Tag Archives: SAADI

Eraserhead Screening at Greystone Mansion, Gwar Art Show and More Happening in Los Angeles September 11 – September 17

Mike Meyers So I Married an Axe Murderer coffee House screenshot
So I Married an Axe Murderer is playing this weekend too. Friday night at Vidiots.

If you’re not still recovering from Oasis-mania, there is plenty to get you out of the house and away from your screens this weekend. Thursday’s Desire and Johnny Jewel show at Hollywood Forever is already sold out, but there will be an afterparty at Gold-Diggers. Friday night is packed with concerts, including Anamanaguchi at The Wiltern and Cold Waves XIII at The Mayan. Retrospective exhibition Let There Be Gwar opens at Beyond the Streets on Saturday, while Jaws: The Exhibition debuts at The Academy Museum on Sunday. Plus, Eraserhead screens at Greystone Mansion on Saturday night.

Heading into next week, Swans play three nights at The Lodge Room, one of which is already sold out, and generative Brian Eno documentary, Eno, heads to Philosophical Research Society. There’s more too, so keep reading for the details on what’s happening in Los Angeles between Thursday, September 11 and Wednesday, September 17. 

Continue reading Eraserhead Screening at Greystone Mansion, Gwar Art Show and More Happening in Los Angeles September 11 – September 17

On Birds of Paradise, SAADI Reflects on Human Nature and Digital Lives

Press photo of Boshra AlSaadi as SAADI by Laura Moreau
(Photo: Laura Moreau)

The urgency in “Cowboy in a Ghost Town” is potent. A galloping beat drives the song and the whip-slap sound of the snare comes in as SAADI sings, “You are a cowboy in a ghost town/You leave a dark legacy.” When I first heard the song, from the L.A.-based singer/multi-instrumentalist’s recently released sophomore album, Birds of Paradise, I thought it was about social media. There are references to shadowbans and people living in an “alternate reality.” 

“It’s about Gaza, actually,” Boshra AlSaadi says when meet up for a video call.  AlSaadi has written a number of songs about Gaza, but “Cowboy in a Ghost Town,” she says, is her most overt. Listening to it again, I’m struck by the poignancy of it, from the mix of anger and helplessness that’s in AlSaadi’s voice to the protest-like chorus that rises near the song’s end to the clear references to social media. AlSaadi captures not just the horror of watching a genocide unfold on your phone, but the frustration of knowing that you can’t stay silent, even when you’re posting into a void. 

“Seeing it unfold on your phone is horrific,” she says. “It’s unprecedented also.” 

Continue reading On Birds of Paradise, SAADI Reflects on Human Nature and Digital Lives