Summary

2023 was a year we will never forget. It was marked as much by unchartered challenges as it was by growth and greater impact. Our work has always been informed by the premise that a community’s music is inseparable from its people and broader culture. In 2023 we were called to put that further into practice. For example, when an earthquake struck Morocco in September, impacting some of our partnering artists and communities, we led a successful direct aid fundraising campaign to assist in recovery efforts.

One month later, when the Hamas attacks in Israel occurred on October 7, we were already in the middle of our Tanfis II residency program, an ambitious project centering mainly around NY-based Palestinian artists. As the horrors of unchecked violence continued to unfold in their homelands, and as our Tanfis artists lost family members, friends, homes, and lands, we doubled down on our commitment to the creative process and our work together. The result was a life-affirming, truthful, and deeply moving body of work that we premiered in December to a sold-out audience in Brooklyn, NY.

These and other accomplishments were made possible by our addition of a diverse, stellar cohort of staff members and a wholly reconstituted board of directors. Beyond the success of our larger projects like Tanfis II, having this new team enabled us to produce several digital releases, significantly grow our online reach and engagement, amplify our community and partnership-building efforts, and systematize our work behind the scenes. 

All of this was bolstered by encouraging developments in our fundraising. In the first quarter of 2023, we raised $8,500 in individual donations from our community and secured $30,000 in institutional grant funding. By the end of the year, we secured $75,000 in institutional grant funding for 2024. While we continued to rely on large donations from our board of directors to fund the remaining annual budget, the increase in external funding demonstrated our growing visibility and the interest in the important work we do. This has helped fuel our commitment to continue co-creating spaces of belonging and mutual support through collaboratively documenting and remixing underrepresented traditional musicians and their communities’ stories.

 In-Person

Tanfis II

The highlight of the year was the successful completion of our second Tanfis residency program. Tanfis II began with a vision larger in scope than anything we’ve previously undertaken. Supported in part by grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and Brooklyn Arts Council, our Tanfis II journey began with an open call for NY-based artists from Palestinian, Syrian, Iraqi, and Lebanese diaspora communities. The invitation was to collectively explore the concept of “tanfis,” an Arabic word referring to a cathartic liberation of the soul, set against the backdrop of dehumanization, misrepresentation, and erasure faced by the featured artist communities. As a result of diligent outreach efforts led by our new Community Liaison, Waad El Hadidy, we received an impressive and diverse pool of applicants from which we selected 14 artists for the residency program. 

Over the course of several months – through a combination of in-person residencies in upstate NY and NYC and remote / independent work, diligently supported by our new Operations Manager, Danielle Andersen, and directed by our Artistic Director, Hatim Belyamani, – these artists individually and collectively explored ways to honor, celebrate, and amplify their community-rooted music and stories, and at the same time reimagine them. These explorations intensified in scope, depth, and urgency in the wake of the unfolding dehumanization, and erasure of Palestinian lives, lands, and culture. Amidst ongoing trauma, the artists bore their hearts and souls with strength, grace, and love. 

The project's key accomplishments included:

  • Collectively defining the themes, music, stories, and approaches that best serve the project;

  • Selecting and creating original arrangements of community-rooted songs;

  • Recording and filming performances of the community-rooted songs;

  • Collecting, recording, and filming interviews and storytelling content;

  • Editing and remixing the recordings and films of music and stories;

  • Creating custom digitized tatreez (traditional Palestinian embroidery) patterns;

  • Co-designing a 3-hr live experience weaving in all of the creative explorations of the residency (in the form of acoustic music, electronic remixes, video projections, storytelling) into an immersive tanfis journey;

  • Premiering the live experience on December 1, 2023;

  • Presenting the live experience a second time on January 15, 2024;

  • Building partnerships with a variety of local organizations and venues, including:

Another magical Tanfis night with the brilliant souls of @remixculture. Palestinian culture is indescribably beautiful: heartbroken, funny, furious, wise, reverent, defiant, endlessly ingenious. If you don’t know, now you know.
— Daniel Maté, activist and composer
The story I want to tell is just how beautiful every single person in this room is and how each and every one of you has inspired me so much and brought me back to some sort of resemblance of life and that is such a beautiful gift. I want to express how grateful I am that we’re able to cross paths.
— Eden Zane, participating artist
This was easily the best musical event I’ve been to, and I’ve been to a lot. I felt like we went on a journey of storytelling, empathy, and music as a community. I felt so connected to the performers and everyone in the audience.
— Tanfis Attendee
A highlight of my time in NYC for the APAP conference.
— Tanfis and APAP Attendee
With all that is happening in the Arab [world], particularly [with the] Palestinian community, the Tanfis events gave me the opportunity to join community and feel supported (breathe and heal a little) – AND I invited people who are outside the community to learn and understand more. It worked on a personal level for me, as well as professionally and in advocacy with people I brought from work (partners, donors, activists, and friends.)
— Tanfis Attendee, Daleel Thawra (international human rights organization)

Other In-Person Collaborations

In February 2023 we were invited by the Toronto-based organization Small World Music to participate in their Small World Series in a collaboration with local traditional Hindustani musicians Hasheel Lodhia and Zaheer-Abbas Janmohamed. We recorded and filmed the duo and premiered video remixes of those recordings as part of an improvised performance by our founder Hatim Belyamani (HAT) and Hasheel. The live set combined video remixing with Hindustani vocals and bansuri (flute). These recordings are currently in post-production and being prepped to release in the fall of 2024. 

 
 

While in Toronto, we had the pleasure of bringing our partner artists Innov Gnawa (the NYC-based, Grammy-nominated gnawa music ensemble) to the Aga Khan Museum. In a fantastic live concert, Innov Gnawa performed their ritual music and dance of Morocco within the monumental and stunning museum of Islamic art and culture. 

 

In March, HAT also extended the Tanfis I collaboration by joining partner artists, The Brooklyn Nomads, in a performance at Littlefield in Brooklyn, NY, that featured live video remixes of much of the Tanfis I body of work.


Online

Traditional Music Releases

In 2023, as our community of musicians grew, so did our online audiovisual library of music recordings, sample packs, and community stories, thanks to the contributions of our new release manager, Conrad Clifton, working in close collaboration with our long-time audio director, Tyler Wood. These new releases offered musical and educational journeys across the world:


Community and Fair Trade Remixes

Our traditional music releases also serve as regenerative offerings, inviting remix artists worldwide to reimagine the traditional music and join our open-access, fair trade collective. Using our downloadable samples, anyone can participate in creating new music and video art. In 2023 we promoted this participatory culture by:


Our Reach 

In 2023 we invested in creating more meaningful, impactful, and engaging content on our social platforms. This included sharing music and video from our vast archive with more educational and storytelling context. These and other efforts led by our Community Manager, Max Katz, resulted in an impressive growth in our online presence:

  • IG profile visits increased by 167.3%

  • IG and FB organic reach each increased by 100%

  • IG post frequency increased by 41.2% and story frequency increased by 137.7%

  • IG followers grew by nearly 33% after the December 15 TANFIS event (with a second large spike after the January 15 event)

  • YouTube vviews reached 14 million, with 2.4 million new views this year and over 58,000 subscribers

 
 
 
 
 

Mutual Aid

 
 

In response to the earthquake that impacted some of our partners in Morocco, we launched an online fundraising campaign. Thanks to the generous response, we were able to send money and provide relief for our partnering artist Khadija El Warzazia, her family and bandmates, and our partnering community center in Marrakesh, Dar Bellarj.

Behind the Scenes

Our Team 

In 2023 the Remix ⟷ Culture family grew as we created new roles and hired five part-time staff members

  • Conrad Clifton, Release Manager

  • Max Katz, Communications Manager

  • Danielle Andersen, Operations Manager

  • Waad El Hadidy, Community Liaison

  • Sydney Friedman, Video Editor

Thanks to the leadership and drive of our Operations Director, Darwensi Clark, we also completely reconstituted our board of directors. These professionals and experts from diverse backgrounds and fields – from non-profit development to marketing to finance and compliance – supported us with additional tools and knowledge for best executing our creative vision:  

  • Justin Adams, world renowned guitarist, member of Robert Plant and The Sensational Shape Shifters

  • Regine Basha, seasoned arts curator, writer, consultant, and podcast host

  • Steven Bean, award-winning social entrepreneur and non-profit development expert

  • Jeremy Burke, nonprofit expert in financial leadership

  • Altay Guvench, tech entrepreneur and software engineer

  • Kurt Korthals, acclaimed electronic music producer and music software engineer

  • Dominique Troy, seasoned nonprofit strategist and community-builder

  • Amita Vempati, former staff member and non-profit arts and social justice professional


Financials  

After a difficult 2022, when the COVID pandemic dried up our external funding, we are proud to have bounced back by securing more grant funding in 2023 than in previous years, along with increased donations from individual supporters. 

  • In January 2023, we kicked off a crowdfunding campaign that raised $8,500 in individual donations from our community.

  • By June, we had secured nearly $30,000 in institutional grant funding from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Brooklyn Arts Council.

  • Our online and in-person programming generated $16,275 in revenue, up from $12,610 in 2022.

  • We received $195,000 in donations from the board and large donors, up from $48,000 the previous year.

  • By the end of 2023, we received approvals for over a two-fold increase in grant funding for the following year, this time from the New York State Council for the Arts. The award consisted of $40,000 in operational support, and $35,000 in support of our planned 2024 residency program. 

This financial growth made it possible for us to not only cover $73,000 in program costs and $57,000 in operating expenses, but also to step into 2024 with over $100,000 in cash reserves.

 
 

What’s Next?

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Strengthening Our Organization

Fundraising

The growth trend in institutional (grant) funding from $0 in 2022, to $30k in 2023, to $100k in 2024 is truly encouraging. While we await responses from additional grant applications for 2024-2025, we continue to invest in strategies that bring us closer to financial sustainability, including:

  • Hiring a part-time Development Director;

  • Identifying and applying to an increased number of grants and institutional funding opportunities;

  • Strengthening and diversifying our revenue streams, with a focus on our digital releases and live programming;

  • Launching community-supported fundraising initiatives to close our budget gaps.

Staff and Board 

In 2023, we were able to find the right balance between slowly investing in increased staffing and infrastructure, while investing in new programming and serving our communities. In 2024, we plan to continue this trend by:

  • Hiring a part-time Administrative Specialist;

  • Investing in streamlined tools and processes, such as a robust CRM system, to increase the efficiency of our operational and development work;

  • Strengthening communication and workflow between staff and board members to better meet our development, operational, and programming goals.

Building on Existing Programming

Tanfis II

  • Tanfis II Live

We hit the ground running in January 2024 with a bigger and better presentation of our Tanfis II live experience, this time at the iconic Roulette Intermedium in Brooklyn, NY. The timing for this second presentation was strategically aligned with the Association of Performing Arts Professionals (APAP) conference, an annual rendezvous in NYC for nationally- and internationally-renowned live music presenters. Thanks to our diligent community outreach and effective marketing campaign, along with many improvements in form and content to the live experience itself, we attracted over 300 new attendees, including APAP conference participants. Consequently, we garnered enthusiastic interest in taking Tanfis II live to audiences beyond NYC. We are actively working with two California-based partners to bring Tanfis II to several west coast venues in the fall of 2024. We’re proud to execute on yet another part of our vision for our residency programming: ensuring that the unique live experience – which is the culmination of each residency we facilitate – travels outside of NY and continues to move more hearts and minds nationwide, and, eventually, internationally.

  • Digital release: 

In addition to the residencies and live events, Tanfis II yielded a wealth of digital content that is currently in post-production. By early summer 2024, we will release the complete digital suite of content, including music videos, EPs, audio and video sample packs, remixes, a video of the live event, and storytelling and educational content, all in accordance with our open access and fair trade model. This content not only serves to amplify the music and stories of our resident artists to an ever-growing online audience from around the world, but also offers a new starting point for an infinitely regenerative process, whereby artists join the conversation by consciously remixing our content.

 

More releases

In addition to the Tanfis II body of work, we have a number of digital libraries from our archive scheduled to be released throughout the year, celebrating community-rooted music globally, from India to Turkey to Albania to Morocco to Haiti.

New Programming

In the Fall of 2024, we will facilitate a new residency program (Tanfis III), this time centering NY-based artists who identify as Black and/or Indigenous to the “Americas.” Similar to the previous two Tanfis programs, this new residency will culminate in a longform live experience co-designed by the artists as well as digital release, both celebrating traditional and remixed music and storytelling rooted in their communities. Again, building on the Tanfis residency model, after the NY live premiere, we will seek to take the live experience to venues and audiences outside of NY and the US.

These upcoming projects and our 2024 priorities continue to be guided by Remix ⟷ Culture’s ongoing mission: to co-create spaces of belonging and mutual support through collaboratively documenting and remixing underrepresented traditional musicians and their communities’ stories. We are proud to be approaching this on both a macro and micro scale, strengthening our ties with our local NY communities, while also continuing to build new bridges with communities across the nation and the world.

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