Maya Youssef
‘The war started in my homeland in 2011. From that point on making music was no longer a choice, it was a crucial means to express and come to terms with intense feelings of loss and sadness from seeing my people suffer and my land destroyed. On a hot summer’s afternoon in London in 2012 I was watching the news. I felt overwhelmed, as if I was going to explode, so I held my qānūn and ‘Syrian dreams’ came out of me. That was the very first piece of music I wrote’. Virtuoso Syrian qanun player Maya Youssef is a regular on the BBC and was featured at the BBC Proms at The Royal Albert Hall amongst other prestigious venues and festivals.
£15 (£14) £3
![](/sites/all/themes/mwldan/images/star.png)
![](/sites/all/themes/mwldan/images/star.png)
![](/sites/all/themes/mwldan/images/star.png)
![](/sites/all/themes/mwldan/images/star.png)
powerful homage twists Arabic music cliches
The Guardian
![](/sites/all/themes/mwldan/images/star.png)
![](/sites/all/themes/mwldan/images/star.png)
![](/sites/all/themes/mwldan/images/star.png)
![](/sites/all/themes/mwldan/images/star.png)
She is a master of her instrument
Songlines
![](/sites/all/themes/mwldan/images/star.png)
![](/sites/all/themes/mwldan/images/star.png)
![](/sites/all/themes/mwldan/images/star.png)
![](/sites/all/themes/mwldan/images/star.png)
This luminous album might be a response to tragedy but it is also colourful and vibrant, displaying great virtuosity
New Internationalist