By Lauren Said-Moorhouse, for CNN
Laying down tracks for their debut album in the recording studio in Los Angeles, Iman Hashi, 25 and her sister Siham, 27 could not be further from their hometown of Mogadishu. The sisters were born in the Somali capital but were forced to flee after war broke out in 1991.
Along with their parents, the girls relocated to Canada as refugees where during their teens they discovered a passion for music.
Heading south to LA by way of Atlanta, the singing sisters with a bold flair for fashion are now embarking on a musical journey, gearing up to unleash their Afro-pop sound to the world.
CNNโs African Voices caught up with the sister act โ known collectively as Faarrow (combining the translation of their names into English โ Iman means โFaithโ and Siham means โArrowโ) to talk about music, aspirations and Somalia.
CNN: Hi guys, thanks for chatting with me today. What are some of your musical influences?
Iman: We love Michael Jackson, Lionel Richie โ stuff my mom would listen to and play โ and the Spice Girls. We used to die for the Spice Girls. I love new artists now but I donโt know if itโs a nostalgia, but I remember โฆ my mom used to pump whatever โ Mariah Carey, Whitney Houston.
CNN: You are working on your debut album now โ howโs that been?
Siham: Weโve been working with Elijah Kelley โ heโs actually an actor. He was in โHairspray,โ โThe Butler,โ and most recently he was in the George Lucas animation, โStrange Magic.โ Thatโs what heโs more known for but his first passion is music. Heโs an incredible producer, writer and singer. I just felt like he was always the missing piece. He brought everything together.
CNN: So now that youโve found your โmissing piece,โ how would you describe your sound?
Siham: Our music before was experimenting with Afrobeat sounds but now itโs more of a fusion (of what) we are inspired by. Itโs pop with undertones of hip hop and rhythmic African percussion. Itโs a fusion of everything.
CNN: And do you guys write the songs as well?
Siham: The entire album was pretty much (written and produced) by me, my sister and Elijah. And when we signed we already had a lot of those songs already done. Warner Brothers Records is really great in that way that they already loved what we were doing and let us do our own thing.
CNN: What are you listening to right now?
Siham: Oh my God, thereโs so many!
Iman: Sia with โChandelier.โ
Siham: I really love this new song โ I donโt know if Iman is going to agree with me โ but his nameโs LunchMoney Lewis, itโs called Bills; I love it.
CNN: As well as your music, you both work with the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) โ how did you start your humanitarian work?
Iman: Ever since we were kids we wanted to help Somalia, we always talked about it. But we were like โwhat can we physically do?โ
We were doing some research and we called our mom and she said โYou know you still have family over there. Thereโs a refugee camp in Kenya and your great uncle and his kids live in a refugee camp.โ And we did some research about Dadaab refugee camp, itโs a massive camp that has taken in Sudanese refugees, Somali refugees, Rwandan refugees โ pretty much anywhere there was a conflict. Everybody fled to Dadaab. In the beginning (it was) pure advocacy talking about it on Twitter and Facebook.
CNN: But then you decided to โup your gameโ as it wereโฆ
Iman: Yes, then we started a non-profit and weโd do small benefit concerts in Toronto and in San Diego โ wherever there was a big Somali community we would do outreach but all we had was our singing, working with UNHCR in a capacity as a spokesperson. We headlined World Refugee Day at the Kennedy Center, as well as the Nansen Awards twice in Geneva. We felt like this platform of singing โ the bigger it gets, the more we can do.
Siham: We obviously love fashion so we wanted to do our own socially conscious brand so weโve been making these bracelets and necklaces called โWish Creatively.โ Wish stands for โWomen Internationally Selling Hope.โ We wanted to do a socially conscious brand where we sell these bracelets where it goes back to projects in Kenya or Somalia with women providing them with a sustainable income.
CNN: So whatโs next for you two?
Siham: Weโre actually in the mixing process right now. We still have a few (tracks) to finish up but the majority of the album is pretty much done. We want to turn it in as soon as possible so they can put together a rollout plan and get ready for the first single to drop.
Iman: I donโt feel like we ever lost that feeling like weโre creative spokespersons for our generation as well as for Somalia. I feel like now because we followed our dreams itโs like โtheyโre not just refugees anymore.โ We donโt have to become doctors so we can one day give back to Somalia and help rebuild โ itโs such a beautiful dream but not ours. In our culture, anything creative is not really respected or appreciated. But I feel like now but even with our new deal weโre still trucking along. I feel like we inspire people.
Source: CNN