Latest news with #BGD


Iraqi News
01-03-2025
- Politics
- Iraqi News
Sheikh Al-Khazali: Al-Sudani's government restored Iraqis confidence in the political process
INA - BAGHDAD The Secretary-General of the Asa'ib Ahl Al-Haq Movement, Sheikh Qais Al-Khazali, confirmed that the government of PM Muhammed S. Al-Sudani restored the confidence of most Iraqis in the political process. "Al-Sudani's government was able to provide services that restored the confidence of the majority of Iraqis in the political process," said Sheikh Al-Khazali to the "Under Two Lines" program, to be aired on Al-Iraqiya News TV at 22:00 BGD on Sunday. He stressed that "Iraqis are heading towards goodness."


CairoScene
08-02-2025
- Entertainment
- CairoScene
Lege-Cy Finds a New Groove on ‘BGD'
Lege-Cy Finds a New Groove on 'BGD' For someone who has been active in the Egyptian scene as long as Lege-Cy has, maintaining a balance between relevance, artistry and experimentation is a difficult act to pull off. Yet, Lege-Cy seems to have cracked the code. Anchored by an unwavering sense of inner grounding, he has consistently proven his ability to reinvent himself while crafting a sound that is unmistakably his own. From his earliest days, Lege-Cy has cultivated a signature sonic identity - distinct yet never bound to a formula, always leaving room for experimentation. His latest offering, 'BGD' - a surprise full-length album drop - further reinforces that Lege-Cy is mastering this balancing act better than ever. 'BGD' is an eight-track project where Lege-Cy's foundational influences shine through more prominently than in his other recent work. Here, he raps his heart out, proving he can when he chooses to - but the real surprise lies in the production. On this album, Lege-Cy taps into his rap purist instincts, embracing boom-bap-driven production, heavy sample use, and an overarching psychedelic, lo-fied atmosphere. Imagine Lege-Cy with Madlib and Alchemist mixtapes on repeat - that influence is heavily embedded in the record. His signature string-driven production remains, but in an entirely different sonic context. The beats are understated, as is Lege-Cy's delivery, carefully walking the fine line between cohesion and monotony. This exploration of sampledelia is introduced from the very first track, 'INTRO', where a nabatshy (emcee) monologue opens the album, calling out random names before his voice distorts and glitches as the beat transitions into the following track, 'SWISSRA'. The production follows a similar structure, while Lege-Cy delivers deeply personal bars, a mix of confidence and despair as he reflects on his past through his signature high-metaphoric lyricism. Tracks like 'EHDA (Freestyle)' see Lege-Cy rapping harder than ever, evoking his Fata El Shaha era. His words cut with razor-sharp precision, unfolding like an introspective stream-of-consciousness conversation with himself. He touches on growing up, possibly starting a family - personal themes that occasionally flirt with the usual rap bravado, but executed with depth, never reduced to empty statements. The album continues to build on these threads through gritty, low-fidelity production techniques paired with carefully curated samples, from spoken-word monologues to vintage advertisements, reinforcing the record's cohesion. Lyrically, it is one of Lege-Cy's most introspective projects to date. He dissects his own psyche through his bars, speaking on his influence, friendships gone sour and the culture of clout-chasing, all while dropping witty one-liners about the music industry. Early in 2024, Lege-Cy released his debut full-length project, 'Placebo' - his most ambitious work yet, an album into which he seemingly poured all his emotions. 'BGD', however, is an entirely different project; a significant shift in pace, one we didn't see coming but didn't know we needed. It's a refreshing sound within the context of Egyptian mainstream hip-hop, further proving that Lege-Cy is in a lane of his own: unconcerned with trends, committed to quality and relentless in his exploration.