Garage days

One of the most active organizers in the music industry, Jyad el Murr busies himself with his Instruments Garage, two music stations – Nostalgie and NRJ – and a host of concerts and musical events.

How’s the concert business?

Projects here are difficult to launch, and the problem is that you’ll have to start from scratch very often. You figure you’ll start making money after two or three years. Two years into it you’ll get hit with some disaster and have to stop and start from scratch again. Anywhere else, I’d have been a billionaire by now. I mean, we signed Shakira, paid Shakira and when the problems started she apologized and couldn’t make it. Shakira reimbursed us, but some artists don’t.

But you’re still trying…

We have a lot to offer. All the promoters here know that artists that come from abroad fall in love, and get great treatment. We take them out, show them a good time and they always want to come back in any capacity. The fans, people and promoters welcome them warmly. So the artists want in and the people are open to culture – now we just need a bit of stability. We have huge potential and I have a lot of passion for music.

I know; I’ve been to the Instruments Garage…

That place gave me a hard time for a while, but now I’ve invested a lot in it and it seems to be paying off. I used to have a rock band in the 1980s, you know, Fugitive Entity [laughs]. I had a lot of concerts and video clips. A large part of my week is to pick music for the radio. We get hundreds of submissions a week and spend several hours picking a handful for the stations. I think that’s what makes NRJ and Nostalgie successful.

Any favorite concerts?

I think it was A-Ha. They touched me the most. The event was beautiful inside out. Outside the country my favorite performances are Leonard Cohen and Pink Floyd. There’s a lot of good to look forward to in the world of music.

And the country?

I’m not as optimistic, but comparatively it’s not bad. I’ve worked in far worse situations. I mean, we still played music and still opened the store during the attacks. We’ve endured fighting in the streets and everywhere else. Everyone has. I’m more optimistic than before, but the tension in the country is not very healthy. I’d invest more if I felt a little more comfortable about the country.

What’s your favorite place in the country?

I like central Achrafieh. I want to buy an old house there someday and move in. It’s a city. I like having all these stores around. I like walking out and picking up a sandwich. I’d like my daughter to walk out and buy her chocolates. These days I have to drive her every time she wants that.

Jyad runs one of the coolest guitar stores in the country, and one of the only places that lets you touch the equipment. Check out the Instruments Garage website here.
Written for Time Out Beirut

Article by Karl

I'm Karl, and I'm an acquired taste. I've been an editor for 4 years, a writer for 5 more, and a geek ever since I wrote Pong on my first Atari. I'm married to the perfect woman and we live in the desert.
Karl tagged this post with: , , Read 88 articles by

Facebook comments:

2 Comments

  1. JK says:

    my past 2 guitars have been from there: a BC Rich Warlock , and now a WI65 Washburn … the place is very nice and the guys are friendly and always helpful. You can’t walk out of there except with a smile on your face …
    …. now, we gotta get Dream Theater to play in Leb ….

  2. Agénor says:

    Mmmmm…. I sense a reccuring theme here^^
    So it seems I have to love the people out there to get a chance to see Dream Theater around here. Fine, I adore you all and will buy you drinks if you ask properly. Can I have them play A Change of Seasons now?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Notify me of replies via e-mail. You can also subscribe without commenting.

Random posts

  • Mix up: One of the only women in the local DJ industry, Shadia Bseiso's and her mixes have caught on like a regional wildfire.
  • Chalk please!: I know he was being helpful, but I’m neither blind nor stupid; what bothered me the most though, is that I’d actually asked for wine, not wipes.
  • Evidence: Memory is a fragile faculty, subject to time, lies, alcohol abuse and a hundred different chemical errors that could erase the unforgettable as easily as yesterday’s lunch.
  • Runway comfort: Rabih Kayrouz lets Beirut speak through his designs. He believes that good clothes, like good homes, should be as comfortable to live in as they are beautiful to look at.
  • Monkey seeds revolution: Corporate Lebanon is a repressive, power-hungry world with nary a ray of hope. One monkey fights back!
  • Cats in heat: The way cats go about the mating dance leaves little wonder why the species never got around to developing real societies
  • Mother of 30: Mama Jamale is a surrogate mother to more than 30 children. She has helped two generations of SOS Village children and looks forward to supporting many more.
  • Fat in Beirut: So, three fat women walk into a government office in Beirut; did that sound like the front end of a bad joke? Let me try again.
  • Grass and kufta: Somewhere in my late twenties I joined the Time Out family, and within a year I had built a mental database of cheeses, meats, oils, herbs and plenty of things that I’d never before let into my stomach.
  • Caramel: Creator of Caramel, Lebanese producer and silver screen heroine Nadine Labaki is surprised by her success, and grateful for the learning experience.
  • Dirty Diana: Our eyes locked and he let out a menacing squeak. I lunged at him, and he was gone before I landed. The hunt was on.

Recent comments

  • Hani Bathish on Burned breakfast: Great article, there are a few ‘alleged chefs’ and restaurateurs I...
  • GASS on We’re married!: you’re so cute guys !
  • nicolien on Love me Dutch: Dutch people definitely rock… and we also know how to pick us some nice Lebanese...
  • yasmine on Google hates Arabs, and housekeepers?: This is the most entertaining thing yet – I can’t stop...
  • Abbie on Monkey seeds revolution: Sometimes it’s simply hard to understand how “stupid” ppl can be....
  • Mack trucks on Drob frem: It is great that from a war toned country a super car designer is evolved. There is no...
  • Hani Bathish on Monkey seeds revolution: Oh man, I can’t tell you how many times I have slammed into human...
  • Jad Aoun on Monkey seeds revolution: I’m still here juggling a thousand and one things. Just shared your post...
  • Jad Aoun on Monkey seeds revolution: Absolutely hilarious! Not only did you eventually get the green light to run the...
  • tasteofbeirut on Bearded bells: I have been enjoying your pieces.
  • Sonia on We’re married!: I am amazed to see all these came true. You are a beautiful couple and very nice...
  • Georgia on We’re married!: And here was me thinking you’d fallen off the edge of the planet…....