EIN Presswire
Thursday September 2, 2021

To listen and order on iTunes, Spotify, Amazon and more, go to: http://aarmaanta.com. For album reviews, interviews, and questions, please contact: [email protected].
Today Somali-British musician Aar Maanta releases Children Have Priority (Ubadkaa Mudnaanta Leh), the first bilingual English & Somali children’s album in world music. Aar Maanta created
the pioneering 14-track album together with Somali-American youth in
Minneapolis, Minnesota.
“The children are the priority,” sings Aar Maanta, “In
the three folds of time; As yesterday, today and tomorrow; Being
tomorrow’s expectations of hope; Today’s guests waiting for us; The joy
that filled our eyes.” Combining Somali traditional poetic storytelling
with modern styles, Aar Maanta and emerging performers portray how youth
in tough situations ranging from forced migration to inner city tension
find peace.
After serving as Artist In Residence at The Cedar
Cultural Center, Minnesota’s world music venue, Aar Maanta collaborated
with Minnesota-based producer Greg Grease of Astralblak; sound engineer
Medium Zach; Somali playwright, poet, and filmmaker Professor Said
Salah; and 20+ youth from the Cedar Riverside neighborhood.
Aar Maanta and the youth who took part had to face not
only the Somali community’s long quest for peace in the African Horn,
but the Trump Administration’s “Muslim Ban” on travel to the United
States, and a tough era for civil rights among youth in Minneapolis
where the youth grew up. The album was further delayed by the global
pandemic. Now the album can be heard for the first time in 2021.
Ubadkaa Mudnaanta Leh was funded by a Joyce Award from
The Joyce Foundation, the only regional program dedicated to supporting
artists of color in major Great Lakes cities with the goal of elevating
their visibility and recognition in their craft.
“The fact that youth were able to co-write songs and
tell their own stories on this particular album was really significant,”
says Aar Maanta.
“There’s a lot of stories that need to be told.
There’s a distance, or a disconnect in the Somali community between
generations, between those who were born in the West, and their parents.
Somali youth interested in the arts are usually reluctant to pursue
that path because they’re worried about not getting support from their
families. If they can hear or see songs that were written by youth of
their age that are talking about issues they can relate to, maybe it
will encourage them to follow their heart, and ignite new explorations
into their art and culture.”
Aar Maanta is proud to welcome listeners of all
nations to hear what youth can achieve while mentored by a proven
songwriter for an important cause.