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Great Expectations to Great Futures: British envoy Neil Crompton reflects on time in Riyadh

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Updated 18 min 26 sec ago

Great Expectations to Great Futures: British envoy Neil Crompton reflects on time in Riyadh

Great Expectations to Great Futures: British envoy Neil Crompton reflects on time in Riyadh
  • Neil Crompton discusses Ƶ’s transformation in a farewell conversation on the five-plus years he spent as His Majesty’s Ambassador to the Kingdom
  • During his tenure, three British prime ministers visited the Kingdom — Boris Johnson, Rishi Sunak and, most recently, Keir Starmer

RIYADH: Among the many foreign diplomats I have seen come and go in Riyadh, few stand out quite like Neil Crompton, who is leaving the Kingdom after having completed a little over five years as His Britannic Majesty’s Ambassador to Ƶ.

Crompton is, in many ways, the quintessential British diplomat. That self-deprecating wit and sharp sense of humor are trademarks of Crompton’s personality, which he tends to reveal only after loosening his proverbial necktie.

Like many Britons I met during my near-decade in the UK, and describe in “Anecdotes of an Arab Anglophile” (an anthropological book I published last year about my observations of London), Crompton was hard to crack at first — reserved and diplomatic, as one would expect.

But once the ice melted, I discovered a man of deep intellect, insight and genuine passion for the region.

Crompton began his journey with the UK Foreign Office in 1995, ascending through key posts before heading the Middle East desk in 2015. His appointment as ambassador to the Kingdom came in early 2020 — a pivotal time, not just for Ƶ, but for the world.

Almost immediately after landing in Riyadh, Crompton — like the rest of the world — found himself in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“I have a very vivid memory of how professional and reassuring the Saudi government response was,” he told me. “The communication was very clear. You’ve got a good public health system.”

He added: “There was a very important decision by the government that everybody in the Kingdom would be treated the same regardless of nationality, which is very important. So we felt very reassured by that.”

When the dust of COVID finally settled, Crompton began to see the transformation Vision 2030 promised, not just on paper but in reality.

“I remember going to Riyadh Boulevard for the first time. And there was a polar bear dancing on the wall to the sound of, ‘I Like to Move, Move It,’” he laughed. “It’s just a nice atmosphere, families, grandpas, grandchildren, people out and about.”




audi Arabia’s Deputy Minister for Political Affairs Saud Al-Sati receiving UK Ambassador Neil Crompton in Riyadh in Maerch 2024. (Supplied/File)

But of course, the transformation of Ƶ is not limited to opening up and allowing once forbidden forms of entertainment. “When I met lots of ministers, went to ministries, you could feel the change,” he said. “You went into ministries and you saw everyone working hard.

“People talked about KPIs. I don’t remember hearing the term KPIs 10 years ago. Maybe I was wrong, but everyone was very focused, friendly, and wanted to both advance the Saudi national agenda but work out how they could collaborate with us.

“So it was sort of a mix of social change and then sort of changing corporate ethos. Britons asked me about Vision 2030. I say Vision 2030 was a vision, but now it’s a plan, and it’s been executed and very successfully.”

During Crompton’s tenure, three British prime ministers visited the Kingdom — Boris Johnson, Rishi Sunak and, most recently, Keir Starmer.




Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer held talks at Al-Yamamah Palace in Riyadh last December. (SPA)

As ambassador, Crompton had numerous interactions with Ƶ’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. But the relationship goes back further. “The first time I met the crown prince was back in 2015,” Crompton said.

“He’s very dynamic, he’s on top of his brief. He’s always very positive about the relationship with the UK. I think he sort of talks about it as being a strategic partner, but also says, ‘you’ve been a historically reliable friend.’

“And so I think everyone always comes away fired up because he has so much energy and enthusiasm for what he’s talking about.”

The shared monarchical systems of both nations, according to Crompton, provide a foundation of mutual understanding and respect.

“I think there’s a sort of natural affinity between monarchies. We’re probably the minority in the world, but I think the royal families tend to know each other. And I think there’s a sort of familiarity.

“When Her Majesty the Queen passed, I was very touched by the messages I got from Saudis all over the Kingdom, just saying how sorry they were to see her pass.

“And connections between individual members of the royal families still go on. I know there’s constant messaging backwards and forwards, and that’s very positive.

“His Majesty King Charles, he’s a real expert on Ƶ. I think he’s made six official visits. I just met him on a couple of occasions. But each time he’d talk about things he did in the past. You remember he gave a famous speech on Islam and the West. So he’s always very interested in interfaith dialogue.

“When Sheikh Mohammed Al-Issa (secretary general of the Makkah-based Muslim World League) visited London, he saw him and he talked about the work that Ƶ was doing in those areas.

“But also, in the few minutes I had with him, he asked: ‘Tell me what’s going on at AlUla, tell me what’s going on at this.’ So I think there’s a sort of familiarity, and I hope to nurture that.”




AlUla is undergoing a comprehensive regeneration to rejuvenate its native flora and fauna. (Royal Commission for AlUla photo)

But while royalty might be well-versed in the Kingdom’s transformation, are ordinary Britons keeping pace?

“I think it takes a long time to change perceptions. There’s always a time lag,” Crompton said by way of admission.

“Initially, the sort of scale of ambition when we talked about Vision 2030, people said, ‘really, can you do all that?’ And some people said, well, even if they do 70 percent of that, it would be impressive.

“And actually, my experience … probably 90 percent (can) be done. Saudi GDP has grown by over 70 percent since 2016. New sectors coming along.”

If there was one group that quickly closed that gap, however, it was the British business community.

“One of the highlights of my time here was the GREAT Futures trade event we did last year with the Saudi Ministry of Commerce,” said Crompton. “And for that, 450 British companies came.

“But 60 percent came for the first time, a lot from the creative industries and educational sectors who hadn’t been before. And I think they all came away and said, wow. And they met Saudis and established good contacts, and a lot of business and new relationships have flowed from that.”




File photo taken during the conclusion of the Great Futures Initiative Conference at the King Abdullah Financial District in Riyadh on March 15, 2024, which saw about 450 British companies participating. (SPA)

And the numbers speak volumes. “Bilateral trade has gone up 70 percent since COVID,” Crompton told me. “Last year, I believe it was $17 billion each way. And we have a commitment … to try and get bilateral trade to $30 billion by 2030.

“$30 billion is a magic number. Which I personally think we’ll exceed. And I think investment flows each way have increased significantly. And I think in the last five years, we’ve invested $23 billion in the UK. There’s lots of Saudi private investment.”

One of Crompton’s proudest efforts has been pushing forward the UK-GCC free trade agreement.

“I think we’re very close,” he said. “The negotiations started under the Conservative government, and actually we got quite close, and then we had an election, which just slowed things a little bit.

“Free trade is important to the health of the world economy. I think it’s a political signal between the Gulf countries and the UK, a political commitment to growing the relationship.

“This would be one of our first free trade agreements with a developing group of economies. And in the GCC’s case it would be the first time you signed a free trade agreement with a G7 country. So I think that would be very important.

“But more importantly, it will reduce tariffs in a number of areas, reduce some of the barriers, or some of the regulatory or bureaucratic obstacles to growing the relationship, and it provides a platform for growing trade.”




Ambassador Neil Crompton meeting with GCC Secretary-General Jasem Albudaiwi at the GCC Secretariat headquarters in Riyadh in January 2025. (Supplied/file photo)

He added: “I think it’s 90 percent done. Both sides agree that there’s a set of issues now that can only be resolved by ministers, because they involve political decisions and if you like, a natural bargain.”

Though the GREAT Futures Initiative Conference took place under a Conservative government, Crompton is confident the strong Saudi-UK relationship will continue under Labour.

“They wanted to convey the message that the UK saw the Gulf as natural friends and important economic partners, and they wanted to maintain that relationship,” he said of the Labour government.

On the tourism front, Crompton highlighted the success of Ƶ’s introduction of online visas — and he is glad that the UK managed to reciprocate shortly after.

“The scheme went live in June 2022. Initially, you could only get a single entry visa, but now you can get a two-year visa. And our figures say close to 750,000 Saudis have applied for and used that scheme … I think we’re the only Western country that offers an online visa service.”




The Saudi Tourism Authority and VisitBritain signed a declaration of intent to collaborate and share expertise on domestic and international tourism. (Supplied/file photo)

He added: “And more Britons than ever are coming here. (For) the pilgrimage, but (also) for business or for events. I think we’re the second highest number of visitors after the Chinese. There are many more Chinese people than Britons.

“It’s important to have a good government-to-government relationship with the people-to-people links that make friends.”

It is not just tourists heading to Ƶ. Investments — and soft power — are also flowing in both directions.

“There are important Saudi investments in northeast England,” Crompton said, with the flagship being the Public Investment Fund’s acquisition of Newcastle United.

“I have friends in the northeast who say the first thing they did was professionalize the women’s football team in Newcastle.”




Neil Crompton, British ambassador to Ƶ, at his residence in Riyadh. (AN file photo)

He added: “I think people in the northeast say, well, this is really good. We want to do more with Ƶ.”

One moment that truly embodied Saudi soft power for him? When the Saudi National Orchestra and Choir performed at the Royal Albert Hall in October 2024.

“I never forget they did Adele’s ‘Rolling in the Deep.’” he said. “They started (with) the men singing the Saudi traditional Saudi song. And then I remember when the lady came in and started singing, there were hairs standing up on the back of your neck. It was really impressive.”




The Saudi National Orchestra and Choir, in partnership with the UK’s Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, delivered a rousing performance at London’s Central Hall Westminster on September 28, 2024 as part of the “Marvels of Saudi Orchestra” concert tour. (AN file photo)

The interview also touched on Saudi-UK defense cooperation, ongoing discussions about potential Saudi involvement in the Typhoon jet program, and the Kingdom’s emerging role in international mediation efforts.

Clips from these parts of the conversation are available on Arab News online.

As a parting gesture, I presented Crompton with a custom-made trophy resembling the front page of Arab News from 50 years ago — a small tribute to his time in the Kingdom.




Faisal J. Abbas presents Neil Crompton (L) with a trophy resembling the front page of Arab News from 50 years ago. (AN photo by Huda Bashatah)

True to form, he responded with classic British humor, presenting me with two ketchup sachets — a reference to a story from “Anecdotes of an Arab Anglophile” where I complained to the CEO of a major American fast food chain about not getting enough ketchup, which ultimately led to a change in company policy in the UK.

In the book, I lamented — only somewhat jokingly — how I never received any recognition from the British government for my efforts to improve UK customer service. I should be careful what I wish for, as Crompton clearly saw fit to remedy that.

I had to laugh. As Neil Crompton leaves the Kingdom, he does so with several feathers in his cap — but perhaps most importantly — with genuine affection for a country that is changing faster than most could have imagined.


Saudi surgeons successfully separate conjoined 7-month-old twins in 15-hour operation

Saudi surgeons successfully separate conjoined 7-month-old twins in 15-hour operation
Updated 14 sec ago

Saudi surgeons successfully separate conjoined 7-month-old twins in 15-hour operation

Saudi surgeons successfully separate conjoined 7-month-old twins in 15-hour operation
  • Twins Yara and Lara were joined at the lower abdomen and pelvis, had separate upper and lower limbs but shared some internal organs
  • ‘The joy after the separation of the twins is indescribable; it’s a completely different kind of happiness,” says their father Muaid Al-Shehri
  • This surgery is the 65th operation of its kind in the 35-year history of the Saudi Conjoined Twins Program

RIYADH: Surgeons in Ƶ successfully separated 7-month-old conjoined twins during a 15-hour operation at King Abdullah Specialist Children’s Hospital in Riyadh on Thursday.

Muaid Al-Shehri, the father of the twins, Yara and Lara, described the operation as a profound and emotional moment for his family.

“The support has been great,” he said. “Honestly, the joy after the separation of the twins is indescribable; it’s a completely different kind of happiness.

“There was absolutely no hesitation when we were told the twins could be separated — it was pure joy. It was truly something extraordinary. We thank God and are deeply grateful for our great nation.”

The twins were joined at the lower abdomen and pelvis. They had separate upper and lower limbs but shared some organs in the lower abdomen and pelvis.

Speaking to Arab News before the operation was completed, Abdullah Al-Rabeeah, an adviser to the Royal Court and general supervisor of Saudi aid agency KSrelief, said that one of the main difficulties surgeons faced was working in a small space where several critical anatomical features overlapped.

“The big challenge here is that we are working in a narrow space where many structures join,: he said. “We’re talking about a joint rectum, joint parts of the urinary bladder.

“This case is complex. It involves many doctors, specialists and technicians. We are expecting 38 members to participate in this surgery, from consultants, specialists (to) technicians, nurses.

“It is a delicate surgery. We expect to lose some blood but I am confident in my colleagues and their experience. We have done similar cases in the past with success, and I’m sure that (God willing) this case will be another achievement for the Kingdom of Ƶ.”

The surgery was the 65th operation of its kind in the 35-year history of the Saudi Conjoined Twins Program. Al-Rabeeah said that the work of the program continues far beyond surgery.

“The case does not end with the separation,” he explained. “First of all, immediately after separation they will need a lot of extensive care in the pediatric intensive care unit to ensure that they recover very well.

“When they recover from surgery, they will be subjected to an intensive rehabilitation and physiotherapy program so that they will be able to be active and will be able to sit and stand outdoors.”

Cases such as this one reflect the broader transformation of the Kingdom’s healthcare sector in line with the goals of the Saudi Vision 2030 plan for national development and diversification, Al-Rabeeah said.

“This is one of the most complex surgeries that are done worldwide, and Ƶ is leading the world,” he added.

“So this is actually a reflection of the (Vision 2030) that the healthcare of Ƶ will not only be of a high standard but also filled with capable young boys and girls from Ƶ.”

Dorrah Alsaadoon, a social worker assisting the family at the hospital, told Arab News that the provision of support is essential to help prepare relatives for the separation surgery.

“Psychological and social support helps the family cope with fear and anxiety, strengthens their ability to adapt, and gives them the emotional strength to face the challenges of surgery and beyond with resilience and hope,” she said.

“My role, as a social worker responsible for conjoined twins, is to provide emotional and psychological support to the family, prepare them mentally for the surgery, help them understand the medical process, and ease their anxiety before and during the operation.”

She also highlighted the fact that the care provided to the family will continue long after the operation.

“Post-surgery support systems include psychological and social support, sessions to help parents emotionally prepare for reconnecting with their children after the changes, and guidance to help them adjust to the new demands of daily life,” Alsaadoon said.

She added that the twins themselves will also require physical and psychological support.

“After surgery, the twins need physical rehabilitation to strengthen their muscles and learn independent movement, and psychological support to help them adjust to their new bodies, build a sense of identity and develop independence.”


How quantum computing and AI can accelerate and improve drug development

How quantum computing and AI can accelerate and improve drug development
Updated 1 min 42 sec ago

How quantum computing and AI can accelerate and improve drug development

How quantum computing and AI can accelerate and improve drug development
  • Quantum computing could revolutionize drug development by simulating complex molecules far faster than traditional methods
  • Ƶ is entering the quantum race, with Aramco and France’s PASQAL deploying the Kingdom’s first quantum computer

RIYADH: Using traditional discovery processes, a staggering 90 percent of drug development trials are unsuccessful. But what if there is a future in which quantum technologies could revolutionize that process to achieve unprecedented efficiency?

The race to develop quantum computers has been surging worldwide. In April, IBM announced a $150 billion investment plan to strengthen US technologies and innovation over the next five years, including a push for quantum computer development.

Additionally, the UK’s National Quantum Technologies Programme has invested more than £1 billion in quantum technology since its establishment in 2014, with facilities such as the National Quantum Computing Centre.

PASQAL in France is also a leading company in quantum research. In 2024, Saudi Aramco signed an agreement with PASQAL to deploy the first quantum computer in the Kingdom, scheduled to be up and running by the end of this year.

If the promise of quantum computing holds, the pharmaceutical industry could be looking at faster, more accurate, and less costly drug discovery and development.

The World Health Organization predicts that antimicrobial resistance to existing drugs will lead to 10 million human deaths by 2050. To stop the timer, the pharmaceutical industry must adopt new and innovative technologies.

Artificial intelligence has already had a huge impact on the efficiency and success of clinical trials, generating new materials and computationally predicting their performance rather than relying on scientists’ intuition for molecular hypotheses that then must be synthesized and tested repeatedly.

Quantum computing, however, has the potential to take it one step further. It uses special units called qubits (quantum bits), which can exist in multiple states at once and can link together in unique ways, to perform computations much more efficiently than classical computers.

In layman’s terms, quantum computers solve complicated problems quicker while AI simplifies the problem and then solves it. Quantum computers understand the problem. AI does not.

A research scientist focusing on computational catalysis with a doctoral degree in chemical engineering spoke to Arab News about the current feasibility of this tool.

“We are talking about mature technology (AI) versus very immature technology (quantum),” he said.

According to the World Economic Forum, in synergy, quantum computing and AI can lead to enhanced molecular understanding.

Although our expert heeds that “we are not at the stage where we can actually do that, we can only do it on very specific problems because there are many physical limitations… you need to be able to manipulate atoms in a very precise way that we currently cannot do.”

Quantum physics allows scientists to predict the behavior of electrons in molecules, producing detailed three-dimensional structural insight into new drug designs.

Rather than adopting traditional laborious methods such as X-ray crystallography, quantum principles and AI provide virtual simulations.

AI further accelerates this process by quickly analyzing datasets and clinical outcomes to pin down favorable drug targets and predict a compound’s efficacy.

A novel tool called quantum machine learning combines AI’s power of data analysis and pattern recognition with quantum computing’s ability to simulate complex molecular behavior throughout trillions of possibilities.

This paves the way to more accurate and faster predictions in drug binding orientation, absorption, and metabolic pathways.

QML makes it possible to sift through vast chemical spaces holding trillions of potential drug candidates in weeks or days in contrast to the years that classical computers would need.

With the integration of quantum computing and AI, compound screening traditionally executed “in vitro,” meaning outside of a living organism, can be done “in silico” instead, meaning carried out in virtual simulations.

A new quantum-AI model developed by Qubit Pharmaceuticals with Sorbonne University and announced in May of this year called FeNNix-Bio1, reportedly leverages unprecedented computational power and very accurate molecular databases.  

Employing the principles of quantum mechanics (such as superposition and entanglement), quantum computers can model molecular and atomic behavior with great accuracy and speed.

This is critical to understanding relevant properties such as molecular stability, binding affinity, and how drugs could interact with target proteins in real-world conditions.

Structural optimization and docking — determining how a drug candidate fits into a biological target, can be simplified using QML and quantum-powered algorithms.

These algorithms rapidly evaluate orientations of molecules against target structures to identify optimal configurations, and which molecules will bind most effectively. This enhances drug absorption and metabolic stability.

Quantum computing and AI models are then able to streamline the preclinical phase, delivering only the most promising compounds to laboratory validation, significantly reducing tedious lab work and enabling researchers to conduct faster and cheaper work.

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And with more accurate early-stage predictions, overall success of clinical trials is boosted, lab to market time is reduced, and the possibility of delivering targeted treatments for unmet patient needs is increased.

“You do patient trials to reduce the risk of anything going wrong with the patient, imagine if you are able to accurately predict how the drug will affect people without doing a trial. This will create a leap in how we produce drugs and how we can commercialize drugs,” our expert said.

Meeting specific patient needs based on their biological profiles rather than producing drugs for a wide demographic can drastically change our healthcare systems and how we consume products.

Patients will be able to get a drug for diseases such as Alzheimer’s, diabetes, cancer, and more without having to wait ten years for a trial to decide their fate.

You can also anticipate what conditions or illnesses people are at high risk of developing later in life and treat them early on, such as joint pain and hair loss.

It comes down to significant time reduction and improved chances of success.

“A quantum computer can significantly increase my accuracy. My chances of success are very dependent on my prediction of the performance.

“The quantum computer can make more accurate calculations that can make my predictions of the performance much more accurate. By doing that, my chances of success will be higher.

“Another way is that a quantum computer will be much faster in performing tasks, generating structures and predicting their performance than AI, and by that I will reduce my time further.”

Although we are still a long way from achieving this, the functionality of quantum computing and AI theorizes that personalized medicine and treatments for patients is possible.

“If (specific patient information) becomes accessible to those companies… then they match that information to their database, hypothetically speaking it is possible.”

Although this all sounds like the realms of sci-fi, there have been significant strides in this area of quantum research.

Pfizer and its partner XtalPi, a US-China pharmaceutical tech company, reportedly used quantum-inspired algorithms and AI cloud computing to reduce 3D structure prediction time of new molecules from months to days, enabling rapid assessment of candidate molecules and their drug-likeness.

Additionally, it is said that Qubit Pharmaceuticals’ FeNNix-Bio1 quantum AI model could be used for QML applications such predicting toxicity, side effects, and drug metabolism with greater speed and accuracy.

Taking it into perspective, our expert said: “Three years ago, no one would have thought we would have a large language model that can perform as well as ChatGPT does today, it came out of left field. A breakthrough could happen.”

However, WEF warns that before this technology can become the new commercial norm, certain guardrails need to be put in place to ensure the safe, effective, and responsible use of this novel tool.

Data integrity and avoiding bias, ethical and regulatory oversight, workforce readiness training, and a shared vision for applying best practices all must be upheld industry wide.

 


Ƶ condemns Israeli strike on Gaza Catholic church

Mourners attend the funeral of two Palestinian Christians who were killed in an Israeli strike on the Holy Family Church.
Mourners attend the funeral of two Palestinian Christians who were killed in an Israeli strike on the Holy Family Church.
Updated 17 July 2025

Ƶ condemns Israeli strike on Gaza Catholic church

Mourners attend the funeral of two Palestinian Christians who were killed in an Israeli strike on the Holy Family Church.
  • Israeli strike on Gaza’s sole Catholic Church killed three people and injured several others
  • Kingdom strongly condemns Israel’s continued attacks against innocent civilians and places of worship

RIYADH: Ƶ condemned on Thursday an Israeli strike on Gaza’s only Catholic church that killed three people.

The Kingdom strongly condemns Israel’s continued attacks against innocent civilians and places of worship, the Foreign Ministry said.

The Israeli strike on Gaza’s sole Catholic Church killed three people and injured several others, the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem, which oversees the small parish, said on Thursday.

In the shelling of the Holy Family Catholic Church in Gaza, the church compound was also damaged, where hundreds of Palestinians have been sheltering from the 21-month Israel-Hamas war.

The Kingdom said that such repeated attacks in the region, without any deterrent, require a serious stance from all countries to put an end to Israeli crimes which threaten the security and stability of the region.

It reiterated its call for the international community, especially the United Nations Security Council, to confront Israeli practices and activate international accountability mechanisms for these violations.


Robotic-assisted implantation is world’s first

Robotic-assisted implantation is world’s first
Updated 17 July 2025

Robotic-assisted implantation is world’s first

Robotic-assisted implantation is world’s first
  • Groundbreaking procedure opens new horizons in circulatory support techniques for patients with complex cardiac conditions
  • Cardiac surgery team, led by Prof. Feras Khaliel, performed the operation through small incisions using remotely controlled high-precision robotic arms

RIYADH: King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Centre in Riyadh has performed the world’s first implantation of two artificial pumps for biventricular support using robotic technology on a patient with advanced heart failure.

The groundbreaking procedure opens new horizons in circulatory support techniques for patients with complex cardiac conditions and marks a medical achievement that culminated in the patient’s recovery within a short period following the surgery.

The procedure represents a major advance in the treatment of bilateral heart failure, which was traditionally performed through full sternotomy, an approach associated with higher surgical risks and prolonged recovery.

However, the cardiac surgery team, led by Prof. Feras Khaliel, performed the operation through small incisions using remotely controlled high-precision robotic arms, resulting in reduced blood loss, lower risk of infection, and faster patient recovery.

The milestone reflects the integration of expertise across multiple departments at the hospital, including cardiac surgery, cardiology, anesthesia, critical care, biomedical engineering, and advanced life support.

The procedure was meticulously planned and benefited from 3D imaging technologies, real-time surgical navigation, and innovative solutions. 


Saudi jazz singer is hitting all the right notes

Saudi jazz singer is hitting all the right notes
Updated 17 July 2025

Saudi jazz singer is hitting all the right notes

Saudi jazz singer is hitting all the right notes
  • Loulwa Al-Sharif, also known as Lady Lou, is self-taught
  • Music shaped by loss of her father, she tells Arab News

RIYADH: From soulful Hijazi oud melodies to renditions of smoky jazz and blues tunes, Loulwa Al-Sharif is crafting a sound, shaped by personal loss, that is uniquely her own.

The self-taught singer, also known as Lady Lou, left journalism to pursue her heart’s yearnings, she said during her appearance recently on Arab News’ The Mayman Show.

 

“I knew that I loved, like, music since I was a little kid. I used to love to perform just for my family and myself, but then I stopped for a long time.

“And while I was working in the newspaper and in other jobs before that, I used to do music … part-time.”

Al-Sharif sang Arabic songs when she was young.

 

“When I was 15 years old, when I discovered that I liked to sing, I used to sing Khaleeji (Gulf) and Tarab (classical Arabic music) such as songs from prominent Egyptian singer Mohammed Abdel Wahab.

“But then when I started learning (to sing) in English, the first song I learned, with my blues brother — his name is Moez — it was ‘Ain’t No Sunshine.’”

“So just simple, you know, it’s a very simple song with him because he encouraged me, like, you have soul, and you need to do that more,” she said.

 

The death of her father was a pivotal moment in her life. At the time, she had not been performing and was still quite “shy” and lacked confidence.

“I believe that was my — I don’t know what to call it — escape or something, I don’t know. But all my emotions and my feelings were, ya’ni (like), driven into the music.

“Even, to be honest, it helped me a lot because my father was a musician, and so believing that, oh, wow, I’m doing what my father used to do and putting all my emotions into, ya’ni … it was healing.

 

“Saraha (honestly), so it was healing for me. Pursuing music and just creating and singing.”

Al-Sharif learned her craft at jam sessions, often late at night, supported by members of the Jeddah music community.

 

“First, I chose rock. I started singing, like, rock covers, you know, like Evanescence and things like that.”

She then focused on jazz and blues tunes, including from the late English singer Amy Winehouse.

 

“To be honest, I feel like I was, like, a little bird, and now I’m just, like, flying.

“It’s helped me a lot. Because I didn’t have that confidence back then, and I was, ya’ni, when I performed, I used to perform in front of, like, a few people.”