Hozier, Jesse & Joy, Mashrou’ Leila & more join Ed Sheeran for ‘Give a Home’ gigs

 
1,000 musicians will perform all over the world for Amnesty International and Sofar Sounds’ refugee solidarity concerts on 20 September.
 
Amnesty International and Sofar Sounds have added new acts to perform intimate shows for the huge global refugee concert series Give a Home. Added to the line-up are Irish Blues-Rock singer Hozier, Grammy award-winning Mexican-American pop duo Jesse & Joy, world-renowned Italian composer Ludovico Einaudi, Arabic indie heavyweights Mashrou’ Leila, and many more. The intimate concerts will take place in people’s homes around the world on 20 September.
 
The stars join a line-up of hundreds of artists that already include Ed Sheeran, who will play in Washington D.C., Fossils, slated to play Kolkata, Freshly Ground, set to play in Cape Town and Daughter and Kate Tempest, who will be among those playing in London. The full list is available on sofarsounds.com/giveahome, where fans have until 10 September to apply to win tickets for the shows taking place in their city.
 
“It is our honor to join Amnesty International and Sofar Sounds’ Give a Home concerts. The worldwide refugee crisis has reached historic proportions; we must take action from our own backyards to every corner of the globe. We stand with all refugees in their quest for the most basic freedoms; justice and equality. Art and music surpass borders: we are one,” said Jesse & Joy, who will play in Mexico City.  
 
Launched on 20 June on World Refugee Day, Give a Home aims to unite people in showing solidarity with those forced to flee their home and raise awareness of solutions to the refugee crisis. At 300 plus shows in more than 200 cities across multiple continents, music fans will host intimate gigs in their homes with some of the world’s biggest music stars, refugee artists and activists.
 
Performing alongside major artists will be refugee bands. They include pianist Abbas Abboud, singer and spoken word artist Basel Zaraa and the Orchestra of Syrian Musicians.
 
They also include Faarrow, a Canadian pop-duo formed by sisters Iman and Siham Hashi, who said: “Music for us has been about freedom, and we hope people listening to our songs feel like they can do anything. Right now governments around the world are trying to say the refugee crisis is impossible to solve, but we know it’s not true. We hope the Give a Home gigs inspire people to recognize that we have the power to help solve this crisis.” The sisters, who were born in Somalia but moved to Canada as refugees, will be playing in Los Angeles.
 
The shows are in support of Amnesty International’s I Welcome refugee campaign, which mobilizes public pressure on governments to welcome refugees. Amnesty International’s research shows that 80% of people around the world are open to welcoming refugees, yet governments are failing to do their part.
 
For more information, please contact Sue Montgomery, media relations for Amnesty International Canada, at 613-744-7667 ext. 236 or smontgomery@amnesty.ca