Iranian Women Sing Across Generations
Woman, Life, Freedom showed the world that Iranian women are not waiting for permission.
SEDA carries that spirit onto the stage — women singing where they were told not to. On the day Iran plays in Inglewood, the music that was kept quiet gets loud: legends, newcomers, and every voice in between, in public, together, at full volume.
For decades, women's solo public singing before mixed audiences was restricted in Iran. Tonight, Inglewood answers with a full lineup.
Once forbidden. Tonight, the whole program.
Sing
A woman's solo voice in public was censored for decades.
Tonight, it opens the show.
Dance
Dancing in the open has gotten Iranians arrested.
Tonight, the whole room moves.
Gather
A night like this could be shut down.
Tonight, we stay till eleven.
This is what freedom sounds like.
Iranian women singers across generations on one stage — the icons who shaped the sound, the artists who carried it across borders, and the new voices rising in LA. One lineage, equal billing, one loud and joyful night.
You don't have to agree on Iran's future to sing along with its women.
Not a party. Not a crown.
Not a foreign government. Not a war.
In every other sense, it's a party. The stage belongs to the artists.
Sunday, June 21 · Inglewood
RSVPBring someone who needs to hear it.
Bring someone who wants to dance.