Wednesday, June 05, 2013

Sufi Nights at the Fes Festival of World Sacred Music 2013


The Sufi Nights are daily free concerts and a wonderful way to wrap up your day at the festival. The Dar Tazi garden venue is a great location and easy to find, being at the top of the Medina near Batha. Be warned that the Sufi Nights are very popular and so expect large and enthusiastic crowds of locals.

The Hamadcha Brotherhood at Dar Tazi

8-15 June 2013, free entry Dar Tazi: Sufi Nights from 23h00

These outdoor samaà concerts are open to all, and give a glimpse into Islamic culture through the richness and creativity of its artistic and spiritual dimensions. Musicologist Philip Murphy explains samaà - Much of what is performed is known as samaà - a form of Sufi music, and the literal translation from Arabic is audition, to listen or to hear, but with spiritual connotations. It also refers to a ritual taking place in the zawiya, Arabic for the corner of a Sufi house or meeting place, which could be attached to a Mosque, and which would indicate that the original samaâ used to meet in a corner.

Samaà is something that happens in the zawiya but is now becoming part of these cultural festivals. As Faouzi Skali explained, the evening was one of community prayer, not a performance. This is what adds intensity to the experience as it is never really a performance for outsiders, more for the Sufi’s themselves, but has now become a staged thing that has entered the world music market and festival circuits. It seems that it is a very personal celebration between the group themselves but it has also taken on the modern role as a public performance of what they do. There are some differences, for example with the Moroccan-Andalusian style there will usually be some kind of orchestra, but in the zawiya the typical way of doing it is without instruments, so it’s often just vocalising.

The samaâ isn’t really considered singing, it’s more melodic vocalising. It has been called chant, but it can be translated in different ways. The word is inshad in Arabic, which can be translated as chant or melodic vocalising, it’s distinct from singing, which has other connotations. To our ears it’s very melodic and the melodic rules, the ways that you develop melody, are similar for both, but it has to do with place, time and the role of music, it’s so very difficult to give an exact definition.

Marouane Hajji  photo: Sandy McCutcheon

One exception to the normal Sufi Night programming is the inclusion of local singer Marouane Hajji. If you intend to go along to this concert - go early! He is extremely popular and very good. His appearance will be in June 11th

Sufi brotherhoods appearing at the Sufi Nights:

Saturday June 8th: Tariqa Hassania (Laayoune)
A Sufi Brotherhood from the far south of Morocco.

Sunday June 9th: : Tariqa Habibia (Taza)
Taza, in Arabic: تازة) is a city in northern Morocco, which occupies the corridor between the Rif mountains and Middle Atlas mountains, about 120 km east of Fes.

Monday June the 10th: Tariqa Derkaouia (Azemmour)
A Sufi Brotherhood founded by Sharif Idrisi Moulay Larbi Derkaoui. He was born in 1760 in the Moroccan tribe Beni Bou Zerroual Brih. He was the disciple of the great mystic Moulay Ali Ben Abderrahman El Amrani said Jamal El Fasi who had his zawiya (lodge) in Fes, at a place called Hummat Er-Remula. The doctrine of Moulay Larbi Derkaoui proceeds from tarika Shadhiliyya jazouliya. He died in 1824 in his zawiya Bou Brih where he was buried.

Tuesday June 11th : Marouane Hajji

Wednesday June the 12th: Tariqa Touhamia (Fes)
The Taibia or Touhamia were servants of the sherifs of Ouezzane, who exercised their influence in Morocco and Algeria from the 18th cent.

Thursday June the 13th : Tariqa Hamadcha of Fes
Along with the Gnawa and the Aïssawa, the Hamadcha are one of the three most important so-called ‘popular’ Sufi brotherhoods in Morocco. The Hamadcha brotherhood was founded by Saint Sidi Ali Ben Hamdouch in the seventeenth century, and has become famous through the originality of its repertoire, its spellbinding dances, and the trance-therapy skills of its members.

Friday June the 14th : Tariqa Al Ajibia (Tangier)

Saturday June the 15th : Tariqa Ouazzania

Fes Festival program
Fes Festival Medina Map
Fes Festival Food! 

SHARE THIS!
Print Friendly and PDF

Tuesday, June 04, 2013

Australian Choir to Sing in Fes Festival Fringe


One of the highlights of the fringe events at the Fes Festival of World Sacred Music this year is the Australian choir Timbre Flaws. The 24 strong group will sing heavenly harmonies on Wednesday June 12 at 5.45 PM at the ALIF Riad in the Fes Medina. Choir director Stuart Davis told Suzanna Clarke about his venture.

Renowned choir director Stuart Davis told The View from Fez, "I visited Fez three years ago with my family and was utterly enchanted...Ever since then it has been my dream to come and sing in Fez and to be part of the Festival in some way.

"Amazingly, this time I have convinced a whole choir to come along with me on this adventure. Timbre Flaws is a unique group. We're a community choir in the true sense of the word - we are a community that loves to do things together, as well as sing."

Based in Sydney, Timbre Flaws numbers 40 singers, and 24 of whom are on this trip to Morocco. Each Wednesday they get together to sing acapella harmonies - pop, Gospel and African traditional songs. "We sing a lot of different styles, but we have tried to stay with a 'sacred' theme for this trip and will be performing sacred music from all over the world, as well as some pop music that is sacred in its own way," says Davis.

They will be giving a concert at the ALIF Riad in the Fez Medina next Wednesday June 12 at 5.45 PM, one for ALC students on Saturday June 15, as well as impromptu "pop up" concerts in the streets of the Medina.

Stuart Davis has been running community and school choirs and workshops for over 20 years, as well as singing professionally. "At the moment I direct three adult choirs and one school choir, as well as co-ordinating six other community choirs in and around Sydney," he says.

"I’m a lucky guy - my job gives me immense joy, and I know that every week 350 other people (across 10 choirs) are getting a similar dose of happiness...We are also trying to make a difference with each trip by supporting local communities...There are villages in Africa, New Guinea, India and Vanuatu who have classrooms, wells, toilets and books because we put on a few concerts."


Two years ago the choir travelled to Vanuatu and sang in churches, markets, villages, halls, schools, a hospital and a radio station.

"We took several boxes of expensive medical supplies with us to Vanuatu for a small hospital there which was unable to source them locally."

This trip, Timbre Flaws will spend 14 days in Morocco, including travelling to the desert. Here they are supporting two communities - Sahara Children and the SOS Orphanage. "We have donated money to a Sahara Children programme to buy several goats, and will be dropping into SOS to say hello, meet and sing for the kids and donate cash to help them out," says Davis.

Choir member Kevin Meagher explains, "We’re a group of people who just love to sing – whether it be each Wednesday night learning new songs or fine tuning our repertoire, or singing to audiences, big or small."

Timbre Flaws concert in Fez will be hosted by the American Language Center and the Arabic Language Institute. 

Timbre Flaws will be performing on Wednesday June 12 at 5.45 PM the ALIF Riad, 6 Derb Drissi, Batha, Fes. If you don't know the way, meet at Batha Fountain at 5.30 PM. 

Story: Suzanna Clarke  Photos: Julia Charles Photography

SHARE THIS!
Print Friendly and PDF

Monday, June 03, 2013

Visiting a Moroccan Hammam - A Beginners' Guide

What should I expect when I visit a Moroccan hammam?



A visit to a Moroccan hammam (bathhouse) is a wonderful experience and one of the best ways to meet up with Moroccans. So if you are a visitor to Morocco, don't miss out on a cleansing and cultural experience. Hammam etiquette is not an absolute, but here is a general guide to getting the most from the traditional way of Moroccan bathing.

Where to find a hammam

You will find public hammams in almost every town in Morocco, and in every neighborhood in the cities. Your hotel reception desk will know where to find a local hammam. Taxi drivers, waiters and people in the street will also be happy to give you directions.

The larger hammams have separate bathing rooms (and entrances) for men and women, some exclusively serve either gender. A third category have days of the week for men, and other days for women, or certain hours for men and others for women. You will not find "mixed" public hammams anywhere in Morocco.

A public hammam in the Fez Medina


Quite a few upmarket hotels and riads offer private hammams to their guests. Some also allow non-guests to use their baths. While these private hammams are usually more elaborate and luxurious, they also tend to be much more expensive than public bathhouses.

Some hotels and riads allow people from both genders to bathe together. Ask about their policy before you book.

What to bring to a hammam

Moroccans take the following toiletries to the bathhouse:
  • soap,
  • shampoo,
  • scrub glove,
  • towel,
  • small, jug-style plastic bucket to pour water over your body,
  • swimsuit or extra underwear
  • shaving cream and razor.
Hammams usually sell travel-size bottles of shampoo and soap. When available, buy "sabon beldi," a unique black olive oil soap. You will find this easily in the souks.  Also ask if they sell "ghasoul" or "rhassoul", a lava clay that is used to scrub the skin. The rhassoul or ghassoul is a natural mineral clay mined in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco since the eighth century. It is combined with water to clean the body and has been used by Moroccan women for centuries to care for their skin and hair. Rhassoul contains silicon, iron, magnesium, potassium, sodium, lithium, and trace elements.

sabon beldi
rhassoul


Kiis (scrub glove):  Part of the bath ritual is getting scrubbed down by the hammam attendant or by a friend – all depends on whether you have a friend who will scrub your back for you (everyone scrubs each other in the bathhouse – another cultural thing that would normally be out of place in Western culture). A "kiis" (not "kiss") costs about 10 to 15 dirham /1.00 to 1.50€ for a really good one in the souks  Scrub gloves and the small plastic buckets are available at souks (markets) and épiceries (drugstores). They both cost no more than around 10 dirham. Sabon beldi and rhassoul are also widely available in shops.

You can also rent towels for a few dirham at the front desk.


Hammam layout

When you enter a hammam, you pay the man at the front desk the entry fee and continue to the changing room. Here, you change into a swim suit or a piece of underwear. You leave your clothes on shelves in the room.

There is usually no locker-type storage available, but staff will keep an eye on your belongings. It's very rare for clothing or shoes to be stolen from a hammam, but you should not bring valuable items to a bathhouse.

The changing room often doubles as a place for people to rest after their bath. A lot of hammams serve coffee or tea in this room. So while changing, you will be surrounded by other guests. Be careful to wrap a towel around your waist as you change - full-frontal nudity is offensive.

Beyond the changing room are three areas separated by walls and connected by small openings in these walls. The first room is cool, the second room is warm and the third room is steaming hot.




The hammam ritual

After changing, the usual path through a hammam is:
  • (1) Warm room
    Here, you get your body accustomed to the heat in the hammam and fill two of the many available large buckets, one with cold water and one with warm water.

    You use some of the water to clean the floor of the space you'll be sitting on. Then you wash a first time, but just superficially, to get rid of the basic dirt on your skin and in your hair.
  • (2) Hot room
    The heat in the hot room allows your pores to open wide and let your sweat out. This brings all the dirt out that's hidden in your pores and does wonders for your skin.

    How much time you spend in this room, depends on your tolerance for heat. You can use the water in your buckets to refresh from time to time, although most Moroccans leave their buckets in the warm room.
  • (3) Warm room
    You return to the warm room for a more thorough washing. This is when you soap in completely, using the water from one bucket in the process. A fellow bather may offer to wash your back for you. This is a courtesy, don't misinterpret it for anything else.

    After you wash your skin and hair, you use the water from the second bucket to rinse the soap and dirt off your body.

    When your bath is done, you carefully empty the remaining water from your buckets along the walls of the warm room.
  • (4) Cold room
    After your bath, you step into the cold room. Many hammams have communal showers in this room, so you can rinse the last remaining dirt and sweat off your body. There are also benches in this room where you can relax for a while and let your body get used to normal temperatures again.

Getting a massage

Many hammams, but by far not all, have staff who can massage you. The more upscale (often private) hammams use scented oils for this. Here, you can also choose to be washed by staff. Such a "gommage" often involves rich olive oil soap and is a real treat.

Visitor, Michael Palin, having a massage in Fez


In the more basic, public hammams, a fellow bather may offer to massage you. There's nothing suspicious about such an offer. It's a very kind gesture, usually without financial motives, although returning the favor is somewhat expected.

People with a bad back or other ailments would be wise to abstain from a massage. Even at the hand of a professional, a massage can be quite painful, although afterwards you'll feel as new.

Getting a massage is always an option, never compulsory.


Hammam etiquette

There are a couple of things that you can do to upset Moroccans in a hammam. Wasting water is one of them. Water is scarce in Morocco and splashing it around in large quantities is considered imprudent and rude. Only use as much water as you need to wash and rinse.

Even more seriously offensive is stripping completely naked in a hammam. There are no exceptions in men's bathhouses, but in some women's hammams people have reported Moroccan women going complete naked. Still, women tourists should only bare all when they see Moroccans doing it. As a general rule keep panties on! (take a spare dry pair to change into afterwards).

Although hammams are basically for hygiene, they also have an important social function. This is especially true for more "traditional" women, who rarely leave their house except for a visit to the hammam. People like to chat in hammams, discussing the latest news and gossip.

As a tourist, you may be quite an event in a public hammam. You will receive a lot of attention. Enjoy your special status - a hammam is a great place to get to know Moroccans. Don't be surprised if you're invited over for drinks or dinner.


How much a hammam costs

A bath in a public hammam usually costs around 6 or 15 dirham. Towels, soap and other toiletries are available for a couple of dirhams.

If you take a massage from one of the staff in a public hammam, you are expected to tip him 10 or 15 dirham .

As you leave the bathhouse, it's custom to tip the front desk attendant one or two dirham.

Hammams in hotels and riads ask up to 300 to 500 dirham for a hammam experience. Expect to pay another few hundred dirham extra for a massage.


Luxury Hammam or Spa



If you are hesitant to dive into the world of a traditional hammam, then investigate the more expensive hotel/resort spas.

Part of the Nausikaa hammam

In Fez there are a number of high-end hammam and spa opportunities.

The Nausikaa Wellness Centre (See our report here). can be found on Avenue Bahnini – Route Ain Smen, in Fes. There is a separate hammam for men, a hair and make up salon, many different kinds of hydro-, seaweed and other therapies provided by staff trained in France, as well as a fully equipped modern gym with personal trainers.
Tel: (+212)035 61 00 06
(+212)035 61 00 16
e-mail: info@nausikaa-spa.com
website : http://nausikaaspa.com/

Riad Laaroussa - Spa Laaroussa (see our story here) is a private authentic hammam with traditional massage in the heart of the medina of Fez. Reservations are available on the hour. Open from 12pm to 8pm.
Email: contact@riad-laaroussa.com  Tel: +212 (0) 6 74 18 76 39 Website: http://www.spalaaroussafez.com/

Spa Laaroussa
The hammam at Riad Laaroussa


Palais Amani
- Another luxury plus hammam with some interesting products including a hand and foot bath with sea salt crystals. Pumice stone foot scrub, Black soap with argan oil and wild mint and body clay mask and wrap.
12 Derb el Miter  Email: contact@palaisamani.com  Telephone:  +212 535 63 32 09
Website: http://www.palaisamani.com/wellbeing/hammam-rituals-at-les-bains-amani.htm




Marrakech

In Marrakech there are dozens of very fine spas and hammams.  A good example is the Riad Zamzam Spa which as well as hammam offers acupuncture, hot stone therapy and reflexology. All spa products are sourced or made locally. Most are organic, made using ancient recipes handed down by elders.
Telephone: +212 661 215 062 Email: zamzamriad@gmail.com
Website: http://www.riadzamzam.com/spa/



SHARE THIS!
Print Friendly and PDF

Sunday, June 02, 2013

Clock Culture this week 3rd June – 9th June



Café Clock Cultural Program

Workshops

Cooking School

Learn to cook traditional Moroccan food in the heart of the medina
with Clock Kitchen. Fez’s first dedicated cooking school.

Calligraphy

Discover the sacred art of calligraphy with master
Mohamed Charkaoui.

Fez Download

Let us introduce you to Moroccan culture, customs and language
with Khalid. In 1:30hrs you will wow your way round the souks.

Henna

Give your hands a fancy look with a beautiful henna tattoo.

Oud

Learn to play with master musician Mohamed Semlali. Oud provided.

Djemmbe

Wild Djemmbe rhythms with Yassine. Djemmbe provided.

Jam Session

Every Wednesday from 6pm to 8pm. All musisians are welcome.

Football

Every Thursday @ 5pm in Sports Complex batha. Speak to café manager for details. All welcome
If in Cafe Clock ask manager for details 

Art Exhibitions

Graffiti Art by the urban artist Omar Lula
Gods From India Art exhibition in the Redroom
Habibi prints from a graphic novel

Cinema

Monday & Friday @ 6pm


Monday @ 6pm  Al Hay Alkhal  Directed by Farida Bourkia with Mohamed Mohammed Said, Hanan Ibrahimi and Nourdine Benkirane. The movie is in Darija with French subtitles. (free)




Friday @ 6pm  Ted Directed by Seth MacFarlane with Mark Wahlberg, Mila
Kunis andSeth MacFarlane. The movie is in English with French subtitles. (free)





Sunday Concert @ 6pm




Jilaliyat Popular female group (20dh)



SHARE THIS!
Print Friendly and PDF

Cheb Khaled and Majida Al Roumi to Star at Timitar Festival


Lebanese diva Majida Al Roumi to perform at Morocco's Timitar Music Festival later this month


While Morocco prepares for the Fes Festival of World Sacred Music music (June 7 - 15),  fans will be pleased to note that in Morocco the music keeps on coming. 

According to the entertainment pages of AlBawaba, Lebanese diva Majida Al Roumi is going to be one of the stars at the 10th Timitar Festival in Agadir, June 26-29. 

Algerian Rai singer Cheb Khaled will also take the stage after singing on Arab Idol last weekend, and Maghreb home girl singer, Latifa Rafat, will be there too along with a number of other Moroccan singers that are to be announced by festival organisers.

Majida Al Roumi

According to Sayidaty.net, the festival in the past has featured some of the hottest names in the region’s music industry like Lebanese singer Najwa Karam, Iraqi singer Kadem El Saher, and another Moroccan native Samira Saed.

Whether Majida will blow her festival predecessors out of the water remains to be seen, but the singer is sure to make a splash at the very least.


Timitar 2013 in Agadir has the theme "Signs and Culture" and organisers expect tens of thousands of festival-goers to visit the main performance areas: Place Al Amal (Sahat Al amal) Place Bijawane and the Municipal Theatre outdoors.

Timitar Festival Website: TIMITAR



SHARE THIS!
Print Friendly and PDF

Saturday, June 01, 2013

Another Fes Festival Highlight - DJ Click & the Fes Hamadcha


On the 10th of June at 10.30 pm the Bab Boujloud square will be the venue for one of the many free "Festival in the City" events that are part of the Fes Festival of World Sacred Music. This performance is an extraordinary collaboration between the famed Hamadcha Sufi Brotherhood and Dj ClicK 

The collaboration between ClicK and the Hamadcha goes back some time to a project of the French Institute in Fez . You can see our story and video HERE  The video - Dj ClicK meets Hamadcha Fez - was filmed during the recording of a new album, entitled Click Here - Fez. Dj ClicK describes the result as, "a Euro-Mediterranean creation and ritual Sufi, where tradition alongside modernity."

The Hamadcha

Along with the Gnawa and the Aïssawa, the Hamadcha are one of the three most important so-called ‘popular’ Sufi brotherhoods in Morocco. The Hamadcha brotherhood was founded by Saint Sidi Ali Ben Hamdouch in the seventeenth century, and has become famous through the originality of its repertoire, its spellbinding dances, and the trance-therapy skills of its members.

The Hamadcha’s rhythmic and melodic modes are extremely complex, and like their musical instruments, are found only within the brotherhood. A large part of the repertoire of the Gnawa and the Aïssawa is borrowed from the Hamadcha and is named “El Hamdouchiyya”. This amazing music is played during a ritual that dates back several centuries which mixes praise to the founding Saint and trance.


The Hamadcha ritual, like that of the Gnawa, has a therapeutic function. The Hamadcha were for a long time regarded as expert therapists, and Moroccans looked to them for help because of their knowledge of “medicine of the mind”.

Like all Muslim brotherhoods, the Hamadcha are subdivided into separate groups proper to each town or region. The groups are affiliated with Sidi Ali Ben Hamdouch and his descendants. During the moussem, which takes place every year, they gather at the tomb of the Saint in the region of Meknès.

Because of the modernization of Morocco, the future of traditional practices is uncertain, and the Hamadcha, as well as the other brotherhoods, are in danger of disappearing.

The Fez Hamadcha


Abderrahim Amrani Marrakchi

The Hamadcha of Fez, led by the master Abderrahim Amrani Marrakchi, distinguish themselves by their will to preserve the brotherhood from a possible disappearance. Their thorough knowledge of the repertoire and their remarkable musical skills make them the most renowned and valued Hamadcha of Morocco. They have performed on many occasions, for recordings and at festivals of traditional music.

Dj ClicK

ClicK is a cross-country DJ, who appears on his own No Fridge label, has a reputation for projects that team him up with local musicians. He has previously worked with Rona Hartner for gypsy culture, with the Moroccan Gnawa Njoum of Essaouira, with his electro-jazz collective UHT°, and collaborating with DJ Panko (Ojos de Brujo) for DJ Dolorès’ mixes brasileiros, with Zuko 103 and African mixes with Issa Bagayogo.

He has produced a dozen albums in his studio, a number of remixes such as those of Rachid Taha, Manu Chao, Warsaw Village Band, Mahala Raï Banda, Burham Öçal, Boogie Balagan and Watcha Clan, and has appeared on prestigious compilations.

At his sound desk, ClicK produces "no-visa music", infuses rural with urban and extracts living music from electronic mechanics. On stage he invents a new type of digital folk, inviting the musicians he has met to play on his machines.

Appearing at major festival, clubs and international events from Australia to South Korea, from Japan to Brazil, from the Balkans to North Africa, his worldtronica touch has paved the way for truly international cultural diversification.

More Fes Festival of World Sacred Music Info here

For more information on the Hamadcha please visit: The Hamadcha in Fes


NOTE: The Hamadcha will also be appearing at Bab Boujloud on the 12th with Ladysmith Red Lions from South Africa and the French Orchestre National de Jazz.

Full Festival in the City programme is here

SHARE THIS!
Print Friendly and PDF