
Sea Nights Festival Brings Cultural Showcases to Jeddah Waterfront
The Sea Nights Festival offers entertainment, traditional performances, and immersive light shows celebrating Arab heritage.
The Sea Nights Festival has officially launched along Jeddah's waterfront, offering a vibrant lineup of cultural programming as part of the broader Jeddah Season festivities. Running until May 27th, the event celebrates Arab heritage through music, art, and performance, transforming the corniche into a dynamic open-air venue.
The festival includes participation from several Arab countries, with traditional folk shows, children's workshops, and acrobatic performances designed to appeal to families. The event aims to provide an inclusive atmosphere where visitors of all ages can engage with regional traditions and modern entertainment formats alike.
Among the festival's standout features are its large-scale light and sound installations, which synchronise Arabic music with immersive visual displays across the seafront.
In addition to its artistic elements, the Sea Nights Festival includes beachside sporting events such as football and volleyball tournaments.

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The young teenager couldn't really understand why he had suddenly been made a national enemy, or why he was made to feel this way—but he knew the only answer would be heading to Cairo. Hamid El-Shaeri was not an isolated case of personal ambition clashing with political authority. He belonged to a pioneering generation in Libya that listened to music with a new ear and read its notes with a fresh vision. His peers—like Nasser El Mezdawy, who fled to Italy, and Ahmed Fakroon, who sought refuge in France—were part of a generation defined by defiance and the courage to create, pursuing renewal at a time when the safest path in Libya, musically, was strict adherence to artistic tradition. Stepping into Egypt as a stranger, a foreigner entering a land he had only seen on television, Hamid El Shaeri brought with him what would come to define his distinct sound—his roots, carried all the way from his hometown in Benghazi. 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Using synthesizers, drum machines, and Western funk and pop grooves fused with Arabic melodies, Hamid injected the region's music with a much-needed jolt of youth and energy. At a time when Arabic music was steeped in classical orchestras and long-winded ballads, he trimmed the excess and cranked up the soul, creating catchy, yet emotionally rich tracks that resonated across generations. Egypt was changing—and so was its soundtrack. In the early 1980s, the country was still reeling from the seismic shifts brought on by President Sadat's Infitah, the open-market policy that restructured Egypt's economy and daily life. After Sadat's assassination, the streets felt restless. Uncertainty lingered in the air, and with it, a growing hunger for something different—something that spoke to a new generation trying to find its voice in the chaos. That's where Hamid El-Shaeri stepped in. Bold, modern, and unapologetically different, it echoed the pulse of a nation in flux. 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