from AirUniversity AU By Dr. Hayat Alvi
Jihadists have their nasheeds,
and the Islamic State (IS) became popular for its nasheed compositions used in
propaganda videos. Nasheed is an a cappella song praising the Prophet Muhammad
and reciting Quranic verses glorifying jihad. Similarly, drug cartels have
bands that compose and sing narco corridos, or “drug ballads,” based on Mexican
folk music, which glorify cartel leaders as modern-day “Robin Hood” figures and
announce executions of enemies. Both nasheeds and narco corridos have much in
common: glorifying historical victories over enemies in wars and revolutions;
using lyrics to warn their enemies about their invincibility and strength and
bravery; calling out specific enemies as targets; and using their respective
ideologies to justify their acts, behaviors, and beliefs.
This study examines and comparatively analyzes the two musical genres in the context of terrorism and narco-terrorism, and how these musical traditions affect their respective followers, admirers, and devotees. The analysis also highlights how these musical genres popularize crime and violence, and desensitize audiences to the extreme brutality praised and glorified in their songs.
There are some contextual distinctions that separate the two genres as well, and these entail part of the comparative analysis. The use of social media in both contexts is an essential tool to popularize nasheeds and narco corridos; they use YouTube videos, Twitter and Facebook, and other Internet resources to spread their music and messages. In particular, Western democracies provide freedom of expression, which further facilitates the proliferation of nasheeds and narco corridos. Specifically, the nasheeds are sung with religious references, verses, and lyrics, which endow them with greater allure and legitimacy in the eyes of the religious public.
However, even some drug cartels and their leaders and followers embrace religious cult-like ideologies related to their narco-paradigms. They come complete with cults of personality attributed to specific drug lords and folkloric heroes from Mexican and Latin American history. An entire industry in entertainment, jewelry, amulets, shrines, icons, and spiritual “saints” and shaman-like figures flourishes in advancing what is called the “narco-culture.”
This study examines and comparatively analyzes the two musical genres in the context of terrorism and narco-terrorism, and how these musical traditions affect their respective followers, admirers, and devotees. The analysis also highlights how these musical genres popularize crime and violence, and desensitize audiences to the extreme brutality praised and glorified in their songs.
There are some contextual distinctions that separate the two genres as well, and these entail part of the comparative analysis. The use of social media in both contexts is an essential tool to popularize nasheeds and narco corridos; they use YouTube videos, Twitter and Facebook, and other Internet resources to spread their music and messages. In particular, Western democracies provide freedom of expression, which further facilitates the proliferation of nasheeds and narco corridos. Specifically, the nasheeds are sung with religious references, verses, and lyrics, which endow them with greater allure and legitimacy in the eyes of the religious public.
However, even some drug cartels and their leaders and followers embrace religious cult-like ideologies related to their narco-paradigms. They come complete with cults of personality attributed to specific drug lords and folkloric heroes from Mexican and Latin American history. An entire industry in entertainment, jewelry, amulets, shrines, icons, and spiritual “saints” and shaman-like figures flourishes in advancing what is called the “narco-culture.”
Moreover, law enforcement faces
substantial hindrances to monitor and control online materials. How have
governments responded to these social and religious musical media that glorify
violent crimes? What are the implications of these for counterterrorism and
counternarcotics strategies, bearing in mind that drug cartels often resort to
narco-terrorism in much of the same ways as religious terrorist organizations
operate, and, in fact, in many cases, the narco-terrorists are even more brutal
and heinous in their tactics, shock value, and impacts.
Yet, each type of terrorist—religious and narco-terrorists—still secures a loyal following. Their audiovisual tools for glorifying their respective causes, leaders, ideologies, and roles in society have made them extremely popular, especially among the youth. Each type of terrorist claims to fight against corrupt political elites and to stand for and support the masses, especially the poor, disenfranchised, and oppressed in society. In their propaganda, they use words like “oppression,” “persecution,” the “corrupt officials,” and the like, and they present themselves as the heroic warriors rising from among the masses to fight against oppression and injustice, but never mind the drug production, drug and human trafficking, and senseless violence that they perpetrate.
And, in the case of ISIS and al-Qaeda, their violent repression and brutality against anyone who fails to accept their creed, leadership, and way of life are clearly paradoxical to their claims of serving as fighters against oppression and injustice. Thus, we see that both narco corridos and nasheeds have much in common, while at the same time they are contextually different.
Yet, each type of terrorist—religious and narco-terrorists—still secures a loyal following. Their audiovisual tools for glorifying their respective causes, leaders, ideologies, and roles in society have made them extremely popular, especially among the youth. Each type of terrorist claims to fight against corrupt political elites and to stand for and support the masses, especially the poor, disenfranchised, and oppressed in society. In their propaganda, they use words like “oppression,” “persecution,” the “corrupt officials,” and the like, and they present themselves as the heroic warriors rising from among the masses to fight against oppression and injustice, but never mind the drug production, drug and human trafficking, and senseless violence that they perpetrate.
And, in the case of ISIS and al-Qaeda, their violent repression and brutality against anyone who fails to accept their creed, leadership, and way of life are clearly paradoxical to their claims of serving as fighters against oppression and injustice. Thus, we see that both narco corridos and nasheeds have much in common, while at the same time they are contextually different.
The fact that narco-terrorists
and religious terrorist groups like ISIS and al-Qaeda use songs at all is
rather surprising. For the world of narcos, traditional Mexican and other
Latino folk music and songs in Spanish provide an historical backdrop for their
narco corridos. However, in more contemporary times, narco-corrido singers and
composers have been increasingly inspired by American hip-hop and rap music and
what has evolved into the “gangster-rap,” or “gangsta rap” genre. This is
easily correlated to drug cartels and dealers, because many gangs engage in the
buying, processing, and selling of illegal drugs, mostly in urban streets, but
now the target market is also expanding into the more suburban and rural areas
of the United States.
Groups like ISIS and al-Qaeda
present nasheeds without music, hence a nasheed is a religious hymn sung a
cappella, mainly in Arabic. According to their extremist interpretations of
Islam, instrumental music and female voices are not allowed. Therefore, only
male voices are heard in nasheeds, which are sung and chanted without any instrumental
accompaniment, especially when it comes to jihadist nasheeds. This is conducive
to the traditional oral traditions of poetry and storytelling in Arab culture
and history.
In order to understand the modern
usage of nasheeds and narco-corridos, one must first understand each genre’s
history, concepts, and cultural contexts. Then, it is imperative to analyze
each genre’s messaging, propensity for glorifying grotesque violence, and tools
of dissemination. Finally, it is essential to assess the effectiveness of each
genre’s lyrics, strategic use of propaganda, profiteering, and growth of the
cult-like cultures and industries associated with them, which could not happen
without their music increasing in popularity among the masses, despite their
criminality.
Nasheeds: The Hymns of Jihad
In the Muslim world, the nasheed
(plural, anasheed) is a song without musical instruments with lyrics that
resemble hymns that praise God (Allah). The person who sings a nasheed is
called a munshid. According to the Islamic Board website, in Islam “what is
meant by Nasheed is a song that carries with it an Islamic belief, practice,
etiquette, lesson, etc.
They do take many forms. Some are just pure simple praises of Allah, some have very specific lessons related to Qur’anic passages, some are lessons of life stated in an Islamic manner; . . . a Nasheed should be voice only with no use of musical instruments.”1 Sometimes a simple percussion is used in the background to accompany the a cappella singing. Most nasheeds are sung in Arabic, but they are contextually known in comparable terminology in other languages, for example, as Islami nazam in Urdu.2
They do take many forms. Some are just pure simple praises of Allah, some have very specific lessons related to Qur’anic passages, some are lessons of life stated in an Islamic manner; . . . a Nasheed should be voice only with no use of musical instruments.”1 Sometimes a simple percussion is used in the background to accompany the a cappella singing. Most nasheeds are sung in Arabic, but they are contextually known in comparable terminology in other languages, for example, as Islami nazam in Urdu.2
According to some music scholars,
nasheeds evolved from seventh century Arabia, similar to Christian hymns or
psalms, which were sung as “tributes to the spiritual life.”3 With the
worldwide spread of Islam, “worshippers began using elements from their own
musical traditions, including instruments, to sing their own songs of praise.
This led to the growth of several new subgenres of Islamic music stretching
across continents. Today’s youth have also incorporated the latest styles, such
as hip-hop and pop music, to craft their own modern odes to Islam.”4 In his
article, “Music of the Arab World,” Saeed Saeed explains the nasheed’s
traditional contents, rules, evolution, and iterations:
Islamic music was originally
defined by what it didn’t contain: no strings, brass, or wind instruments and
no female vocals. The only instrument initially allowed was minimal percussion
by an Arabic drum called the daf. This minimal form remains widely practiced in
the Gulf and some other parts of the Arab world.
However, in places such as Turkey
and Southeast Asia, several new styles of spiritual songs have developed. In
Turkey, Sufi adherents incorporate music into worship. The most popular are
services undertaken by Mevlevi Sufis, which include chanting and the famous
whirling dervishes.
In Pakistan and Southeast Asia,
the most recognized form of devotional music is qawwali. Performed by up to
nine men, a qawwali group would often use instruments such as the harmonium (a
type of keyboard) and percussion instruments including a tabla and dholak. The
songs often run from 15 to 30 minutes and include instrumental preludes,
repeated refrains and vocal improvisation. In recent times, nasheed artists
from the Gulf have found innovative ways to overcome the no-instrument rule.
Albums by Sharjah’s Ahmed
Bukhatir and Kuwait’s Mishary Rashid Al Afasy use studio trickery and
manipulate backing vocals to sound like a synth piano or string section. In the
West, groups such as America’s Native Deen and Australia’s The Brothahood use
hip-hop music to get their spiritual message across to a new generation of
young Muslims. The nasheeds in English by South Africa’s Zain Bhikha secured
him a large following in Europe and the Middle East.5
Global jihadists have composed
their own brand of hymns derived from this tradition of nasheeds, and they have
been using the nasheed genre in their propaganda videos, audio recordings, and
recruitment tactics. These chants “are now the soundtrack of jihad.”6 In his
Euronews article, Thomas Seymat says that, “Nasheeds were not always so
significant in the jihadi culture, their rise has been only recent. ‘There was
an increase of songs after the outbreak of the Arab Spring and the
diversification of the jihadi scene which was no longer represented by al-Qaeda
alone’,” quoting Behnam T. Said, a doctoral candidate at the University of
Jena; “’But an even stronger increase of new nasheeds could be observed during
the last years within the context of the war in Syria and Iraq’.”7
Two scholars have focused on
jihadi nasheeds: Behnam Said, whose 2012 journal article in Studies in Conflict
and Terrorism explains how nasheeds constitute a significant “Contribution to
the Study of Jihadist Culture.” Also, Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi has been
translating jihadi nasheeds from Arabic to English for many years and has
posted his work on his website.8 Behnam Said makes a startling discovery in his
article, stating that the songs represent an inspiration for many modern
jihadists, for instance Anwar al-Awlaqi, whom the United States killed in an
airstrike in Yemen in September 2011, made an “interesting statement [in] his
pamphlet ‘44 Ways to Support Jihad’,” saying:
In the time of Rasulullah (i.e.,
The Prophet Muhammad) he had poets who would use their poetry to inspire the
Muslims and demoralize the disbelievers. Today Nasheed can play that role. A
good Nasheed can spread so widely it can reach to an audience that you could
not reach through a lecture or a book. Nasheeds are especially inspiring to the
youth, who are the foundation of Jihad in every age and time. Nasheeds are an
important element in creating a ‘Jihad culture.’ Nasheeds are abundant in
Arabic but scarce in English. Hence it is important for talented poets and
talented singers to take up this responsibility. The nasheeds can cover topics
such as: Martyrdom, Jihad is our only solution, support of the present-day
leaders of Jihad (to connect the youth to them), the situation of the Ummah
(global Muslim community) the responsibility of the youth, the victory of Islam
and defending the religion. The nasheeds should focus on Justice rather than
peace and strength rather than weakness. The nasheeds should be strong and
uplifting and not apologetic and feminine.9
Hence, we see that jihadists have
used nasheeds strategically in a concerted effort to spread their propaganda,
legitimize their ideologies in the façade of religion, and popularize their
genre to gain recruits and loyal followers. Nasheeds are “used by different
Islamic groups who are engaged in battle, Sunni or Shia. But many new songs are
produced by one of the most powerful actors on the battlefield: the Islamic
State”10 (IS, also known as the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, or ISIS; and
the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant, or ISIL). During the peak of the IS’s
power and ubiquitous presence on the Internet, especially Twitter, newly
composed nasheeds would be announced with great fanfare. The IS has produced
Hollywood-quality propaganda videos that play nasheeds in the background,
sometimes providing the lyrics in subtexts on the screen. In addition, al-Qaeda
has used nasheeds for its own propaganda purposes as well.
According to Behnam Said, “There
are more nasheeds, which are not subsumed under one special category due to the
reasons that they are less common in jihadi publications than other ones. These
nasheeds are related to Palestine, prisoners, or current political
situations.”11 He goes on, providing an example for a Palestine nasheed:
‘Sahm al-Ams’ (The arrow of
yesterday) . . . by Abu Ali. This song has been used by Al Qaeda in its video
‘al-Quds lan tuhawwada’ (Jerusalem will not be judaized) from 19 July 2010 as
well as in the ‘Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghrib’ (AQIM) film ‘Adkhulu al-bab
aleihim’ (Enter through the door against them), which was released in July
2011. The song’s text is about the loss of Jerusalem and Palestine and the loss
of dignity, which can be restored only by means of fighting for the land. The
text itself is not militant but is apparently attractive for the militant scene
as we can conclude from the fact that core Al Qaeda and its branches used this
song for their videos.12
In addition to finding Jihadi
nasheeds in propaganda videos, you can also hear them on the Internet, and
prior to the technology of today, there was “already a distribution [before the
Internet] via song books, cassettes and videos but the Internet worked as a
catalyst.”13 The Internet also provides forums containing audios (sautiyat) and
sections for discussions “about the permissibility of nasheeds, [and] they are
asking for specific songs they come across in videos, etc.”14 Seymat reports in
Euronews:
In a few
clicks, euronews found similar forums, web portals and even a subreddit, that
host hundreds of MP3s of nasheeds, available to stream or download.
On YouTube, a search for
“nasheed” returns 1.3 million results (and more than 80,400 for ‘jihad
nasheed’), large parts of which use military imagery and claim geographical
origins from Chechnya to Bosnia.
Militant Islamist groups have no
qualms using Western inventions like the Internet to circulate their hymns:
‘Jihadists are very pragmatic,’ [Behnam Said] tells euronews. ‘You will find
that skepticism more amongst purist Salafis, like Nasir al-Din al-Albani and
many Wahhabi scholars from Saudi Arabia.’
Peter Neumann, a professor of
Security Studies at the Department of War Studies at King’s College, London,
sees irony in the situation. ‘There has never been an objection to using
Western technology, for example, as long as its use is for a religiously permitted
purpose,’ Neumann explained during an interview on NPR.
‘That’s always been the sort of
irony and contradiction of this movement – that they are essentially trying to
establish states that are following medieval rules, but they are taking
advantage of the Internet’ and other cutting-edge technologies, according to
Neumann, who is the director of The International Center for the Study of
Radicalization (ICSR).15
Nasheeds have been attached to
jihadi videos, which often contain graphic, grotesque, and morbid imagery from
battlefields, terrorist attacks, and executions that include beheadings.
Sometimes nasheed music attributed to particular Jjihadi videos are banned
“from video-hosting platforms, but in most cases not because of the nasheeds
but because of the footage.”16 “But you can still access nasheed videos on
internet platforms quite easily. The songs have spread so far and there are so
many that it is not possible to control their spread via internet. Also, in
many cases you need experts telling you whether the song is a radical one or
not and why it should be banned or not. So this is a quite complex task.”17
Jihadi nasheeds convey a range of messaging, some specific, and some more
ambiguous. Often, the “pictures or footage which illustrate the videos leave no
doubt of its support for violent jihadist groups, at times the symbols used,
such as lions, or scimitars, are ambiguous. Other propaganda videos do not
contain violence but are posted by accounts claiming to be linked to ISIL.”18
The IS “has used nasheeds to
spread its message since its founding, disseminating battle hymns online
through its own media unit and other affiliated propaganda outlets.”19 Most IS
nasheeds “are in Arabic, but the language of delivery can be as diverse as the
foreign fighters who have joined its ranks.”20 In 2017, the IS released a new
nasheed, entitled, “Dawlati Baqia,” or “My State Is Remaining,” which was
“professionally recorded and has an Auto Tune quality to it.”21 The song
begins:
My state is remaining, firing at
the enemy.
Its soldiers shout that it is
remaining.
Its path will not be eliminated;
its light seeks to expand.
Like other ISIS nasheeds, this
one was disseminated across the Internet, on encrypted messaging applications,
and likely on the organization’s radio station—still broadcasting in areas
under its control. The verses are a defiant reply to those who believe IS’s
battlefield setbacks signal the group‘s demise.22
Law enforcement finds it
difficult to monitor and police Internet content. However, YouTube, which is
owned by Google, “has ‘clear policies prohibiting content intended to incite
violence, and [we] remove videos violating these policies when flagged by our
users. We also terminate any account registered by a member of a designated Foreign
Terrorist Organization and used in an official capacity to further its
interests,’ a YouTube spokesperson told Euronews.
‘We allow videos posted with a clear news or documentary purpose to remain on YouTube, applying warnings and age-restrictions as appropriate’.”23 Furthermore, YouTube has “given a number of government agencies ‘trusted’ flagger status to prioritize their reporting of dangerous or illegal material.”24 However, that might not suffice, since the Internet is global and the sheer capacity and capability to police it around the clock for each platform is impossible. Moreover, as Seymat indicates, “For video-hosting platform YouTube, it is a case of finding the right balance between freedom of expression and removing violent videos.”25
‘We allow videos posted with a clear news or documentary purpose to remain on YouTube, applying warnings and age-restrictions as appropriate’.”23 Furthermore, YouTube has “given a number of government agencies ‘trusted’ flagger status to prioritize their reporting of dangerous or illegal material.”24 However, that might not suffice, since the Internet is global and the sheer capacity and capability to police it around the clock for each platform is impossible. Moreover, as Seymat indicates, “For video-hosting platform YouTube, it is a case of finding the right balance between freedom of expression and removing violent videos.”25
From the 1970s until the present,
nasheeds have evolved in three contexts and purposes: (1) the “Islamic
Resurgence” period as a means to counter cultural changes in Muslim societies
and against various governments; (2) the anti-occupation context and causes,
such as Hamas’s nasheeds against Israeli occupation, and militant groups
fighting against Western forces in Iraq and Afghanistan—the precursor to this
has been the much glorified jihad against the Soviets in Afghanistan; and (3)
the “singing” or chanting of nasheeds as battle hymns, which include mourning
for special martyrs and praising hymns that invoke jihadist and ideological
leaders like Osama bin Laden, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, Sayyid Qutb, and Samir
Salih Abdallah al-Suwailam (aka “Saif al-Islam Khattab”), a highly-respected
foreign commander in the Chechnya War (1994–1996).26
According to Behnam Said, the
prominence of nasheeds grew in modern history based on the preaching of Sayyid
Qutb, an Egyptian author, educator, Islamic theorist, poet, and a leading
member of the Muslim Brotherhood (MB) in the 1950s and 1960s, which means that
the MB embraced nasheeds, within certain parameters, to invoke Qutb and praise
him and his “martyrdom.”27 This phenomenon has mainly targeted internal changes
within Muslim societies to repel secular Western cultures and ideas because
they threaten Islamic principles and ways of life, as the MB interprets them.
In general, most Salafists and Wahhabis do not find nasheeds incompatible with
Islam, as long as musical instruments are not used. Salafism and Wahhabism are
ultra-orthodox ideologies that usually inspire global jihadists and jihadist
movements. Therefore, they use nasheeds to promote Islamism and Islamic
principles and teachings and as morale boosters on the battlefield. The IS,
which claims to follow Wahhabism, in particular, has popularized nasheeds in
their videos and audios, and their videos frequently have extremely violent and
graphic images.
The global jihadist movements use
nasheeds strategically to connect “between the global jihadist scene to which
[nasheeds] are helpful in creating a common narrative and building up a
collective historical mind.”28 Jihadist nasheeds pose significant problems for
counterterrorism—specifically countering terrorist ideologies—because they are
“very widespread throughout the Internet, so that not only adherents of the
jihadist movements but also their sympathizers can get in touch with this
material easily, because you will find many hard-core nasheeds not exclusively
on jihadist websites but also on sites that claim to provide ‘Islamic
nasheeds’.”29 Scholar Behnam Said warns that, “by those websites people can
come in touch with this material, which can, in combination with other factors,
radicalize individuals on a rational and emotional level.”30 Hence, the lines
are increasingly blurred between the legal dissemination of nasheeds that are
used in peaceful worship and those promoting violent extremism and jihadism.
Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi translates
IS documents and nasheeds for counterterrorism purposes. He provided the
English translation from Arabic for an IS nasheed in November 2017 intended to
boost morale following the loss of territories of the Caliphate, as mentioned
above. According to Al-Tamimi,
The Islamic State’s Ajnad Media,
which produces nasheeds in Arabic, has released a new production entitled
Dawlati la tuqharu ("My state will not be vanquished"). As with the
other nasheeds produced in recent months by Ajnad Media, this nasheed follows
the same theme of the endurance of the Islamic State despite the loss of its
core territories in Iraq and Syria. Below is my translation of it:
Cry the takbir [Allahu Akbar] and
rejoice: my state will not be vanquished.
My state, for we have continued
supporting it.
My state’s edifice is built from
our blood.
My state’s banners proudly fly in
Excellence.
On the day of the tumult, our
soldiers’ horse does not slacken.
Their determination does not
bend, their spear is not broken.
What noble men they are! For
loftiness they have embarked.
In their efforts, our soldiers
have bewildered mere men.
Oh our enemies, come forth,
mobilize and issue the summoning call.
Gather your soldiers, in hellfire
they will be burnt.
You will either be killed or
taken prisoner.
Our swords have not ceased to
drip with your blood.31
Thus, we see that nasheeds remain
as paramount strategic tools for the global jihadist movement that includes
al-Qaeda, the IS, and a host of other militant groups and cells. The nasheeds
have penetrated the spirit and psyche of thousands, if not millions, of
admirers and sympathizers who have taken the nasheed as bait. Counterterrorism
efforts must consider tackling nasheeds without violating freedoms and rights
and without offending religious sensitivities. These are not only challenging
goals and aspirations, but given the nasheeds’ religious legacy, legitimacy,
and history, they might be nearly impossible to achieve, especially since the
Internet provides the ultimate platform for global reach and individual
exposure to the “Islamic hymns.”
Similarly, drug cartels have been
using narco ballads called narco corridos to promote narco culture, beliefs,
messages, and paradigms. The next section examines narco corridos and their
impact on what can be described as “adoring fans,” despite the narco stigma of
criminality and reputation for excessive violence.
Narco Corridos: The Drug Ballads
of Narco-Culture and Narco-Terrorism
In 2013, Netflix aired a shocking
documentary entitled Narco Cultura, or “Narco Culture.” The film depicts the
contrasting circumstances of drug cartels, or narcos, and a law enforcement
forensics team (SEMEFO, a crime scene investigation service) in Ciudad Juárez,
Mexico, which is located at a mere stone’s throw to the border town of El Paso,
Texas. The film provides homicide statistics, stating that in 2007 Juárez
suffered 320 murders; in 2008, 1,623 murders; in 2009, 2,754 murders, and in
2010, 3,622 murders; whereas, El Paso, Texas had less than eight murders per
year.
The film opens with scenes and
narrations about pistols, AK-47 and R15 machine guns, 9 mm handguns, beheaded
and dismembered bodies, and, the narrator points out that, “sometimes the heads
have messages” attached to them. These are the crimes of the narco cells in
Juárez, and obviously, by looking at the statistics for homicides, these
terrorists have increased their presence and bloody operations in the city. The
local civilians suffer terribly from the narco gangs’ extortion, bullying,
kidnappings, and grotesque violence. The locals yearn for peace, security, and
stability, and some desire to cross the border to safer ground in El Paso. The
film also profiles Edgar Quintero, a popular narco corrido singer who is
married and has two small children.32 Quintero breaks into song on camera:
I was walking in peace around
Guadalajara
The damn government started a
battle
With an AK-47 but no bulletproof
vest,
I cruised in my white truck
I hit one, my rifle never fails
With a good eye and a good pulse,
my school fights back33
Edgar Quintero then talks on the
phone with “El Ghost,” his narco benefactor. Quintero asks his employer what he
wants in the next song. He gets paid a bundle of US dollars. He informs the
viewers that he was approached in prison to be in a band called Buknas de
Culiacan. In another scene, Quintero’s wife says on camera, “I like
narco-corridos. People like hip-hop . . . There’s nothing better than
narco-corridos, you know.”34
If you go to “Narco-Corridos” in
Amazon.com, you will see the following:
Audio CD (2001)
Editorial Review
The corrido, or ballad, is one of
Mexico’s oldest and most respected song styles, and also one of its most contemporary
and controversial. The classic corridos are Mexico’s equivalent of the Spanish
romances, the British broadside ballads, and the cowboy songs of the old West.
Today, the form has been reborn as one of the most popular musics in Mexico and
the U.S., but most of the corrido protagonists now are drug traffickers, and in
Los Angeles or the border towns these narcocorridos are regarded by many people
as a sort of Mexican equivalent of gangsta rap. While narco songs dominate the
field, groups like Los Tigres del Norte also use corridos to tell eloquent
stories of immigrant life, and to deal with the twists and turns of
contemporary politics.
This album, designed to accompany
the book ‘Narcocorrido: A Journey into the Music of Drugs, Guns, and Guerrillas’
(Rayo/HarperCollins) is the first to survey the modern corrido boom. It focuses
on the work of the genre’s defining band, Los Tigres del Norte, with examples
of other styles and artists showing the breadth and variety of the current
scene. Like the book, it gives particular attention to the great corridistas,
the writers who have made this medievaly-rooted form into one of the most
exciting and relevant musics of our time. It has full notes on all the songs
and artists by author Elijah Wald, in both English and Spanish.
This music is far more popular
than most English-speakers can imagine. In the year 2000, Mexican regional
music accounted for over half of all Latin and Spanish-language record sales in
the United States—selling almost four times as many records as all the
‘tropical’ styles (salsa, merengue, cumbia) put together. It is hard to say
what proportion of those records are corridos, but one of the five top stations
in Los Angeles is playing corridos and narcocorridos virtually all day long, and
corrido stars appear regularly on the Billboard Latin charts.35 [emphasis
added]
In the aforementioned
documentary, viewers see extremely disturbing scenes, including Quintero riding
a bicycle with his child in tow, singing, “We’re bloodthirsty, crazy, and we
like to kill,” and then he turns to his child and says, “Sing it!” The scene
brings home the fact that narcos often use children to kill; some are as young
as 14 and 15 years old.36 This is similar to the IS and various other militias
and terrorist organizations, who increasingly see value in indoctrinating
children and getting them to carry out their operations.
In his book Narco-Cults, Tony
Kail describes the Mexican drug cartels as “a sophisticated breed of criminal
enterprise,” adding that, “The growth of the cartel networks and their
expansion throughout the world also produced extreme acts of violence in a
campaign to spread drug distribution routes.”37 He cites the statistics that
since 2006, “more than 60,000 people have been killed in cartel-related
violence and more than 26,000 have gone missing”38 in Mexico. He adds,
Acts of violence, including
public hangings, beheadings, and torture, have become trademarks of the cartel
culture. Cartels publicly claim ownership of communities by flying ‘narco
banners’ (narcomantas) or signs that display the cartel’s name and challenges
to rivals in the area. Internet postings, including videos of beheadings and
shootings, are used to intimidate communities and rivals. Bodies of victims are
displayed as warnings to rivals and threats to local communities. There are
increasing acts of violence toward innocent civilians as well as journalists
covering the drug war. . . . Once small-time drug trafficking rings, many of
these groups have evolved into international terrorist groups.39
Along with beheadings, hangings,
and shootings, cartels are known for training recruits in disemboweling,
filleting, boiling victims in vats (referred to as a “stew”), torturing, and
flaying. Drug cartels have left rows of decapitated heads on public streets
long before the IS began indulging in this grossly violent crime. Yet, despite
these atrocities, narco corridos are extremely popular throughout Latin America
and even in the United States.
Narco corridos–singing bands
engage in concert tours in major US cities. Their concerts are packed with
screaming audiences, who know all the lyrics by heart and sing along with the
chorus. Often, the band members carry machine gun and bazooka props on stage
while they sing and interact with the audience. The documentary shows a number
of such scenes, one in which Buknas performs in El Paso, Texas, and gets the
audience to sing along to these lyrics:
With an AK-47 and a bazooka on my
shoulder
Cross my path and I’ll chop your
head off
We’re bloodthirsty, crazy, and we
like to kill
[The audience repeats]
We are the best at kidnapping;
our gang always travels in a caravan, with bulletproof vests, ready to execute!
I’m number one, code name ‘M1’ .
. . I’m backed up by El Chapo
My name is Manuel Torres Felix,
sending greetings from Culiacan (Sinaloa)40
Performing in Los Angeles, lyrics
by Los Twiins, Culiacan, who founded the Movimiento Alterado bands, include the
following:
Sending reinforcements to
decapitate
El Macho leads wearing a
bulletproof vest
Bazooka in hand with experience
Wearing grenades, death is within
The girls take off their clothes
A private party like you can’t
imagine! 41
On camera, one of the founders of
Los Twiins says, “Hundreds of clubs play this kind of music in the United
States;” people go to the clubs and “feel narco for that night. It’s an
anti-system rebellion that makes a hero out of somebody that operates outside
of the law.”42 Many people respect Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán—who is currently
in a federal prison in the United States—because of his “Robin Hood”–like
reputation for helping the poor in Sinaloa.43 People get drunk and take drugs
at these concerts, and they get into fights.
Young kids really like the corridos, and the bands that perform them, and they are practically giddy for singers starring in Mexican narco films.44 In one scene of Narco Cultura, a young schoolgirl interviewed on camera says in Spanish, “I would like to be the girlfriend of a Narco, because it’s a way of life, not anything bad. . . . Well, okay, it’s something bad, but it’s a way of life. It’s something that’s a culture for us.”45 Walmart, Target, and all the major chain stores sell music CDs of narco corridos. The music “is becoming more professional,” says Adolfo Valenzuela of Twiins Enterprises.46
Young kids really like the corridos, and the bands that perform them, and they are practically giddy for singers starring in Mexican narco films.44 In one scene of Narco Cultura, a young schoolgirl interviewed on camera says in Spanish, “I would like to be the girlfriend of a Narco, because it’s a way of life, not anything bad. . . . Well, okay, it’s something bad, but it’s a way of life. It’s something that’s a culture for us.”45 Walmart, Target, and all the major chain stores sell music CDs of narco corridos. The music “is becoming more professional,” says Adolfo Valenzuela of Twiins Enterprises.46
The top-selling narco corrido
singer is El Komander, whose logo is an AK-47. He aspires to enter Hollywood.
In addition, Mexico has an entire film industry that caters to narco soap
operas and action films, but many narco singers and actors want to make it big
in the United States, particularly in Hollywood films. Narco corridos are
enormously popular throughout the Western hemisphere, particularly in the
United States, and the drug cartels even use them to taunt law enforcement
personnel. For example, in Juárez you always hear narco corridos playing on
police radio frequencies, signifying that there has been an execution.47 The
documentary Narco Cultura points out that the, now defunct, website
www.narco.com provided songwriters with ideas; it was loaded with extremely
violent images, including real dead bodies.48 The website contained videos and
audios, including videos of cartels interrogating rival cartel members, as well
as executions, all taking place to narco corridos playing in the background.
They also make direct threats to the Juárez forensics personnel, SEMEFO, a
number of whom have already been killed.49
Narco culture encompasses more
than just drug production and smuggling and excessive violence; it also
incorporates religious and cult-like beliefs, including the deification of some
saints and drug lords, diverse iconography, spiritual roles of shaman figures,
tattoo symbols, secret hand codes, and some even practice animal sacrifices and
voodoo-like rituals.
At least two Mexican cartels, La Familia Michoacana and Caballeros Templarios (Knights Templars), base their ideologies on Christian beliefs, symbols, and rituals. According to Tony Kail, “approximately 83 percent of Mexico identifies itself as Catholic (U.S. Department of State). Various forms and denominations of Christianity are widely accepted and embraced among the Mexican population. Drug traffickers who appropriate Christian elements into their practices may find that potential recruits feel as if they can identify with the religious aspects of the group if they are predisposed to this culture.”50 Consequently, the convictions of the recruits are deeply entrenched, which are reinforced by fear tactics through excessive violence that the narcos utilize to deter operatives from disobeying orders, snitching on the drug lords, betraying the narcos, and/or withdrawing from cartel membership.
At least two Mexican cartels, La Familia Michoacana and Caballeros Templarios (Knights Templars), base their ideologies on Christian beliefs, symbols, and rituals. According to Tony Kail, “approximately 83 percent of Mexico identifies itself as Catholic (U.S. Department of State). Various forms and denominations of Christianity are widely accepted and embraced among the Mexican population. Drug traffickers who appropriate Christian elements into their practices may find that potential recruits feel as if they can identify with the religious aspects of the group if they are predisposed to this culture.”50 Consequently, the convictions of the recruits are deeply entrenched, which are reinforced by fear tactics through excessive violence that the narcos utilize to deter operatives from disobeying orders, snitching on the drug lords, betraying the narcos, and/or withdrawing from cartel membership.
Mexico is locked in a drug war
that appears unwinnable. The security forces and police have to hide their
faces in public, or else they risk getting threats, or worse, from the narcos.
Also, corruption and co-optation of government officials, the police, and a
host of other figures and business people throughout the social spectrum pose
significant challenges and obstacles to effective law enforcement efforts to
rein in the narcos.
Moreover, the drug gangs, leaders, and operatives who are in prison are capable of continuing their narco-related operations even behind bars. Therefore, if physical containment of the narcos is so difficult in the real world, one can only imagine how incredibly challenging control of their messaging in the virtual world/cyberspace becomes for law enforcement.
Moreover, the drug gangs, leaders, and operatives who are in prison are capable of continuing their narco-related operations even behind bars. Therefore, if physical containment of the narcos is so difficult in the real world, one can only imagine how incredibly challenging control of their messaging in the virtual world/cyberspace becomes for law enforcement.
Furthermore, the drug cartels are
meeting the high demands for consuming narcotics north of the border in the
United States. The top drugs of choice over the last several years in the
United States have been marijuana, methamphetamine (Meth), heroin, cocaine, and
most recently fentanyl, which has emerged with the opioid abuse epidemic. The
drug cartels in Mexico and Central and South America are very savvy in
adjusting the drug supplies to meet the contemporary demand trends.
Thus, it is important to note that if the demand for illicit drugs is so high and the volume of consumption and addictive traits only reinforce the needs for the supplies, then there remains very few ways and means—if any—to tackle the popularity of narco corridos and narco culture. In other words, the drug consumption culture, statistics, and demographics have skyrocketed in the United States. These trends provide immensely lucrative profits to the narcos, who then use the revenue to push and market the narco culture in the form of narco corridos and narco films.
The narco world and its culture, messages, violence, and criminal behavior are proliferating not only in the real world but also in cyberspace, and until now, there is practically nothing that law enforcement can do about it—especially for long-term impacts against these variables and forces. In turn, the public seems to love narco corridos, the bands that sing them, and the drugs that the cartels produce and traffic particularly to consumers in the United States.
Thus, it is important to note that if the demand for illicit drugs is so high and the volume of consumption and addictive traits only reinforce the needs for the supplies, then there remains very few ways and means—if any—to tackle the popularity of narco corridos and narco culture. In other words, the drug consumption culture, statistics, and demographics have skyrocketed in the United States. These trends provide immensely lucrative profits to the narcos, who then use the revenue to push and market the narco culture in the form of narco corridos and narco films.
The narco world and its culture, messages, violence, and criminal behavior are proliferating not only in the real world but also in cyberspace, and until now, there is practically nothing that law enforcement can do about it—especially for long-term impacts against these variables and forces. In turn, the public seems to love narco corridos, the bands that sing them, and the drugs that the cartels produce and traffic particularly to consumers in the United States.
In many ways, the narco culture,
organizational structures, methods of operations, ideologies and beliefs, use
of narco corridos to popularize the culture, use of excessive violence, and
taking advantage of cybertools bear striking similarities to the IS. In the
same vein, both the narco corridos and culture and the IS also have distinct
differences. The next section comparatively analyzes the similarities and
differences between the narco culture/narcoterrorism and the IS. In particular,
the comparative analysis focuses on the similarities and differences between
narco corridos and jihadist nasheeds.
Two-Sided Mirror: Narco-terrorism
and Jihadist Terrorism
Jihadist nasheeds and
narco-corridos have some striking similarities and contextual differences (see
table 1). First, examining the similarities between them, we see that both have
cult-like characteristics as symbolized in words, imagery, glorified heroes and
leaders, icons, and totalitarian lifestyles, for example, one’s membership in
the narco world or IS requires complete and total acceptance of the ideologies
and assimilation into the ways of life inside these cultures, and the
organizations are able to monitor and enforce the rules and practices—violently
if necessary. Jihadist nasheeds and narco corridos also glorify violent combat
and operations.
Both genres also call out their respective enemies and condemn, curse, and ridicule them in lyrics. Both genres also make reference to historical victories over enemies in wars, battles, and revolutions. Both genres use lyrics to warn enemies about the organizations’ invincibility and strength and bravery. Both parties claim divine guidance and support on each of their sides in their respective goals and causes. Both genres and their respective organizations engage in brainwashing their followers and sympathizers.
Both genres also call out their respective enemies and condemn, curse, and ridicule them in lyrics. Both genres also make reference to historical victories over enemies in wars, battles, and revolutions. Both genres use lyrics to warn enemies about the organizations’ invincibility and strength and bravery. Both parties claim divine guidance and support on each of their sides in their respective goals and causes. Both genres and their respective organizations engage in brainwashing their followers and sympathizers.
Both genres glorify violence, and
the bloodier and more grotesque and excessive in the shock value, the better;
and, both use their ideologies to justify their acts, behavior, operations,
beliefs, and lifestyles.
Both genres pay homage to their fallen heroes, or “martyrs.” Both genres are used to disseminate their respective organizations’ propaganda, messaging, and ideological worldviews.
Both genres are used to project their respective cultures.
Both genres have agendas to weaken and/or discourage law enforcement entities and personnel, and they taunt and attempt to intimidate the authorities at large.
Both genres have enemies within their own cultures—the Islamic State and al-Qaeda are enemies, and drug cartels are always violently competing with each other for drug smuggling territories and routes. Both genres extensively use social media tools, audiovisual tools, and Internet resources to expand their influence globally.
Both genres and their respective organizations systematically and strategically use children in their agendas, operations, and propaganda tools, mainly to ensure the longevity of their ideologies and establishments. Finally, both genres use their songs and lyrics to recruit members and increase popular support worldwide.
Both genres pay homage to their fallen heroes, or “martyrs.” Both genres are used to disseminate their respective organizations’ propaganda, messaging, and ideological worldviews.
Both genres are used to project their respective cultures.
Both genres have agendas to weaken and/or discourage law enforcement entities and personnel, and they taunt and attempt to intimidate the authorities at large.
Both genres have enemies within their own cultures—the Islamic State and al-Qaeda are enemies, and drug cartels are always violently competing with each other for drug smuggling territories and routes. Both genres extensively use social media tools, audiovisual tools, and Internet resources to expand their influence globally.
Both genres and their respective organizations systematically and strategically use children in their agendas, operations, and propaganda tools, mainly to ensure the longevity of their ideologies and establishments. Finally, both genres use their songs and lyrics to recruit members and increase popular support worldwide.
Second, examining the contextual
differences between Jihadist nasheeds and narco corridos, we see that the
nasheeds are based on the jihadist organizations’ interpretations of Islam and
the scripture, the Quran. The narco corridos are based on the ideologies,
tenets, and rules of drug cartels and drug lords, with religion used more as a
legitimizing prop in narco culture rather than the core ideology.
The jihadist nasheeds of the IS are composed and performed specifically for the greater objective of creating the Caliphate and continuing its agendas. The narco corridos are composed and performed for the drug cartel leaders who pay the artists. The jihadist nasheeds are not intended for lucrative profits in the same way that narco corridos seek to gain immense fame and fortune for a given band or singer.
The jihadist nasheeds of the IS are composed and performed specifically for the greater objective of creating the Caliphate and continuing its agendas. The narco corridos are composed and performed for the drug cartel leaders who pay the artists. The jihadist nasheeds are not intended for lucrative profits in the same way that narco corridos seek to gain immense fame and fortune for a given band or singer.
The jihadist nasheeds glorify
jihad, the supposedly divinely sanctioned “just battle” of good against evil,
as the IS interprets these attributes. The narco corridos also symbolize the
battle between good versus evil, but it is in the context of the oppressed poor
for whom “Robin Hood”–like figures and revolutionaries, like Pancho Villa, come
to the rescue. The only twist is that in narco corridos the drug cartel leaders
are presented as the symbolic Robin Hood heroes fighting oppression on behalf
of the poor masses.
Jihadist nasheeds have very
specific military themes and concepts; whereas, the narco corridos lyrics have
more to do with asymmetric warfare and violence against other rival cartels and
law enforcement authorities. Finally, jihadist nasheeds are derived from
legitimate religious (Islamic) hymns, and hence this makes them more difficult
to distinguish between the peaceful and “radical” or extremist nasheeds. On the
other hand, narco corridos are a unique genre in its own right, relative to the
narco culture, although narco corridos draw influences from German polkas for
the use of the accordion, as well as many influences from American rap,
hip-hop, and Gangsta music. Nonetheless, narco corridos stand out as their own
genre with no direct religious background, unlike the nasheed.
Table 1: A comparative analysis
of nasheeds and narco corridos: similarities and differences
Conclusion
The modern world of popular
culture is complex enough, and when jihadist nasheeds and narco corridos are
added into the mix, an extremely challenging problem emerges for law
enforcement, social order, and basic human decency. The jihadist nasheeds are
deliberately couched in the legitimate religious genre of the Islamic nasheed,
which has been popular for decades, if not centuries. Violent jihadist
organizations, like the IS and al-Qaeda, have strategically used nasheeds in
their propaganda, indoctrination tactics, and global appeal, especially by
means of social media and other Internet tools. Drug cartels have succeeded in
popularizing the narco culture, and narco corridos have been the primary tool
for drug lords and their organizations to glorify themselves, venerate
excessive violence, threaten their enemies, and taunt law enforcement
authorities.
Counterterrorism strategists face
formidable obstacles and challenges on a regular day, but when including the
power, influence, and reach of jihadist nasheeds and narco corridos, the
terrorist organizations seem to enjoy many advantages. Social media and various
Internet tools afford terrorist organizations, which include narco-terrorists,
an edge that they effectively exploit, and global public demand for both
nasheeds and narco corridos allows these organizations to proliferate and
sustain their longevity. Counterterrorism experts, intelligence officials, and
law enforcement authorities must consider innovative ways to disrupt the
momentum and popular appeal of jihadist nasheeds and narco corridos without
offending cultural and religious sensitivities. Moreover, countering
narco-terrorism also requires addressing the demand and consumption side of the
illicit drugs equation. Anything less will eventually threaten global peace and
security.
Dr. Hayat AlviDr. Alvi (BA in journalism and international studies, University of South Florida; MA in Near Eastern studies, University of Michigan; and PhD in political science, Howard University) joined the US Naval War College in 2007. Previously, she served as an assistant professor in the Department of Political Science at American University in Cairo from 2001–05 and as the director of the International Studies Program at Arcadia University from 2005–07. She specializes in international relations, political economy, and comparative politics, with regional expertise in the Middle East, North Africa, and South Asia. She also specializes in Islamic studies and genocide studies. She is proficient in Arabic and Urdu and is a Fulbright Fellow (Syria, 1993–94). Alvi has published numerous articles, books, and book chapters.
Dr. Hayat AlviDr. Alvi (BA in journalism and international studies, University of South Florida; MA in Near Eastern studies, University of Michigan; and PhD in political science, Howard University) joined the US Naval War College in 2007. Previously, she served as an assistant professor in the Department of Political Science at American University in Cairo from 2001–05 and as the director of the International Studies Program at Arcadia University from 2005–07. She specializes in international relations, political economy, and comparative politics, with regional expertise in the Middle East, North Africa, and South Asia. She also specializes in Islamic studies and genocide studies. She is proficient in Arabic and Urdu and is a Fulbright Fellow (Syria, 1993–94). Alvi has published numerous articles, books, and book chapters.
Notes: to access notes please use hyperlink at top to the original article
As someone who has been playing music for over 25 years, I find narco corridos appalling, maybe it just doesn't hit my musical pallet but I listen to everything from jazz, rock, death metal, bluegrass, electronic and even country...
ReplyDeleteThere will never be anyone on the level as Los Tigers, Mana or Vicente Fernández in Mexico IMO or it will be a long time till there is. Just my humble opinion
Interesting. But a bit of a stretch. Any commonalities are superficial rather than substantive.
ReplyDeleteJohnny Cash never inspires violence and his music talked a lot about criminals.
ReplyDeleteCorridos are very boring music in my opinion! The best music for the cartels are middle Eastern or from the balkans
ReplyDeleteExtremist proliferation is a concern, especially when we’re living in times of so much social unrest. Their approaches can easily be adapted by other groups seeking to achieve extremist political goals.
ReplyDelete