Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Resurfaced interview with Tony Todd, Whose Last Performance in FINAL DESTINATION: BLOODLINES Premiered This Weekend
    • Mykelti Williamson’s Toxic Experience On A Popular Show Led to the Iconic “Bubba” Role on Forrest Gump
    • Inez Dahl Torhaug and Jesper Barkselius for Innovative AI Assisted Swedish SciFi WATCH THE SKIES
    • Breaking Barriers with WATCH THE SKIES Filmmakers: First Film To Use Seamless Multilingual Dubbing Using AI
    • Adrianne Palicki and Director Austin Nichols for THE SALAMANDER KING
    • SCOTT PAGE: Blending Music, Tech, and the Future of Blockchain
    • Daniella Pineda (“Anaïs”) for THE ACCOUNTANT 2
    • Adrian Smith and Richie Kotzen Illuminate the Shadows with “Black Light”
    AMFM Magazine.tv
    • Features
    • Movies
      1. Movies – Indies
      2. Movie Reviews
      3. Movies- Wide Release
      Featured
      April 2, 20250By christine

      Director Dallas Jenkins Says “I’m Not That Good…I Just Feel Like I Have A Front Row Seat” THE CHOSEN Season 5

      2 Mins Read
      Read More
      Recent
      May 19, 2025

      Resurfaced interview with Tony Todd, Whose Last Performance in FINAL DESTINATION: BLOODLINES Premiered This Weekend

      May 12, 2025

      Inez Dahl Torhaug and Jesper Barkselius for Innovative AI Assisted Swedish SciFi WATCH THE SKIES

      May 12, 2025

      Breaking Barriers with WATCH THE SKIES Filmmakers: First Film To Use Seamless Multilingual Dubbing Using AI

    • Photography
      1. Event Photos
      Featured
      August 23, 20240By christine

      JANE’S ADDICTION At The 713 Music Hall, Houston August 19, 2024

      1 Min Read
      Read More
      Recent
      May 1, 2025

      DISTURBED, DAUGHTRY and NOTHING MORE Photo Collage for 25th Anniversary Tour of “The Sickness”

      November 26, 2024

      ARIZONA Opening For Yellow Card and Third Eye Blind at Dickie’s Arena, Nov. 15, 2024

      November 26, 2024

      CHARLIE CROCKETT At Dickie’s Arena, Nov. 15, 2024

    • ABOUT US
    • Music
      1. Indies
      2. Majors
      3. Reviews
      Featured
      November 25, 20240By christine

      Asia’s #1 Rock Guitarist Tak Matsumoto Talks New Supergroup TMG Release “Crash Down Love” (Interview)

      4 Mins Read
      Read More
      Recent
      May 7, 2025

      SCOTT PAGE: Blending Music, Tech, and the Future of Blockchain

      May 5, 2025

      Adrian Smith and Richie Kotzen Illuminate the Shadows with “Black Light”

      May 1, 2025

      DISTURBED, DAUGHTRY and NOTHING MORE Photo Collage for 25th Anniversary Tour of “The Sickness”

    • The Wire
    • Literarians
    • Great Conversations Reprised
    • Movie Minute Reviews
    • AMFM Studios LLC
    AMFM Magazine.tv
    You are at:Home»Entertainment»Music»Indies»TAMTAM: New Single “Blue” Resonating and Rhythmic

    TAMTAM: New Single “Blue” Resonating and Rhythmic

    0
    By amfmstudios on March 23, 2018 Indies, LATEST, Music

    Interview by Christine Thompson

    [interactive_banner_2 banner_title=”Bridging The Gap Between Cultures” banner_image=”id^34783|url^http://www.amfm-magazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/tamtamyellowheader.jpg|caption^null|alt^null|title^tamtamyellowheader|description^null” banner_style=”style7″ banner_color_title=”#1f92c4″ image_opacity=”1″ image_opacity_on_hover=”1″ banner_title_font_family=”font_family:Homemade Apple|font_call:Homemade+Apple” banner_title_style=”font-style:italic;,font-weight:bold;” banner_title_font_size=”desktop:36px;”]
    [ultimate_fancytext strings_textspeed=”35″ strings_backspeed=”0″ fancytext_strings=”Born and raised in Saudi Arabia, Tamtam is bridging the gap between the Middle East and the West. Already raising eyebrows with her timely and powerful “Gender Game”, her unforgettable voice, and larger-than-life hair, she’s shattering the ceilings of convention. ” strings_font_family=”font_family:Homemade Apple|font_call:Homemade+Apple” strings_font_style=”font-style:italic;,font-weight:bold;” strings_font_size=”desktop:24px;” fancytext_color=”#21b3e0″]

    AMFM: You are a filmmaker, an activist, a feminist, and a voice for an opressed gender. You’re taking on a lot.  There are hundreds-no, thousands of years of history. It’s a very difficult thing that you’ve chosen to do. So I’m sure you’ve faced backlash. What I’d like to know first is why you made the transition to Los Angeles?  It’s known for eating it’s young, a very tough place.

    “Blue is the haunting feeling I experienced at the end of a dissolved relationship. While I was wallowing in the “blues”, he kept his “cool” about it.” – TAMTAM “Blue is the haunting feeling I experienced at the end of a dissolved relationship. While I was wallowing in the “blues”, he kept his “cool” about it.” – TAMTAM

    TAMTAM:  That’s true.  But my family is Saudi, and they’re open-minded. They wanted me and my sisters to see another perspective of the world, and then come back home and bring that with us to see it too.

    I went to UC San Diego, and I’ve always wanted to do music since I was eleven years old.  In the beginning, my family thought in the beginning I was just going through a phase, or it was just a hobby.  They didn’t see it as a career.

    I think subconciously  I came to California because I knew I wanted to be in Los Angeles after school and pursue music.  So I studied economics so that I could do that. I knew that if I studied economics they would be more inclined to let me try what I wanted to do.

    So then I moved to L.A.  I don’t know why I chose L.A., because when you’re in another part of the world and you think about music…I grew up watching Michael Jackson.  He was before my time actually, but I loved him so much even though he was from the 80’s. I really admired him, and all the people I admired seemed to be in L.A.

    There are so many musicians in L.A.  It’s crazy, I’ve never been in a city where you meet so many musicians, producers, managers.  It’s good and bad in that way. It’s great, but on the business side, it can be tricky.

    AMFM:  Tricky is a good way to put it.  Fortunately for you, you met Andrew Cole, he’s a good guy.  So Andrew produced the song “Blue?”

    TAMTAM:  Yes, he and Siren co-produced it and Siren, Andrew and I wrote it.

    AMFM: There’s an overarching theme that comes through your music…and by the way, I’m a mother of an artist, it’s not just your culture that doesn’t want kids to be artists, because it’s a difficult thing to do.  You are a voice, and you will express your opinion, regardless of opposition. I was looking at your other videos on youtube, and the comments seem to be overwhelmingly in support of what you are doing. They are applauding you.  There were a few negative comments, and they were of course, men. You have to push through that. How do you mentally prepare yourself to push through knowing that what you’re doing is going to create a little bit of controversy?

    TAMTAM: When I see those negative comments, I understand them.  I know what kind of mentality it’s coming from. I don’t think they’re right and I’m wrong.  That’s not how I see it all. I just see it that we think in different ways. And it’s time for every human being in the world that we live in a world where not everyone is going to agree and think the same way.  You can’t start thinking “Oh, I’m right and they’re wrong” – that’s what causes war and hurting other people. That’s why they’re writing these negative comments, they think that I’m wrong, and they are right.

    So I ignore it, I don’t think that they are wrong, because I know how they grew up. At one point in my life I thought similarly, because I didn’t see the world the way I see it today.  You can’t blame someone for growing up the way they did, or believing what they do. I respect their beliefs, but I don’t want them to change their beliefs, because you can’t do that, you can’t tell somebody to believe something else.  So I just want them to learn to respect other people.

    AMFM:  Yes, and your supporters are overwhelmingly positive.   The few comments that I saw weren’t positive actually werent’ nasty or terrible, which as you know trolls  on youtube can be awful – they actually seemed to be respectful. So what you’re trying to do is bridge not just your culture, but a belief system – who’s right and who’s wrong – by using art.  Which is what art is actually for in the first place.

    So your parents were the ones who decided you should have an alternate view, and to be a world traveler and bring it back.  So your friends at home that you grew up with, what do they think about all this?

    TAMTAM:  They support me.  They’re always excited to hear new things that I’m putting out. Some of them choose to live a more traditional lifestyle, and mine is so not-traditional for a Saudi woman.  I mean, to my face they support me, and I appreciate it. I’ve known so many of them since I was 5 years old.

    AMFM:  I know that every little drop in the ocean feels so tiny, and yet adds up.  What do you hope for your music to do, first of all for the people in your country that are your age, and then what do you hope it does for the rest of us?

    TAMTAM:  I have to give the example of my song “Gender Game,” some of my friends and family did not want me to put out a video on youtube for a song called “Little Girl.” They didn’t want to show my face or my name, so I changed my name to TamTam, and I put out the video blurry.  After that happened, I wrote “Gender Game” and again it’s because something happened to me. When I was filming that music video, all these women from all over the world, they came up to me and said they really related to that song.

    I wrote  “I won’t share my face, I won’t share my name in this gender game.” because of something that happened to me.  But when I shared the video for “Gender Game,” all these women from different parts of the world – different ages, different races, and they grew up in different places all came to me and said “Wow, I really relate to this song.”

    That amazed me. I wrote this because I’m from a more conservative culture, and they didn’t want me…they thought it would be dangerous for me to show so much of myself on youtube, a public place.  But then all these other women from other places, including the U.S., which is so liberated and you think people are free to do what they want…that’s when I knew that even though I write my music based on my experiences, other people in the world could relate to it.  We all go through similar things. And the degrees to which we go through them are similar but different according to where we grew up.

    Someone in Saudi feeling that women don’t have as many rights, is the same degree as someone in the U.S. because they experience similar things.  Does that make sense?

    <AMFM:  Yes, each culture has it’s own definition of a woman’s place.  You’ve probably found out that there are some similar things in America – of course, look at the #metoo movement.  We’re not actually as liberated as we’d like. Yes we can vote, yes we can drive,but there’s still some basic things going on between men and women that transcends any culture. Your family is very progressive, no matter what country.  They allowed, even encouraged you to travel to different places in the world.

    Your voice is amazing,  How did you develop your voice?

    TAMTAM:  When I was 11, I really wanted to pursue music, so  I started voice lessons when I was 13, while in boarding school in Switzerland.  Then I took a break for three years from ages 15-18, and I was learning guitar instead.  When I moved to San Diego and L.A., I was taking voice lessons.

    AMFM:  Now a personal question, how do your parents feel about it now?

    TAMTAM: They support me and they’re excited, they want to see me succeed.  A lot of times, people who are on the outside of the music business or the art world…or any business actually, like for example it takes a long time to be a doctor, years and years school and training. People can be impatient because they don’t see it in that way.

    AMFM:  Yes, I’ve seen people become impatient with artists because they want a product from you and they want it right now because they need to sell it.  What they don’t understand is that what it takes to create something original is very difficult, and not an easy process. Although I know sometimes you can write a song in five minutes, although that’s true, to really refine it and master it takes a long time.  Your voice is so beautiful though, and you have a network of people like Andrew, so you’re ahead of the game there.

    I did see your music video at the Austin Music Video Awards a few years ago…it was great.  Are you going to be coming out with any more music videos, and will you be directing?

    TAMTAM:  Yes, I am.  But no no directing.

    AMFM:  So let’s get back to the bridge you’re providing between cultures.  You’ve experienced our culture, and you’re singing to people who’ve not experienced yours.  What is it that you’d like to bring out about your culture to Americans?

    TAMTAM:  I want people to see that Saudis are…when somebody thinks of Saudi Arabia they think of one person, and that’s what people think about any country, they just have this one image in their minds.  I want to change that. I want people to understand that there are so many people. There are so many perspectives, and there are really open-minded people. The arts are flourishing there, I think now is the time for artists from the Middle East, and it’s amazing.  I would love for people to see that and have an open mind when they are thinking about Saudis and Saudia Arabia.

     

    http://www.tamtamsound.com/#shows

    [ultimate_heading][/ultimate_heading]
    Andrew Cole Pop Music Saudi Arabia Siren TamTam
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleSTEVEN TYLER: OUT ON A LIMB NEW TRAILER OUT
    Next Article BLOCKERS: GRAMMY WINNING COMPOSER MATEO MESSINA ON WHAT IT TAKES TO SCORE A FILM
    amfmstudios

    Related Posts

    Featured Music

    SCOTT PAGE: Blending Music, Tech, and the Future of Blockchain

    Read More
    Featured Music

    Adrian Smith and Richie Kotzen Illuminate the Shadows with “Black Light”

    Read More
    Concert Photos

    DISTURBED, DAUGHTRY and NOTHING MORE Photo Collage for 25th Anniversary Tour of “The Sickness”

    Read More

    Comments are closed.

    SEARCH BY CATEGORY
    • MOVIES
    • Music ICON
    • AUTHORS
    May 19, 2025

    Resurfaced interview with Tony Todd, Whose Last Performance in FINAL DESTINATION: BLOODLINES Premiered This Weekend

    April 17, 2025

    Alyssa Sutherland and Director James Camali on Thriller THE MENTAL STATE

    April 2, 2025

    Director Dallas Jenkins Says “I’m Not That Good…I Just Feel Like I Have A Front Row Seat” THE CHOSEN Season 5

    April 9, 2025

    Jack Canfield (Chicken Soup For The Soul) And Children’s Book Author Miriam Laundry On “I CAN Believe In Myself”

    April 8, 2025

    Astrophysicist, Author and Social Entrepreneur Alan Lightman On Achieving Goals And Non-profit Harpswell Work in Southeast Asia

    April 3, 2025

    Wrongfully Imprisoned For 36 Years, Judy Henderson Talks About New Book “WHEN THE LIGHT FINDS US”

    AMFM INSTAGRAM
    Recent Posts
    • Resurfaced interview with Tony Todd, Whose Last Performance in FINAL DESTINATION: BLOODLINES Premiered This Weekend
    • Mykelti Williamson’s Toxic Experience On A Popular Show Led to the Iconic “Bubba” Role on Forrest Gump
    • Inez Dahl Torhaug and Jesper Barkselius for Innovative AI Assisted Swedish SciFi WATCH THE SKIES
    • Breaking Barriers with WATCH THE SKIES Filmmakers: First Film To Use Seamless Multilingual Dubbing Using AI
    • Adrianne Palicki and Director Austin Nichols for THE SALAMANDER KING
    Archives
    Majors
    May 19, 20250By christine

    Resurfaced interview with Tony Todd, Whose Last Performance in FINAL DESTINATION: BLOODLINES Premiered This Weekend

    5 Mins Read
    Interview by Paul Salfen In the dimly lit world of horror, few figures cast a shadow as towering as Tony Todd. With a voice that rumbles like distant thunder and a presence that commands every frame, Todd was a genre legend, most famously as the hook-wielding Candyman. In an exclusive sit-down with AMFM Magazine last
    Read More
    Dallas
    May 16, 20250By christine

    Mykelti Williamson’s Toxic Experience On A Popular Show Led to the Iconic “Bubba” Role on Forrest Gump

    1 Min Read
    While on the red carpet for THE LAST RODEO, Mykelti Williamson told the story of how a toxic experience on one popular show led to his being hired for the part he is best known as, "Bubba" from Forrest Gump. "Had I Not Been Fired, I would not have been available for Forrest Gump."
    Read More
    Movie Reviews
    May 12, 20250By christine

    Inez Dahl Torhaug and Jesper Barkselius for Innovative AI Assisted Swedish SciFi WATCH THE SKIES

    1 Min Read
    Interview by Paul Salfen Synopsis: A rebellious teenage woman’s father went missing years ago and she believes that he didn’t run away, but was abducted by aliens. She joins forces with a funky UFO club made up of a lovable group of weirdos and rejects. Together, they embark on an adventure that takes them far
    Read More
    Movie Reviews
    May 12, 20250By christine

    Breaking Barriers with WATCH THE SKIES Filmmakers: First Film To Use Seamless Multilingual Dubbing Using AI

    4 Mins Read
    Interview by Paul Salfen In an exclusive interview with AMFM Magazine, host Paul Salfen sat down with Scott Mann,Victor Danell and Albin Pettersson, to discuss their groundbreaking film, *UFO Sweden: Watch the Skies*. This Swedish sci-fi adventure, now making waves in U.S. theaters, marks a historic milestone as the first movie to utilize advanced AI
    Read More
    Copyright AMFMSTUDIOS LLC
    • About
    • Privacy
    • Contact
    • Cookie Policy (US)
    Copyright AMFMSTUDIOS LLC
    • About
    • Privacy
    • Contact
    • Cookie Policy (US)

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.