Sunday, June 30, 2013

Artists Respond: Exhibition and Performance in Fez

The View From Fez correspondent Vanessa Bonnin's photographs feature in an exhibition and performance event AiR Sidi Ali - Artists Respond, opening on Tuesday July 2 at the French Institute


In January this year, during a week long artists' residency with four other artists, photojournalist Vanessa Bonnin explored the religious Moussem celebrating the Prophet's birthday at the town of Sidi Ali near Meknes. Taken during a Gnaoua lilla, her photographs hint at the mystical and sensual side of the ceremony.

"At Sidi Ali I met a chaufa, a woman who tells fortunes, who invited us to this Gnaoua lilla. Although I was allowed to take photos, there were also restrictions such as respecting people's identities, so I did an artistic rather than literal interpretation.

"The whole artists' residency was so intense it took a really long time to be able to process it. It feels like the residency continued beyond that week and the exhibition is the culmination."

An Australian photojournalist, Vanessa completed a degree in journalism and photography at Perth's Curtin University. After graduation she worked on the Melbourne newspaper The Leader for three and a half years. Her alter ego is as the host of one of Fez's top restaurants and boutique hotels, Dar Roumana.

Musicians in Sidi Ali before a performance 
The AiR Sidi Ali - Artists Respond residency was run by artist Jess Stephens from Culture Vultures, who will be exhibiting several of her own works and a series of adornments inspired by the rituals and music-based ceremonies at the Moussem.

The other artists include Hollis Bennett, a photographer from Texas, US, whose work focuses on small groups of people. "He shows their individual intricacies and how they fit into society by standing apart," says Jess.

Rene Kladzyk, a multidisciplinary artist based in Brooklyn, New York, will do a solo performance, CROWNWORC, using sound and movement. It is inspired by the practices of possession and trance at the Moussem.

A video installation by Fez based contemporary dancer, Camelia Hakim, calls on her research into Gnaoua ceremonies.

The AiR Sidi Ali event will be in two parts - an exhibition which opens on Tuesday July 2 at 6.30 PM and runs until August 31, and the performance by Rene Kladzyk at Dar Batha in the Fez Medina at 8 PM.

This year Jess Stephens plans to run the residency again and artists are invited to apply until September 1. For info, CLICK HERE. 


When: Exhibition opens Tuesday July 2 at 6.30 PM and runs until August 31. Performance on Tuesday at 8 PM. 
Where: Exhibition is on at the French Institute Gallery in the Ville Nouvelle, and the performance is on at Dar Batha. 
Info: CLICK HERE

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Visiting the Fez Medina? Dive Into Local Culture with Café Clock


Every Week Café Clock hosts a range of activities that can add a cultural boost to your visit to Fez. Here are this weeks offerings.

WORKSHOPS
Clock Kitchen
Learn to cook traditional Moroccan food in the heart of the medina with Clock Kitchen. Fez’s first dedicated cooking school, a new addition to the renowned Cafe Clock

Calligraphy
Discover the sacred art of calligraphy with master Mohamed Charkaoui. Private lessons by arrangement. Speak to café manager for details.

Fez Download
Let us introduce you to the Moroccan ways with Khalid (French, English and Arabic), 2hour session on culture, customs and Language, call  0535637855 or come into Cafe Clock


Get your henna at the Clock!

Henna
Give your hands a fancy look with a beautiful henna tattoo for 100dh. Speak to café manager for details.

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


CINEMA
Monday & Friday @ 6pm
Al Boyout Asrar Directed by Asayed Ziada with Adil Imam, Amira and Sohir Ramzi. The movie is in Arabic with French subtitles. (free)
Casino Royale Directed by Martin Campbell with Daniel Craig, Eva Green & Judi Dench.The movie is in English with French subtitles. (free)

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

FOOTBALL
Every Thursday @ 6pm in Sports Complex Batha. Speak to café manager for details. All welcome

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

CONCERT

Sunday Concert @ 6pm
Jilaliyat Popular female group (20dh) 




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"Amazigh and Andalusia" ~ The Fez Festival of Amazigh Culture



The Fez Festival of Amazigh Culture is at its 9th Edition and this year has the theme: "Amazigh and Andalusia". The festival takes place at the Palais des Congres with concerts at Bab Al Makina and Jardin Lalla Meryem

Amazigh women performing at last year's Amazigh Festival (photo: Sandy McCutcheon)


The Fez Festival of Amazigh culture returns in beautiful form. From July 5 to 7 Fez will be transformed into a city where singers and poets from various regions of the Kingdom and from friendly countries are invited to participate in the festivities of this great cultural event.

Organized under the High Patronage of His Majesty King Mohammed VI at the initiative of the Spirit of Fes Foundation, the North South Centre and Fez-Saiss Association, the fusion between debate, song and poetry is designed to advocate cultural diversity, preserve its authenticity and promote this rich heritage.

This edition is organized in partnership with the Region of Fez Boulemane, the City Council, the Royal Institute of Amazigh Culture, BMCE Foundation and Maroc Telecom, with the participation this year of several countries including Spain, Algeria, France and Italy.

It will be marked by the tribute which will be paid to Mr. Abdeslam Ahizoune, CEO of Maroc Telcom for his remarkable contribution to the revival of Amazigh and Moroccan culture in general. It will also be marked by the participation of well-known poets from Morocco and Europe, such as Mohamed Mestaoui, Ali Amran, or Abdelaziz Stati who will be honored by the festival as well.

The program this year includes an international congress on the role of the Amazigh component in Andalusia and its impact on migration, as well as writing workshops, music performances, poetry readings and the presentation of two works by 2M award-winners in the last literary competition, namely Mustapha Mellou: Tiwtmin yufn urgzn (novella) and Sanae Zahid Khabbach Id: Talalit Izwarn (Poetry). The program also includes exhibitions of works of art, of Amazigh Moroccan carpets and handicrafts.

Fatima Tihihit

The festival will be a stream of music, dance and songs, Najat Atabou, Abdelaziz Stati, Ali Amran Algeria, Flamingo Tablao of Catalogna Cataldo Perri Italy, Fatima Tihihit, Najmat Rif Ahidous Mgouna and others will illuminate Fassi nights through 20 concerts taking place on the legendary stage of the Bab Makina and Lalla Amina Garden.

Abdelaziz Stati

In addition to the exhibition of works of art by Khadija Madani, Jamal Boutayeb Abderrahim Hassani, Yassine Bouriaz, Cherki Ali and Hassan Attifi, the program features a play in Amazigh titled "Who are you and what did you do?" by Mohamed Dasser and a writing workshop with the French writer Jean-Marie Simon.

The Fez Festival of Amazigh Culture, which has now become a major annual cultural event, aims to enhance the values of tolerance and brotherhood/sisterhood and promote the Amazigh culture and opens, as usual, its scenes of traditional music to the young musicians from North Africa and the Mediterranean region. This festival is also working to consolidate the development process, the values of peace, dialogue and social cohesion.

Programme

Festival de la Culture Amazighe

The public are welcome to attend concerts, interact with speakers and world-class experts and to participate in discussions.

There is no entry fee and entry to all concerts is free. For those of you who come from outside of Fez, the organisers can help you get a reduced hotel price or shelter rates.







July 5th
PALAIS DES CONGRES
Congrès Mondial sur “Amazighité et Andalousie »
Ouverture : 16 :00 - 18 :30 -OUVERTURE
-HOMMAGE A ABDESLAM AHIZOUN
-PREMIERE SEANCE DU CONGRES

JARDIN LALLA MERYEM
19 :00 - 21 :00 - AHIDOUS KALAAT MGOUNA (Maroc)
-MAJID MOURAD (Maroc)

BAB MAKINA
21 :30 - 23 :30 - AHIDOUS KALAAT MGOUNA (Maroc)
- NAJAT ATABOU (Maroc)

July 6th
PALAIS DES CONGRES
Congrès Mondial sur “Amazighité et Andalousie »
9 :00 - 14 :00
17:00- 18:30
-TRAVAUX DU CONGRES ET DEBATS

-ATELIER D’ECRITURE
-projection de film « Explusion 1609 La Tragédie de Morisque

JARDIN LALLA MERYEM
19 :00 - 21 :00 - Group Kwasser (Maroc)
- ALI AMRANE (Algérie)

BAB MAKINA
21 :30 - 23 :30 - Groupe Kwasser (Maroc)
- Fatima Raissi Tihihit Banou

July 7th
PALAIS DES CONGRES
Congrès Mondial sur “Amazighité et Andalousie »
9 :00 - 13 :30 -TRAVAUX DU CONGRES ET DEBATS
-ATELIER DE L'ALPHABET TIFINAGH
- LECTURE DE POESIE

JARDIN LALLA MERYEM
19 :00 - 21 :00 - FLAMINGO (Espagne) : Fès-Andalousie
- Najmat Rif (Maroc)

BAB MAKINA
21 :30 - 23 :30 -Ahidous Tahla
- ABDELAZIZ STATI (Maroc)


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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

2013 Volubilis Festival Programme Announced


The 14th edition of the Volubilis Festival is being held between the 3rd and 8th of July in Meknes, and the lineup is impressive.


Opening night will be an interesting cultural mix, with the Maria Pomianowska group from Poland, a folklorique Turkish ensemble and the Moroccan outfit, Rouh Meknes featuring Yassin Habibi.

Maria Pomianowska
It is a great start to what promises to be a fascinating festival with music from Martinique, Peru, France, Turkey, The Ivory Coast, Spain and (incredibly) a troup from the Beijing Opera!

Beijing Opera 
THE FULL PROGRAMME


For more information: contact Contact M.Bouselham Daif
Mail: bouselham.daif@gmail.com


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Moroccan Photography Tours For Photographers

A series of photography tours with a difference - a photography course where Morocco is the subject. Each ten day course is a tour of Morocco designed by photographers for photographers.

Photo projects will include: portraiture, model work, architecture, ethnographic, documentary, editorial, and entertaining (maybe even slightly competitive) scavenger hunt assignments.

The trip will be an intense immersion into both photography and Moroccan culture. And one of the best ways to see/frame a culture is to understand and learn about your subject.


Youssef Khalfaoui, the Moroccan Photographer and tour leader has been a tour coordinator and leader for over 15 years and is an avid photographer. He is fluent in Arabic, Berber, French and English.

Jake and Youssef

Jake Warga is from Seattle. He is a professional photographer, journalist and instructor who fell in love with Morocco while working on a photo assignment for the Morocco Tourism Bureau. His photos are represented by Corbis and Getty Images, and a multimedia series Faces of Africa was exhibited at the Seattle Art Museum. He teaches photography and filmmaking and holds a masters in Visual Anthropology from the University of London. Jake has traveled to over 50 countries for various assignments and personal curiosity.

Jake has been featured on The View from Fez several times in our Photo of the Day series. He is also the man behind the wonderful artisan series - a story we ran back in May (see it here).


For additional information and contact details please visit: http://moroccophototours.com/

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Friday, June 21, 2013

Royal Air Maroc Set To Expand With New Aircraft


According to reports carried by Reuters, MAP and other agencies the Moroccan national airline, Royal Air Maroc (RAM) is in the market to buy up to twenty and thirty new-generation planes, including fifteen medium-haul and five long-haul jets



Driss Benhima, the RAM CEO says that he would like to purchase the aircraft "as soon as possible".

Royal Air Maroc's fleet of about 44 medium and long-haul aircraft is becoming obsolete, at the same time as the airline has sought to develop Casablanca as a regional hub, connecting mostly poorly served west African capitals to Europe and North America.

"We wish to renew our fleet with the new-generation planes, and we need between 20 and 30 additional jets by 2020", RAM Chief Executive Driss Benhima told state news agency Map.

For long-haul, Benhima said he would be interested in the Boeing 787 Dreamliner, which competes with Airbus 350 , as the aircraft burns 15 percent less fuel than the current generation.

He said the Airbus Neo and Boeing Max were attractive medium haul options while the C series of Bombardier or Embraer were also being considered.

"If we want to develop and protect our market share, we must think of buying new planes," the CEO said.



RAM is looking beyond the Euro crisis which hit tourism, its main source of revenue, to develop its business and take on competition from European airlines. Morocco signed an Open Skies agreement with the European Union in 2006 allowing new airline competitors, including low-budget carriers such as Ryanair and easyJet.

Benhima didn't give details for the company's financing plan. The company's operating profit was 718 million dirhams ($84.5 million) in 2012, the best result since the 1990.

Morocco, which has been thinking about reducing its stake in RAM for more than 20 years, led major efforts to restructure the group last year in a move that tourism operators said was a sign the state was preparing for a sale.

But the transport minister Abdelaziz Rebbah has said he would rather pursue a strategic partnership with an airline from one of the Gulf states or beyond, than sell a stake in its flag carrier.

Regular travellers will also be hoping that inflight service will be upgraded to match the new aircraft as onboard refreshments have lately been widely criticised as being way below international standards.  "A stale bread sandwich is not an inflight meal," according to one recent passenger.


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Women's Rights and the Arab Spring Conference in Fez


The international conference on International Forum: Mediterranean Women's Rights in the Aftermath of the ‘Arab Uprisings’ got off to a great start at the Palais Des Congres in Fez this morning. 


In front of a packed auditorium, Valentine Moghadam, Director of the Program of International Affairs at the Northeastern University in Boston set the tone with a keynote address; Revolutions, Democratic Transitions, and Women’s Rights: The Arab Spring in Comparative Perspective. 

Unlike some recent events in Fez, the simultaneous translations worked perfectly and made Moghadam's speech available to non-English speaking members of the audience.

Valentine Moghadam

The address included fascinating comparisons between the gender outcomes of democratisation in various parts of the world. The countries where positive outcomes had resulted, such as Argentina, Brazil, Chile, The Phillipines, South Africa and Northern Ireland, were compared with the less egalitarian outcomes in Eastern Europe and Russia.

Valentine Moghadam reserved judgment on countries such as Indonesia and Turkey where, as she put it, "the case is still to be made".

The factors predicting or explaining gender outcomes, Moghadam pointed out, included the status of women and their legal situation under the previous undemocratic regimes, the number and mobility of women's groups and the nature of the transition. She noted that slow transitions to democracy tend to produce better outcomes than swift ones.

Advances in gender equality where also effected by external factors such as wars and invasions on the negative side and attention from international women's organisations on the positive side.

Valentine Moghadam rounded out her address with some key goals for a new social and economic contract for women. These included among others, paid maternity leave, subsidised childcare, the right to inheritance equality, unemployment benefits, freedom from sexual harassment in the workplace and the right to obtain a passport and travel without needing permission from a husband or relative.

Fatima Sadiqi (left) and Valentine Moghadam

Congratulations to Fatima Sadiqi and her committee for organising this important conference and, if the first day is anything to go by it will be a fascinating and worthwhile event.

The conference aim is to encourage projects that promote partnerships by pooling resources to solve common or specific problems found in the Mediterranean region.

The countries that will be represented at the Forum are Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, Mauritania, Egypt, Lebanon, Yemen, Palestine, Jordan, Turkey, Iran, France, Belgium, Italy, the Netherlands, Canada, the United States of America, and Morocco.

The feminist movement in the Mediterranean has become increasingly effective in attracting widespread support, as this conference demonstrates.

According to organizers, the women of the Mediterranean combine expertise and knowledge specific to the ancestral values ​​of family, community and social cohesion in an ever changing world. They point out that women's rights in the southern Mediterranean have experienced in recent decades, a significant improvement although with ups and downs.

The conference continues until June 23rd. Entry is free.

For more information please contact: Contact: Prof. Dr. Fatima Sadiqi (ISIS), Academic Director sadiqi_fatima@yahoo.fr

To read the full programme and all the details: CLICK HERE

Text: Sandy McCutcheon
Photographs: Suzanna Clarke

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Thursday, June 20, 2013

International Women's Forum in Fez Tomorrow


REMINDER! The 6th edition of the Mediterranean Women's Forum is starting tomorrow Friday June 21 at 9 am.




An important International Forum will take place in Fez from June 21 to 23. The presence of women in the "Arab Uprisings" has not resulted in marked improvement of the position of women in society.  This forum will tackle big and important issues


The international forum is hosted by the Isis Center for Women and Development and the Rabat office of the Konrad-Adenauer-Stftung. The forum takes place at the Palais des Congrès in Fez from June 21 to June 23.



Women’s rights in the south of the Mediterranean have been on the rise with ups and downs. There seems to be a backlash on these rights after the Arab uprisings. In reflecting on women’s rights two years after the uprisings, many paradoxes come to mind.

On the one hand, we have witnessed a spectacular presence of women of all ages, ideologies, ethnicities and social statuses during the political mobilization of the uprisings (as has been well documented by the media).

Yet, on the other hand, and here is the first paradox, in Egypt, Tunisia, Morocco, and Kuwait, the newly elected governments have a very weak, if not a zero, representation of women. Furthermore, the political Islamization of the MENA region is a fact (with the adjectives "moderate" and "salafist" added according to the Islamic dose involved).

However, and here is the second paradox, what most advocates of women’s rights (scholars and activists) had scored through decades were also “Islamic” gains. Women’s rights advocates in the region fought to improve, not replace, Sharia laws and they have targeted patriarchy, not Islam. These two paradoxes call for serious debate and action. The goal of the forum is to discuss the new challenges facing academics, activists and politicians.


The forum is organized around nine major axes:

  1. Equality of sexes in the new constitutions
  2. Feminist discourses in the region (secular/liberal and Islamic feminisms)
  3. Feminine and feminist activisms
  4. Women’s political participation in the eve of the Arab uprisings
  5. Women and economic empowerment
  6. Women and cultural Rights
  7. Rural Women
  8. Women’s rights and public/individual freedoms, masculinites
  9. Women and transnational networking
The languages of the forum will be : Arabic, French and English.

For more information please contact: Contact: Prof. Dr. Fatima Sadiqi (ISIS), Academic Director sadiqi_fatima@yahoo.fr


To read the full programme and all the details: CLICK HERE


The forum is open, no fee.


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Moroccan News Briefs #99


9th edition of the Festival of the Amazigh Culture
Festival de la Culture Amazighe

The 9th edition of the Festival of Amazigh Culture takes place in Fez from the 5th to 7th of July. It is billed as a World Congress and has the theme "Amazigh and Andalusia".

The Congress will be held at the 'Palais des Congres' during the day and live music in the Lalla Meryem garden next to the Grand Hotel at 7pm and Bab Makina from 9:30 p.m.

The public are welcome to attend concerts, interact with speakers and world-class experts and to participate in discussions.

There is no entry fee and entry to all concerts is free. For those of you who come from outside of Fez, the organisers can help you get a reduced hotel price or shelter rates.

Programme

VENDREDI 5 JUILLET 2013
PALAIS DES CONGRES
Congrès Mondial sur “Amazighité et Andalousie »
Ouverture : 16 :00 - 18 :30 -OUVERTURE
-HOMMAGE A ABDESLAM AHIZOUN
-PREMIERE SEANCE DU CONGRES

JARDIN LALLA MERYEM
19 :00 - 21 :00 - AHIDOUS KALAAT MGOUNA (Maroc)
-MAJID MOURAD (Maroc)

BAB MAKINA
21 :30 - 23 :30 - AHIDOUS KALAAT MGOUNA (Maroc)
- NAJAT ATABOU (Maroc)

SAMEDI 6 JUILLET 2013
PALAIS DES CONGRES
Congrès Mondial sur “Amazighité et Andalousie »
9 :00 - 14 :00
17:00- 18:30
-TRAVAUX DU CONGRES ET DEBATS

-ATELIER D’ECRITURE
-projection de film « Explusion 1609 La Tragédie de Morisque

JARDIN LALLA MERYEM
19 :00 - 21 :00 - Group Kwasser (Maroc)
- ALI AMRANE (Algérie)

BAB MAKINA
21 :30 - 23 :30 - Groupe Kwasser (Maroc)
- Fatima Raissi Tihihit Banou

DIMANCHE 7 JUILLET 2013
PALAIS DES CONGRES
Congrès Mondial sur “Amazighité et Andalousie »
9 :00 - 13 :30 -TRAVAUX DU CONGRES ET DEBATS
-ATELIER DE L'ALPHABET TIFINAGH
- LECTURE DE POESIE

JARDIN LALLA MERYEM
19 :00 - 21 :00 - FLAMINGO (Espagne) : Fès-Andalousie
- Najmat Rif (Maroc)

BAB MAKINA
21 :30 - 23 :30 -Ahidous Tahla
- ABDELAZIZ STATI (Maroc)


INLAC boosts intercultural exchanges

Fatima Sadiqi reports that the International Institute for Languages and Cultures (INLAC) in Fez, has recently hosted students and staff from Lewis and Clark (University of Oregon, Protland).


The semester long program allowed fruitful interactions between American and Moroccan students and boosted intercultural exchanges between the Amercian and the Moroccan cultures.


Casablanca gets its first detective novel

Karima Rhanem, writing for Morocco World News, reports that a novel, Inspector Dalil in Casablanca being published today will be the first crime novel set in Casablanca that the country has produced. The author is Moroccan writer and journalist Soufiane Chakouche.

Published by Casa Express Editions, the novel tells a story of Dalil ("proof" in English) a brilliant police inspector from Tangiers with a devastating humor. On the day of his 50th birthday, when he was planning to visit the beautiful Rayna in cadiz, he got another mission, but first of its kind: to stop a dangerous serial killer in Casablanca.


The killer adds fuel to fire by assassinating public figures known for their opposition to the regime in the context of “Arab Spring.” The police and crime scene investigators are dispatched in different dark corners and lost in the madness of crowds.

Intrigue, wordplay, anagrams, puzzle to a reader who loves to read between the lines. With this first novel, the thriller author of Soufiane Chakouche signs a new era in Moroccan literature. With Inspector Dalil, Casablanca finally gets its first police novel.

Soufiane Chakouche
Inspired by Casablanca where he was born, author Soufiane Chakouche said that “there is an incredible movement in Casablanca streets, you meet people from all walks of lives with different stories, and millions of things happened there every signle minute. As you read the novel, you will see unprecedented things and I tried as much as I can to engage the reader to solve a puzzle of the murder.”

The character of “Dalil” was born during Chakouche’s first novel The Third Eye published by Marsam editions in 2010, after taking part in the French Cultural Center’s national contest “The New black,” referring to police novels. Soufiane Chakouche was selected among the eleven winners. And the journey of writing begins. Inspector Dalil became popular among the public who has been awaiting a new adventure. The writer’s background in engineering and statistics increased his reasoning ability and made him a perfect writer for this writing style.

So do you think that inspector Dalil will be able with the help of his hacker nephew to stop the serial killer known for using Beretta, a semi-automatic pistols made in Italy? You will find the answer today in good bookstores and libraries.


The World's Best Butter - Now available in Morocco


According to the Morocco's latest customs figures, New Zealand has strengthened its butter sales to Morocco to now account for just over half of Morocco's total imports of butter this year.

By contrast, European imports accounted for a little over 8% of all butter sold to Moroccan buyers by foreign traders in the first four months of 2013. In New Zealand dollars the trade is worth around 57 million.

New Zealand also exports cheese and curd products to Morocco.

And finally

During a lecture after Magrib salaat (evening prayer) Imam Mula Nasruddin suddenly announced: “If you know your wife is controlling you, please move to the left.”

All the men in the Mosque moved to the left except Jallaluddin.

Mula Nasruddin was very amused and asked: “How is it that your wife can't control you?”

Jallaluddin quietly and very nervously replied,“Imam, it's my wife who told me not to move!"

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Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Fes Festival of World Sacred Music 2013 ~ The Wrap Up


The 19th edition of the Fes Festival of World Sacred Music is over.  Here is a retrospective look at what many are describing as one of the best festivals so far. Picking favourites and highlights is often a difficult task, but this year audiences and reviewers alike had very similar choices.


The opening night spectacle (see review here) was the presentation of the premiere of Love Is My Religion, which is best described as Andalusia recreated through poetry, dance and music. It was everything an opening night performance should be and one of the best to date.

The performance, directed by Andrés Marín, featured more than thirty Arabo-Andalusian, Sufi, Amazigh and Spanish flamenco artists and included: Andrés Marín, dance, Carmen Linares, vocals, Amina Alaoui, vocals, Cherifa, vocals and Samira Kaderi, vocals. The music co-ordination was by Aziz Al Achab.

Right from the beginning, with the Andres Marin's display of passionate flamenco, the audience knew they were in for something special. Marin, unaccompanied, moved across the stage, taut and birdlike. Soon he was joined by a haunting clarinet until the piece built ultimately to include ouds, drums and cellos. He moved with core muscles braced and back arched, his heels mimicking the clatter of horse’s hooves.


However, the highlight for many was the appearance of Amazigh singer Cherifa (pictured above). As she entered the stage, flanked by Arab artist Bahaa Ronda and Spanish singer Carmen Linares, some of the crowd broke into ululations of appreciation. Cherifa opened her mouth and the energy in the air crackled, her deeply evocative voice raising goosebumps on one’s skin. Cherifa's command of her art produced an eerily primal sound that seemed both ancient and timeless.

Sufi Nights with the Hamadcha Brotherhood

Along with Cherifa's opening night performance the most widely talked about concerts were those by Paco de Lucía, the Mongolian Sardinian Fusion, El Gusto, Fado singer Ana Moura and Patti Smith. Among the local Moroccans, the Assala Nasri's concert was a huge hit. At the Sufi Nights at Dar Tazi, the local Hamadcha Brotherhood were overwhelming favourites.

The free concerts in the Festival in the City series was again extremely popular, with favourites being (unsurprisingly) the Hamadcha and Dj ClicK and, Nass L'Ghiwan and Hamid el Kasri.


Paco de Lucía's appearance was a highlight in many ways, not just the maestro's extraordinarily passionate guitar work, but also due to the superb performances by singer Juan Rafael Cortés Santiago, known as Duquende and flamenco dancer Antonio Fernández Montoya, known as “Farruco”. (See review here)


There were many performances at the festival this year that combined music from different traditions. Some, like the Indian/baroque concert were only mildly successful, but the standout was the afternoon at the Batha museum that featured the polyphonic work of the Sardinian Cuncordu E Tenore de Orosei and diphonic Mongolian khöömii chanting from singers Ts Tsogtgerel and Nergui Ganzorig of Mongolia.

At first glance the pairing looked like a recipe for disaster, but the reality was wonderful. It was, as one reviewer put it, as if the tectonic plates had shifted. Asia's Altai and Gobi Desert crashed into the mountains of Sardinia, producing a culture shock with Fez at the epicentre.

The Mongolians remarkable ability to depict landscape was matched by the Sardinians. The Mongolians evoked the sound of horses galloping over the windswept steppes while the Sardinians polyphony took the audience soaring over peaks, plateaus and into valleys. Their crystal clear harmonies combined to produce a soudscape greater than its individual parts. Then, when they came together in a huddle, the Mongolian overtone chanting became the solid drone base for a new landscape of steppes and, somewhere in the musical distance, the mountain peaks. Unforgettable. (See review here)


Probably one of ther most poignant moments in the festival was when, with a tear running down her cheek, Aïcha Redouane sang (pictured above) for the first time in her own language (Amazigh) in her own country.

And then, of course there was the triumph that was Patti. (See our review here)



Behind the Scenes

The programming of this festival was seen by most people as being an extremely good mix of music and culture with virtually no exceptions. The Nights in the Medina evenings worked well apart from the usual complaints about the bad sight-lines at Dar Mokri. Hopefully a better venue can be found for the next festival.  Security and signage was more than adequate.

The Sufi Nights were very well attended as were the Festival in the City events.

A village in the Upper Nile comes to life at Batha

Congratulations to Festival Director Faouzi Skali and Artistic Director Alain Weber. Weber also deserves congratulations for his production of the extraordinary performance of "At the Heart of the Nile" by Sheikh Hamid Hossein Ahmad and Sheikh Ghanan from the village of Deir in the Upper Nile.

Alain Weber
Faouzi Skali 

The pre-festival organisation this year was far better organised, with information available well in advance. For most journalists the often last minute confusion over press passes was gone, replaced with a smooth and efficient system. Later in the festival some members of the press did experience a few problems. However, tribute has to be paid to Spirit of Fes Foundation Press Officer Eziza Sid'Ahmed.

Set against this good preparatory work was the once again over zealous attitude of security personnel who seemed to have little appreciation that the international journalists had a job to do and that their reporting is a key to the success of future festivals.  It may be worthwhile for the festival organisers to consider doing what many other festivals do and hold "friendliness" training sessions for security so that their attitude is more about how they can help you rather than hinder.

Another source of complaint was the location of the media centre. Having it out at the Zalagh Parc Hotel far from where people were gathered for concerts, was simply wrong. Hopefully the same mistake will not be repeated next year. Having a press centre either at or near Dar Tazi would be far more logical.

The overbooking of venues needs urgent attention as the crush of people at both major venues was on several evenings,way over capacity to the point where the situation was potentially dangerous. The availability of hundreds of cheap "sponsors' tickets" being sold outside the Bab Al Makina also needs curtailing.

Thanks to Helen Ranger, the English language translations on line were of immense value to visitors and journalists alike. However, the festival still needs to come to terms with the fact that English is either the first or second language of a large number of visitors to the festival and that handing out information in French alone is of limited value. As a Swedish visitor told The View from Fez, "We don't expect a Swedish translation, but English is our second language and if the festival expects to be appreciated it must provide far more material in English."

At one event half the audience left after discovering that no English translator was on hand.

At the forum sessions at the Batha Museum, the English language translators were a mixed bunch. Some did a superb job while others were barely comprehensible.

Gurus of lighting and sound Christophe Olivier and Chris Ekers 

This year the lighting and sound were in the capable hands of Christophe Olivier and Chris Ekers respectively whose sterling work enhanced all the concerts. Each year the technical demands of musicians grow in complexity and as Chris Ekers pointed out they are now at the upper limits of what their equipment can deliver. In one case this year an extra monitor desk was needed to be brought in for El Gusto.

Chris Ekers made the observation that the festival has become more mainstream. His highlights? "Mongolians and Sardinians, the Upper Nile Egyptians were fabulous. Assri was good but commercial and walked off stage at the end and the band had to come to a grinding halt! Plano at the last Batha concert was superb. The fact so many concerts were fusions of cultures is a good sign. Ana Moura had a fabulous voice but not great stagecraft."

The View from Fez Team have their say

This year The View from Fez was fortunate to have to services of a talented team of writers and photographers: Vanessa Bonnin, Suzanna Clarke, Natasha Christov, Gabe Monson, Stephanie Clifford-Smith, Nouri Verghese, and Inga Meladze.

Stephanie Clifford-Smith

As a first time visitor to the festival the overall experience has been great. The standard of the acts was remarkable and the sound at every venue spot on. Highlights included the lovely fado singer Ana Moura in the Musee Bartha, the venue dimly lit to emulate a fado house. The final concert, Patti Smith, at the Bab al Makina was brilliant because, fan or not, she’s an icon who performed graciously and gave it her all.

Ana Moura

Many performances were sheer fun for both audiences and performers and these were favourites. Coubane Mint Ely Warakane from Mauritania and Lo Còr de la Plana from Marseilles spring immediately to mind but off the scale in the fun stakes was the Ladysmith Chicago Gospel Experience. Nothing’s going to get this atheist turning to God but, Jesus, that style of Christian worship is a blast!


Lowlights can mostly be tracked to festival admin and over zealous security. A scheduling clash saw quite a few people walk out of the Samira Kadiri concert to get to their next gig, the mini exodus beyond awkward in a venue as small as Dar Mokri.

Cameramen yakking at the Musee Batha during the Upper Nile Sufi night made it impossible for those at the back to hear the act. And security thinking their job was to make it as tough as possible to get into venues for the first few nights of the festival was frankly a pain. But, hey, on balance the gripes were small potatoes in the eight days that were a fabulous Fez festival.

Natasha Christov

Flamenco sensation Andres Marin and Moroccan singer Cherifa, both performing at the Opening Concert, were definite Festival highlights; Marin's precision in the execution of complex flamenco movements was astounding, and Cherifa's earthy vocals simply incomparable. Anthropologically, Syrian popstar Assala Nasri's concert at an overbooked Bab Al Makina was eye-opening, with glamoured-up locals arriving in droves to belt out Nasri's hits.

Andres Marin

One major gripe at this year's Festival was its embarrassingly poor organisation. Overbooked venues left ticket-holders unable to attend, time and venue changes barely publicised left performers without an audience, and disorganised security meant attendees were at times confined to an area only to be banished from it.

In addition, it is worth mentioning the lack of world focus at this "world music" festival. Concert synopses, workshop lectures and major press conferences were all in French, ostracising a large contingent of foreign visitors and locals (the two main languages spoken in Fes are Darija and Fusha).

Thankfully, the free concerts were another story. A definite highlight was southern Moroccan group Tariqa Hassania had the audience on their feet dancing, clapping and singing to the world language; music.

Gabe Monson

Writing and photographing the free evening concerts at Place Boujloud led to some different perspectives than in my previous media role at the Fes Festival, recording sound.

I began to pay more attention to what I saw, as well as what I heard. Tired from late nights and deadlines I became more sensitive to how the environment of the events, as well as the music, could invigorate or irritate, inspire or sooth.

Hamid el Kasri

My week was bookended with invigoration. Firstly by the warmth of Mauritanian griot (storyteller) Coumbane Mint Ely Warakane at the Batha Museum, supported by her ‘blue birds from heaven’ singers and sensitive male musicians. Finally, by the brilliantly arranged high energy Gnawa-jazz fusion group led by Karim Ziad and Hamid Kasri at Place Boujloud.

Batha Museum itself was a soothing highlight, particularly one restorative afternoon mid-Festival, lying under the ancient wood and cascading foliage of its centrepiece tree drifting to the delicate music of Fado singer Ana Moura’s band.

Lebanese chanteuse Abeer Nehme was inspiringly graceful both in voice and manner; Ali Alaoui’s Andalucian orchestra inspired smiles and dance.

What was irritating to me may have been wonderful for others, so I’ll leave those bits of grit behind and instead congratulate the often unsung heroes of events- the sound and lighting crews. Their work in the challenging space of Boujloud was outstanding; clearly mixing diverse instruments and creatively shaping tableaux of shifting colour, texture and movement within the cavernous stage.

Vanessa Bonnin

There were many highlights for me this year, and they all stemmed from the brave and innovative collaborations between musicians and performers.

It seemed that every second performance was a premiere, or a new fusion that brought together diverse styles that when combined produced something even greater than the sum of their parts.

The first time this grabbed me was the Sardinian tenors singing with the Mongolians - a delightful and joyous performance. Then, the addition of a stupendous young flamenco dancer to the Paco de Lucia show - de Lucia was a marvel but it was Farruco who we were all still talking about a week later.

Mind blowing gospel!

Birds on a Wire - the new collaboration between Rosemary Standley and Dom La Nena - was another marvellous performance infused with talent and humour, and then the feel-good tour de force of the Ladysmith Chicago Gospel experience who blew my mind with their energy and enthusiasm.

Patti Smith in Fez - the ultimate concert

Patti Smith's concert was the ultimate for me - a full-on rock concert in Fes! - but again, it was the collaboration between her and the audience that made this performance so special. The crowd plays a huge role in the success of a show and this was poignantly demonstrated when the people of Fes stood up and responded to Patti's powerful call for freedom.

Thanks to our guest contributors Inga Meladze and Nouri Verghese who covered the Sufi Nights

The next Fes Festival of World Sacred Music will be held between June 13 to 21, 2014. Let us know who you would like to see perform.
We hope to see you there.


Photographs: Suzanna Clarke, Vanessa Bonnin, Gabe Monson, Natasha Christov, Inga Meladze, Sandy McCutcheon

The View from Fez is an official Media Partner of the Fes Festival of World Sacred Music


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