Showing posts with label Tangier. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tangier. Show all posts

Saturday, February 22, 2020

Tangier: From the Romans to the Rolling Stones - review


A new book by Richard Hamilton tells the story of Tangier though the stories of its best known residents - historical figures; writers; artists and musicians 




Some cities have names that evoke much more than the sum of their everyday realities. Mention "Casablanca", and those unfamiliar with Morocco will wax lyrical about the Humphrey Bogart movie. Say "Tangier" and response is likely to be the Beat Poets, Paul Bowles and William Burroughs - all foreigners who produced some of their best work there.

Yet, Tangier is much culturally richer than this, as can be discovered through the pages of Richard Hamilton's latest book, Tangier: From the Romans to the Rolling Stones.

"Much of Tangier's history is a chronology of foreigners and exiles." Hamilton writes.

"Nearly 3,000 years ago the Phoenicians set up trading colonies on the coast and ever since, the local inhabitants have, much to their bemusement seen waves of successive civilizations come and go, imposing their lifestyles upon them. Carthaginians, Romans, Vandals, Byzantines, Arabs, Portuguese, British, Spanish and French have all occupied the region in their time."

Tangier: From the Romans to the Rolling Stones is impeccably researched, erudite, and with flashes of humour. Hamilton weaves the history of the city and its antecedents into a complex carpet; managing to capture the atmosphere of faded glory; of a history little regarded by the present day occupants.

He quotes Moroccan novelist, Lofti Akalay, "Tangier is a town where people talk of elsewhere. There is a local saying: Tangerines have one eye on the sea, one ear on the news, and one buttock on the rocks."

"We are separated from Europe by 14 kilometres and as many centuries."

The chapters of the book are replete with entertaining stories about the likes of the Roman god Hercules, Roman statesman and general Quintus Sertorius, independant ruler of Spain and the defacto governor of Tangier; Arab explorer Ibn Battuta; diarist Samuel Pepys; journalist and fabulist Walter Harris; artist Henri Matisse; writers Paul Bowles and William Burroughs; poet and painter Brion Gysin; painter Francis Bacon; playwright Joe Orton; writer Mohamed Mrabet and musician Brian Jones.

However, that isn't where the cast of characters ends. Renowned names who have also played a part in Tangier's history also get a look in - among them,  Samuel Beckett; Barbara Hutton; WH Auden and Rita Hayworth.

Despite brief sojourns by female authors such as Edith Wharton and Patricia Highsmith, and a longer one by Jane Bowles, the major writers and artists associated with Tangier are overwhelmingly male, and Hamilton's book reflects this.

Pepys's take on seventeenth century Tangier was far from flattering: "Nothing but vice in the whole place of all sorts for swearing, cursing, drinking and whoring," he wrote.

Matisse's visit in 1912 was in another dimension entirely. On a journey to Tetouan, he wrote, "We rode in among this sea of flowers as if no human being had ever set foot there before."

For Paul Bowles, who first travelled to Tangier in 1931 the city became synonymous with his work. "Back in New York, Bowles achieved success as a composer, but pined for Tangier. 'I tried to drown my melancholy in my work,' he said, 'but I was obsessed by memories of the air and light in North Africa.' He moved there in 1947, and went on to develop his skills as a writer, and create his most famous works such as The Sheltering Sky and The Spider's House. He also made extensive recordings of traditional Moroccan music for posterity.


Richard Hamilton is a professional broadcast journalist who has worked for the BBC World Service. He has spent time reporting from Morocco, South Africa and Madagascar. While in Morocco he co-authored the Time Out Guide to Marrakech and has written throughout his career for various newspapers and magazines.

That Hamilton has a huge affection and deep fascination for Morocco is clearly evident. The country has a long history of storytelling, as he recounted in his earlier book, The Last Storytellers: Tales from the Heart of Morocco. That was a collection of stories, as told by five storytellers from Marrakech's famous square - the Jemaa el Fna. "...Marrakech's marketplace, sacred space, cultural crucible, melting pot and meeting point for centuries." His book on Tangier, too, is composed of a series of stories, of lives which intersect through space but not time, to give an impressionistic portrait of the city.

"Tangier seems to be suspended in unreality," he writes. "It escapes definition and defies categorization...Tangier has been hailed as a paradigm for international cooperation and a cradle of creativity, but it is also a kind of museum of failure, a graveyard of ambition."

"Maybe the city that has survived waves of invasions by Carthaginians, Romans, Vandals, Byzantines, Arabs, Portuguese, British, Spanish and French can now endure a new wave of development?" he asks.

Of the economic impact of the port of Tangier Med; of the proposed Chinese funded technopolis, of empty houses inhabited by a multitude of squatters waiting for their chance to jump on a boat to Europe, undercover of darkness, there is little sign in this book.

Tangier: From the Romans to the Rolling Stones is an unashamedly nostalgic look at the inspiration, and occasional despair of which the city has long been a source.

"Perhaps in the end Tangier is us," Hamilton writes. "It reflects humanity itself."

Review by Suzanna Clarke

Tangier: From the Romans to the Rolling Stones by Richard Hamilton is published by Tauris Parke 2019. 

In Fez, Morocco, it is available from the ALC-ALIF Bookstore, CLICK HERE. 

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Monday, September 10, 2018

TanJazz is back!


The 19th edition of Tanjazz will take place from 19th to 22nd in Tangier with around 110 artists and musicians of various musical tendencies, but whose common dominator is jazz

The organisers of this musical event said during a press conference on Thursday night in Casablanca, that the 7 special "scenes" are planned for this occasion and will include many groups of from various "jazzy horizons".

"Some perpetuate the memory of the Old Square of New Orleans. Some keep alive the great standards by interpreting them in their own way. Some pay tribute in their style to the missing. Some revisit the hard bop with a new vitality. Some Klezmerise, orientalize or latinize. Others explore the paths of Nu-Jazz and electro jazz. Others finally in surprising solos or duets invent another jazz - their own.

"It's the Jazz in all its forms", say the organisers of this festival which will celebrate its 20 years next year.

Among the novelties, Tanjazz launches this year its "Day Off". Aficionados of music will appreciate a day or early evening program that will allow them to stroll through the streets of Tangier, to see the various facets, while discovering the artists who embody the new contemporary jazz scene.

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Tuesday, August 21, 2018

The Cervantes is Dying


The Cervantes Theatre of Tangier was founded in 1913, before becoming the biggest stage in North Africa. Despite its current alarming situation, Morocco and Spain have still not agreed to save this magnificent art nouveau building

Created by a couple of emigrants from Cadiz to Tangier, the Gran Teatro Cervantes has long represented the relationship between Morocco and Spain. After hosting the Italian tenor Caruso, the French actress Cécile Sorel, or the Egyptian star Youssef Wahbi, then the biggest Spanish stars, the prestigious theatre become a cinema and wrestling room.

It was in 1903 that Manuel Peña Rodríguez arrived on North African soil. This former fisherman from Cadiz emigrated to Tangier in search of fortune. The destination was not chosen at random because he joined the rich uncle of his wife, Antonio Núñez Reina. He then continued his activity at sea on the other side of the Mediterranean, and launched some time later in the sale of medicinal leeches. They were harvested in a well located in his kitchen garden nicknamed "the Huerta del Señor Frasquito el Sevillano". On the death of Esperanza Orellana's uncle, the couple acquired all the properties as sole heirs. An idea then germinated in the mind of Manuel Peña Rodríguez. He would set up a theatre in Tangier. To please his wife passion about theatre and to put Spanish culture in the heart of the city of Tangier, he began work on the garden. The former fisherman, who has become a wealthy merchant, sought to influence his country's culture in a city also occupied by the French and the British.


Laying of the first stone of the theatre on April 2, 1911, Manuel Peña paid 650,000 pesetas and commissioned the Spanish architect Diego Jiménez Armstrong to build this theatre. The architect was a well known Tangierois. Born in the city in 1844, he studied in Paris. He built a very large number of buildings in Tangier, especially for the Jewish bourgeoisie.

Diego Jiménez Armstrong imported all the materials from Spain. The blue frescoes of the dome are the work of the Spanish painter Federico Ribera Bussato. The exterior sculptures were made by the Sevillian artist Cándido Mata Cañamaque. Diego Jiménez Armstrong also installed ten thousand light bulbs inspired by the Teatro Real de Madrid. The theatre is named Cervantes in reference to the great Spanish novelist Miguel de Cervantes.

The Gran Teatro Cervantes was inaugurated on December 11, 1913 and became the essential place of life of the Spanish exiles and the rest of the Tangier community. With 919 seats (although some sources speak of 1,400 seats), it is at this time the largest theatre in North Africa and a very important place for promotion of the artists of the peninsula adjoining the strait.

From the beginning, the place played a key cultural role in Morocco. But despite its success, the theatre was too big and not profitable. Manuel Peña Rodríguez and Esperanza Orellana Noguera decided to give it to the Spanish state in 1928 for 450,000 pesetas. The theatre offered a varied program with operas (including the voices of Adelina Patti and Enrico Caruso), plays (with María Guerrero, Margarita Xirgu, the French Cécile Sorel and the Egyptian stars Youssef Wahbi and Fatma Ruchdi ). The local theatre troupe "Al Hilal" presented several plays, including Othello , in Arabic, in 1929.

The biggest stars came to the Cervantes to meet the Spanish-Moroccan audience - singers Carmen Sevilla, Imperio Argentina, Juanita Reina, Lola Flores, Antonio Molina, flamenco singer Manolo Caracol and Cuban Antonio Machín. Juanito Valderrama came to play Tangier in 1947 and meet the Spanish who fled the Franco regime. In Tangier Juanito Valderrama composed his greatest song, "El Emigrante" (the emigrant). Valderrama later said he wrote the song as soon as he went to his hotel after the performance.


The theatre prospered in the first half of the 20th century with operas, zarzuelas (Spanish comic opera) and concerts. But from the 50s, this cultural centre begins to experience slack periods. To attract the population, its managers rely on another type of event. The Gran Teatro Cervantes became a wrestling room! Catholics, Jews, Muslims ... all came to see the show, halfway between sport and theatre. Many wrestlers were Spanish. They come from the other side of the Mediterranean because they have had their day in Spain. They are looking for a second wind in the international city of Tangier. But soon enough, the spectators tired of seeing only Spaniards. Jews and Muslims wanted to identify with a character, a fighter. So after failing to find a Jew from Casablanca, the organisers decide to bring back a new Spaniard they posed as a Muslim.

After independence, in 1956, the theatre experienced new troubles. The Spaniards were gradually leaving Tangier. The government was abandoning the place. The theatre reinvented itself for a while as a movie theatre but the conditions were really bad and the building was getting worse. During the war in Algeria, the proceeds of some performances are donated to the FLN. Gradually, events were spaced out and rare. The Cervantes was abandoned and closed definitively in 1962. Between 1972 and 1992, it was rented, without reopening, by the Spanish state to the city of Tangier for a symbolic dirham. Until today, nobody has maintained the theatre which falls every day a little more in ruins.

Since Mohamed VI came to power in 1999, the city has aroused more interest with the construction of a large port, a connection to a high-speed train ... Unfortunately, this emblematic place is still deserted , although it is still possible to visit for some coins. Many people have gone to the wall to raise funds and rehabilitate the theater. In 1994, the architect Mariano Vázquez Espí proposed a project to the Spanish government to preserve the Cervantes. In 2004, the Cervantes Association of Cultural Action and Hispano-Moroccan Friendship was created. This association seeks to avoid the disappearance of the Cervantes. In 2006, the association managed to raise 200,000 euros from the Director of Cultural and Scientific Relations of the Spanish Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Half of the budget was spent on emergency interventions. The Spanish authorities have estimated the works at 5 million euros. Founding member and current active committee of this association, Rachid Taferssiti said that the Cervantes was ranked in 2007 national heritage, but "the solution to really save it is new activities".

Despite the many calls for help, the theatre celebrated a sad centenary in 2013. Artists have written and sang to revive it, petition in support, but the Cervantes is still there, abandoned in front of the port of Tangier. The yellow and blue ceramic on the front shows the past and the decrepitude of the Spanish settlement in the Straits. In the entrance hall you can still see ceramics by Don Quixote and Sancho Panza.

Morocco and Spain, who both wanted to reach an agreement to save the place, took a very long time to negotiate. Spain refusing to pay for a place outside their lands preferred to leave the Cervantes in 2015. But this decision, it was necessary to agree on the terms of the project, Spain wishing to keep an eye on the programming.

While the work was to begin in 2018, a UNESCO commission, according to the site Le360, stopped the renovation because the plans would not respect the original construction. After all these imbroglios, the situation is at a standstill and a big question mark still weighs on the Cervantes.


Morocco and Spain, because of their geographical proximity, have always had a special relationship. Separated only by the 14 kilometre Strait of Gibraltar, the two countries have influenced each other. The presence of Spaniards in Morocco dates back to the signing of the Spanish-Moroccan peace and trade treaty of 1767. But at the time, their number was still very small. It was in the nineteenth century that the Iberian presence really grew, especially after the Second Moroccan War (1859-1860), which Spain emerged victorious. At the beginning of the twentieth century, in 1912, the French and the Spanish took possession of the Moroccan power by the establishment of a protectorate. The Spaniards inherit a strip of land in the North and one in the South of the country.  A large number of traders settled there, seeing that economic relations between the two countries are intensifying. But in 1923, Tangier inherited a special status. The city became an international zone under the joint administration of 9 different countries. The city then had a great cultural mix. The Spanish diaspora continued to grow in Morocco until the declaration of independence in 1956.

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Sunday, August 05, 2018

Shock Closure of Tangier's Famous Cafe Hafa


The famous Café Hafa, an iconic place in the city Tangier, has been closed since Saturday morning. The  reason given is that it is undergoing an "operation of destruction" of a terrace built,"without license", by its owner

Cafe Hafa - a work by Australian artist Bryan Dawe

Yesterday, local media Tanja 24 reported the information, saying the local authorities in the city  proceeded to the destruction of pillars and a concrete slab mounted without a building permit. "Under the supervision of the director of the urban commune of Tangier and the boss of the Second Administrative District, the authorities proceeded to the demolition of the construction and prevented the customers from going to the cafe," the media continues.

The weekend destruction 

The destruction by the local authorities has been denounced the public and by Abderrahman El Akel, owner of the café. In a statement to Hespress, he says the intervention "has been marked by several dysfunctions". He says that he did not receive a notice of demolition when his request to the competent authorities for the granting of a building permit was not returned.

Café Hafa is considered a heritage site in the city of Tangier. Built in 1921, it is visited daily by Moroccan tourists and foreigners, who come to enjoy a mint tea and a panoramic view of the Mediterranean.

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Friday, June 08, 2018

Tangier's New Fishing Port and Marina


On Thursday in Tangier King Mohammed VI inaugurated a new fishing port and Tanja Marina Bay, two structuring projects including conversion of the port area of ​​the city at a cost of more than 6 billion dirhams

These two projects aim to make the city of Tangier a destination of choice for pleasure tourism and cruises on an international scale and the improvement of the conditions of fishing professionals by offering them modern facilities that meet their needs.

The new fishing port of Tangier required a budget of 1,189 million dirhams and will provide an ideal working environment for fishing professionals, will allow a better development of the fishing sector in the region, and help boost investment and create more jobs in the sector.

This new fishing port comprises 1,167 metres of protective structures, 2,537 metres of berthing and wharfage piers, 11 ha of ponds and 12 ha of berths. It houses all the equipment necessary for the proper functioning of the port, including ice factories, cold stores, a standard container management unit, stores for shipowners and wholesalers, premises for artisanal fishermen, coastal and offshore fisheries, a hall for artisanal fisheries, a shipyard, ship repair shops and administrative buildings.

The centrepiece of the port is the fish market for coastal and offshore fisheries. Located in the heart of the port, this hall has a refrigerated exhibition and sales area, a reception hall for the identification and weighing of products, an airlock and shipping, cold rooms, a fish counter and a veterinary office.

This seafood marketing infrastructure focuses on improving quality, product valuation, the fluidity and transparency of commercial transactions, and the development of fishing activities in the region.

Built according to the most demanding international quality standards, this hall is equipped with technologies that ensure the computerisation of the sales process as a whole. The computerisation which allows in particular to maximise the speed and the transparency of the transactions and which ensures a rigorous follow-up of the traceability of the products.

Another structuring project inaugurated by the King is the marina Tanja Marina Bay, made for a global investment of 635 million dirhams and offering important infrastructures dedicated to the reception of the sailors eager to discover the charm of Tangier.

With its 800 moorings for boats ranging in length from 7 to 90 m, and the 600 rings for boats of 7 to 30 m planned under the second tranche, this marina, located in the heart of the bay, offers the largest number of moorings in the Kingdom and a multitude of services to international standards.

This marina is also equipped with food and entertainment areas, covered parking with a capacity of 435 seats, a nautical club, and a resort.

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Friday, April 27, 2018

Moroccan Delicacy Used to Transport Hashish!


A briouat is a traditional Moroccan sweet or savoury puff pastry filled with meat mixed with cheese, lemon and pepper. They are wrapped in warqa in a triangular or cylinder shape. The main ingredients: meat (chicken or lamb), cheese, lemon, black pepper; herbs and spices. Now a new ingredient has been discovered by the police in Tangier who recently seized 10 kg of cannabis resin hidden in the form of ... briouats


After pineapples , bricks of orange juice , or boxes of cereals , it is the turn of briouates to serve as a hiding place to carry drugs.

The police and customs at the port of Tangier city yesterday aborted an attempt to smuggle 10 kg of cannabis resin camouflaged as briouats police sources said.

"The vigilance of the police and customs elements at the passenger control centre within the port has allowed, following a thorough search, the arrest of an employee in one of the shipping companies based in the same port, "said the same source, adding that a man was preparing to embark with this amount of camouflaged drug in the form of homemade briouats stored in a cake box.

The man, born in 1982, was placed in custody for the purposes of the investigation conducted by the judicial police at the port of Tangier-ville on the instructions of the Prosecutor General, according to the authorities of the city.

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Tuesday, April 17, 2018

Tangier: The Book Fair launches its 22nd edition


The Book and Arts Fair Tangier starts from April 19 to 22, its 22nd edition. It takes the theme of "the meeting of the other with oneself" 

The Book Fair includes the participation of illustrious names of the world of letters and music such as Gilles Leroy, Ali Benmakhlouf and Mahi Binebine.

Among the artists who will perform there are rapper Tangier Muslim, Gnawa Diffusion and Marek Halter.

Pierre Bergé

The event will also pay tribute to Pierre Bergé, a French businessman and patron who had close ties with Tangier.

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Thursday, April 05, 2018

Tangier: Books and art to celebrate the return of spring


More than a book fair, a real artistic and literary festival with concerts, workshops for children, theatre. This year, the Book and Arts Fair in Tangier has chosen to put on its spring clothes and renew its program for the summer season. For its 22nd edition, it becomes the "Spring of the Book and Arts of Tangier" and is more inclusive by diversifying the proposed activities, from April 19 to 22, at the Palace of the Italian Institutions and other places in Tangier

"An event, whatever it is, must be renewed since it decreases after a certain number of years. We wanted to give it a new birth hence the choice of 'spring', a symbol of regeneration," explains Jerome Migayrou, director of the French Institute of Tangier who organises the show in partnership with the Tangier Region Cultural Action Association.

This change will not only be aesthetic, since it also accompanies a new approach and a more varied program that includes concerts, workshops for children, screenings or theater. "Thanks to the abundance of activities and disciplines offered, everyone will be able to choose their activity in relation to what interests them the most."

The Palace of Italian Institutions will bring together the stands of different publishing houses and bookstores in the city, but other parts of the city will also host the many events of this event. The show will be held in schools, colleges and high schools, as well as at the Cinémathèque de Tangier, where Moroccan and French films and documentaries such as "Braguino" (2017) by Clément Cogitore will be screened.

For this new format, the show launches the first edition of "Tangier Arts Tour", a circuit that art lovers can follow to visit all the galleries of the city, which have set up 12 exhibitions under the theme of The Encounter. Visitors will find the abstract works of Nourredine Lahrech and Mhamed Cherifi at the Mohamed Drissi Gallery, the architectural photographs of Hicham Gardaf at the Delacroix Gallery, the anonymous portraits of Jaimal Odera at the American Legation, or the surprising paintings of Abdelkader Melehi at the Dar art gallery.

The Photoloft, Mahal art space, Conil, Artingis, Ibn Khaldoun, Conil Volubilis, Medina Art galleries and the Les insolites bookshop will exhibit the works of artists from Morocco and elsewhere throughout the Salon.

After celebrating youth in 2017 , the show chose this year to focus on "The Meeting - the other's own". This theme will be explored through the many round tables animated by one of the mainly Moroccan authors and experts, notably Driss Ksikes, Jalil Bennani, Abdessamad Dialmy, Fouad Laroui, Sana El Aji or Abdelfattah Kilito.

"We wanted to explore the importance of the other, of those who are different from us to show that this difference is fundamental in our society and that as long as we try to standardize behavior, cultural proposals ... we are impoverishing the world," explains Migayrou.

Always in this festival spirit, several concerts and musical readings are planned during this show in the Palace of the Italian Institutions. Rapper Muslim and singer Hamid Elhadri will ignite the palace scene on April 20, after a musical reading of Eric Reinhardt's "The Room of the Spouses" and Melodie Richard.

The next day, the evening will begin with a recital of poetry with Abdellatif Laâbi, followed by the concert of the mythical group Gnawa Diffusion. Finally, the classical music will close the show with the meeting of the Ukrainian pianist Nathalia Romanenko and the French writer Marek Halter who will tell the story of the fate of three women in Islam.

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Wednesday, February 14, 2018

Tangier Tourism Growth Up 27%


Classified tourist establishments in Tangier registered 608,654 arrivals in 2017 against 478,170 a year earlier, an increase of 27%


Thus, the number of international visitors who went to Tangier stood at 312,074 tourists during the year 2017 (+ 49% ), while national tourists totalled 296,580, up 10% over to 2016, with an average stay of two days.

The various classified hotel units of Tangier recorded, during this period, 1,237,391 nights compared to 991,489 in 2016, an increase of 25%, with an occupancy rate of 45% against 40%, year-on-year.

The Spaniards come first among the foreign tourists who visited the city of Tangier during this period (56,744), followed by the French (46,296), Arabs (25,246), Americans (15,026), Chinese (12,379), British ( 9.160), Germans (7.512), Belgians (6.199) and Scandinavians (5.302).

Tourist establishments classified 4 stars have welcomed some 179,100 tourists, followed by those classified as 3 stars (162,026), 5 stars (110,023), 2 stars (80,693) and a star (43,642), as well as residential hotels. (20,454) and guest houses (9,846).

In December alone, 43,567 tourists visited Tangier against 41,156 in December 2016, up 6% with the number of overnight stays was 82,212, up 3% year-on-year, with an occupancy rate of 39% versus 34% in December 2016.

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Tuesday, February 13, 2018

National Film Festival in Tangier


Initiated by the Moroccan Film Centre (CCM), the National Film Festival (FNF) will be held from March 9 to 17 in Tangier for its 19th edition

The FNF is an artistic, cultural and promotional event with the objective of promoting the development of national film production and to contribute to the dissemination of Moroccan film and create a space for meetings, dialogue and film exchange.

The program of this edition, which coincides with the sixtieth Anniversary of Moroccan cinema, includes a competition for short and long films produced since the last edition, debates around these films, a presentation of the cinematographic report for 2017, professional meetings and parallel activities.

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Monday, September 18, 2017

Tangier - Drum and Dance Performance


A fascinating duo for a dancer and a drummer will be performed on the evenings of September 22nd and 23rd in the Beckett Room at the French Institute in Tangier
A choreographic piece by Tess Blanchard with Amaury Blanchard on drums

This is a special collaboration for the dancer and choreographer since the musician was not chosen at random: he is none other than her father, the famous French drummer Amaury Blanchard. This idea emanates from the resemblance between the two interpreters, felt by the choreographer: "I was often surprised when I noticed that my attitudes and expressions on stage were similar to those of my father. We have an energy and a common strength. "

The piece is made up of three elements: the dancer, the drummer, and the drums for only set and musical support; a unique situation where the musician is at the forefront, a real dance partner.

The performances start at 19.30 each evening.

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Thursday, September 07, 2017

Upcoming Moroccan Festivals



Another big event this year in Marrakech. The Oasis Festival is back for a third edition, from the 14th to 17th of September, bringing together the best of the national and international electronic music scene

For its third edition, the biggest festival of electronic music of Morocco provides a rich and varied programme. This year, the organisers have appealed to an array of world-renowned artists, such as the great Richie Hawtin, known for his taste for technological innovation, and the American-Chilean musician, Nicolas Jaar, who, since its inception, has traced line of sophisticated electronic music.

In a very short time, the Oasis festival allowed Morocco to become a long-term player on the map of the festival destinations, and, faithful to its vocation, the festival continues to participate in the emergence of the Moroccan electronic scene, with the participation of founding father Unes, rising star, Jaza, and the new ambassador of Moroccan electronic music, Amine K and many others.

For the organisers, the 2017 edition is the most impressive in terms of programming since the creation of the festival in 2015. For this year they decided to add an extra day with the official opening party taking place on Thursday September 14th, when the popular Solomun will make his first Moroccan appearance.

The Tanjazz Festival will rock Tangier from the 14th to 17th of September. After paying tribute to the women of jazz during its previous edition, it is the turn of young talent to shine in the spotlight
To celebrate its 18th anniversary, there will be five musical stages with more than 120 singers and musicians during the 55 concerts.

"We wanted to introduce the public to the new voices of jazz, which will perhaps be the headliners of tomorrow," says Philippe Lorin, director of the Tanjazz festival. These are, nevertheless, confirmed artists that Lorin, also artistic director of the event, went to look for in different festivals in the world. "I could listen to these artists by traveling, receiving applications, but also by browsing the web, like everyone else," he says.

Spectators will be able to dance to the rhythm of New Orleans thanks to a rich program and artists from here and elsewhere, such as the 18-year-old Spanish trumpeter and singer Rita Payès, who will open the ball on stage at the BMCI Palais, the Croatian pianist and singer Daniel Čačija, and the quartet by Janis Peruzzi, whose composition combines the rhythms of jazz with oriental sounds.

Other artists are expected, among others, to be headliners, the composer and interpreter of Moroccan-Syrian origin, Samia Tawil, with influences both RnB and funk, the Austrian duo Michaela Rabitsch and Robert Pawlik, Nicolle Rochelle  and Hot Antic Jazz Band and many others.

While the Jazz is appreciated by the Moroccan public and is at the core of two other major festivals in Morocco, the Jazzablanca festival in the economic capital and the Jazz at the Chellah in Rabat, it remains, nevertheless, very little played by the local musicians. Tanjazz's artist list includes only two artists of Moroccan origin (Samia Tawil and Teema) this year.


Oujda hosts the 4th Blouza Festival

The Blouza is a costume or dress originally, from the town of Tlemcen. The blouza (strangely) resembles the low-cut dresses and cuffs of Joséphine, the wife of Napoleon I. Some claim its design was a way of paying tribute to the Emperor, who for a time thought of emancipating the natives from the French colonies, La blouza is traditionally worn by married and middle-aged women. It is long and sewn in one piece or two. It is curved at the waist, is worn with short sleeves, the décolleté and the back are worked in pearls and traditional refined embroideries sewn on to form the part covering the whole chest. Today it is widespread and very popular in the cities of the Orientale region of Morocco, specifically in Oujda
The 4th edition of the Blouza Festival will take place from the 7th to 10th of September in Oujda on the initiative of the Eastern Association for Development (AOD), under the theme "Blouza, a cultural tributary of the western Mediterranean"

Initiated in partnership with the Oriental Development Agency, the 4th edition of this cultural event, which aims to perpetuate the heritage of the region, and  to encourage stylists to innovate and to produce quality works.

To highlight the Mediterranean anchorage of culture and heritage of the Kingdom, this edition will be marked by the presence of Moroccan and foreign specialists in the field, giving them the opportunity to discover, according to the AOD, "the intrinsic ties of our common heritage and thus bring an international dimension to our Festival ".
"This Festival will also be an opportunity to promote the work of craftswomen in order to create income-generating activities through the creation of cooperatives and thus highlight the specificities of the Oriental in the framework of advanced regionalisation advocated by the Kingdom" - AOD
The program of the Festival includes discussions on the festival theme, stands to exhibit and market artisan products, and a fashion show that will highlight the work of stylists and craftsmen and women.


"A few decades ago, the Oujdie woman and the Oriental in general were proud to conceive their Blouza themselves and to shape it under different cuts and models. This is the main reason why the Blouza has become a heritage, "says the President of the AOD

He added that the Blouza Oujdia, which had almost been put away in the antique shops and disappeared, is regaining its titles of nobility, thanks to the efforts made in particular in the framework of this event, which made it possible to reinforce the concept Blouza and promote this traditional dress of the city of Oujda and the Region.

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Tuesday, September 05, 2017

Mediterranean Short Film Festival of Tangier


The Moroccan Cinematographic Centre in collaboration with the Mediterranean International Film Festival of Tetouan has announced that the fifteenth edition of the Mediterranean Short Film Festival of Tangier (FCMMT) will run from October 2nd to 7th


The program of the FCMMT includes an open competition for short films of fiction produced in 2016 and 2017 by Mediterranean filmmakers.

There will also be a series of lectures and debates about the films, as well as a film lesson and other activities.

Festival du Court Métrage Méditerranéen de Tanger

Films in Competition

ALGERIE
"CELUI QUI BRULE" de Slimane Bounia
"JE TE PROMETS" de Mohamed Yargui

BOSNIE HERZEGOVINE
"LEJLA" de Stijn Bouma

CHYPRE
"BAD HABITS" de Emilios Avraam

CROATIE
"BEFORE DARK" de Bojan Radanovic
"CHERRIES" de Dubravka Turic
"FABIJAN" de Lovro Mrden
"GOOD LUCK, ORLO!" de Sara Kern

EGYPTE
"THE BUILDERS" de Naji Ismail

ESPAGNE
"CHEIMAPHOBIA" de Daniel Sánchez Arévalo
"EXTRAÑOS EN LA CARRETERA" de Carlos Solano
"NEBOA" de Claudia Costafreda
"THE WAY I LOVE YOU" de Fernando Garcia- Ruiz
"17 YEARS TOGETHER" de Javier Fesser

FRANCE
"FEFE LIMBE" de Julien Silloray
"LA CONVENTION DE GENEVE" de Benoit Martin
"ENTRE DEUX EAUX" de Patrice Cordonnier
"LES MISERABLES" de Ladj Ly
"MARLON" de Jessica Pallud

GRÈCE
"VITHISMA" de Polymnia Papadopoulou-Sardeli
"YENARIS | THE BOY WHO NEVER GREW HIS HAIR LONG" de Zoie Sgourou
"YOUNG FISH" de Chrisanthos Margonis
"-1" de Natassa Xydi

ITALIE
"A CASA MIA (AT MY HOME)" de Mario Piredda
"CONTANDO LE FORMICHE (COUNTING THE TINGS)" de Giuliano Cremasco
"MATTIA SA VOLARE (MATTIA CAN FLY)" de Alessandro Porzio
"MOBY DICK" de Nicola Sorcinelli

KOSOVO
"ETERNALLY CHILD - PËRJETËSISHT FËMIJË" de Lorena Sopi
"THE GIVEN WORD" de Ujkan Hysaj

LIBAN
"CARGO" de Karim Rahbani
"MAKI ET ZORRO" de Rami Kodeih
"SALAMAT FROM GERMANY" de Una Gunjak

MACEDOINE
"FIGHTING FOR DEATH" de Eleonora Veninova
"THE CHILDREN WILL COME" de Ana Jakimska

MALTE
"PRICKLY PEAR" de Alex Camilleri

MAROC
"L'APPEL" de Maria Kenzi Lahlou
"TIKITA A SOULIMA" de Ayoub Layoussifi
"IMA" de Hicham Regragui
"JOUR DE PLUIE" de Imad Badi
"RISSALAT HOB" de Soufiane Ait El Majdoub

MONTENEGRO
"SOA" de Dusan Kasalica

PALESTINE
"THE PARROT " de Darin J. Sallam Et Amjad Al Rasheed

PORTUGAL
"IVAN" de Bernardo Lopez
"MENINA (YOUNG LADY)" de Simão Cayatte

SERBIE
"TA HANDFUL OF STONES" de Stefan Ivancic

SLOVENIE
"A WELL SPENT AFTERNOON" de Martin Turk
"I'LL PROBABLY NEVER SEE YOU AGAIN" de Mitja Mlakar

SYRIE
"MARE NOSTRUM" de Rana & Anas Karkaz

TUNISIE
"LA LAINE SUR LE DOS" de Lotfi Achour
"ON EST BIEN COMME ÇA" de Mehdi Barsaoui

TURQUIE
"DUMRAKATAK" de Mert Edis
"HINTERLAND" de Sinan Kesova
"BERKOS" de Firat Onar
"SCRABBLE" de MERVE GEZEN
"THEN I WOKE UP" de Atilla Ünsal

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Thursday, August 24, 2017

TANGIER HOSTS INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL OF OPERA AND FLAMENCO


The first edition of the International Festival of Opera and Flamenco will take place this Saturday, August 26, at the Ahmed Boukmakh Cultural Center in Tangier, under the theme "Chantons pour la paix"

This cultural event will feature the participation of nationally and internationally renowned artists such as soprano Samira Kadiri, flamenco dancer Alba Fajardo, Spanish poet Pedro Enriquez and Spanish-Moroccan soprano Sara Sae.

The festival, which is part of the celebration of the Youth Day, aims to promote the values ​​of peace, tolerance and peaceful coexistence among peoples, said the director of the festival, Younes Akdira.

The choice of the city of Tangiers for the launching of this initiative is motivated by the place that the "pearl of the North" occupies as a place of cultural interbreeding and coexistence between religions and cultures and a gateway to Africa and Europe.

Soprano Sara Sae says this initiative aims to promote the cultural and civilisational interbreeding between Morocco and Spain and to inculcate in the rising generations the values ​​of love, peace, dialogue, tolerance and acceptance of the other in its difference, noting that this evening comes at a particular moment "where we must get our hands together to fight the spread of hatred, violence and extremism. The theme chosen for this edition is the result of a shared reflection between Spanish researchers, writers and academics, which aims in particular to promote communication bridges and intercultural exchange between the two countries and neighbouring peoples, She said, noting that other evenings will be organised in the next months in other parts of Morocco, including Rabat, Casablanca and Fez, as well as in Spanish cities such as Granada, Cordoba and Barcelona.

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Saturday, August 05, 2017

Mohamed Choukri to Feature at Twiza Festival


The 13th edition of the Twiza Festival will take place from the 10th to the 13th of August in the city of Tangier

According to a statement from the Foundation of the Mediterranean Festival of Amazigh Culture in Tangier, this edition, which will be devoted to the role of intellectuals, will be marked by the participation of several major names from the world of culture and arts, both Moroccan and foreign.


The organisers of the event say a tribute will be paid to the Egyptian writer Nawal Saadawi, who will be the guest of honour of the festival in addition to meetings with journalist Abdel Bari Atwan, researchers Ahmed Assid, Mohamed Boudhan, Rachid Alhahi, Boudriss Belaid and Ahmed Zahed.

The festival will also include sessions on the writer Mohamed Choukri and the Spanish writer Juan Goytisolo.

On the artistic side, the organisers announce several musical evenings of the Moroccan repertoire.

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Tuesday, April 25, 2017

Tangier ~ A Boost in Tourist Numbers


According to a report of the provincial delegation of Tourism in Tangier, tourist establishments classified in Tangier recorded 75,904 arrivals at the end of February compared to 62,347 during the same period a year earlier, a rise of 22%



The number of international visitors to Tangier reached 36,263 tourists during the first two months of 2017 (+ 42% year-on-year), while domestic tourists totalled 39,641, up 7% compared to the end of February 2016, with an average stay of 2 days.

Over the period, the various classified hotel units in the city recorded 141,715 overnight stays, compared to 113,306 at the end of February 2016, an increase of 25%, with an occupancy rate of 34% compared to 31% at the end of February 2016 .

Spaniards are at the top of the list of foreign tourists who visited the city of Tangier during this period (7,593), followed by the French (4,982),  Arabs (1,886),  Americans (1,677), Germans (710), Belgians (652), Scandinavians (645) and Dutch (598).

Four-star tourist establishments welcomed 24,780 tourists, followed by 3 stars (19,399), 2 stars (11,893), 5 stars (11,072) and one star (5,394), as well as hotel residences guest houses (1,499).

In February alone, some 36,486 tourists visited Tangier compared to 30,324 in February 2016, a 20% increase, the same source said, noting that the number of tourist nights was 68,258, up 23% (55,532), with an occupancy rate of 36%, compared with 33% year-on-year.

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Tuesday, February 21, 2017

Three Days of Great DJs in Tangier



Electronic Music Festival 2-4 March 2017 Tangier-Morocco - Festival de Musique Électronique 2-4 Mars 2017 TANGER-Maroc


From 2 to 4 March 2017, the association Maroc Créations will be holding the 2nd edition of the electronic music festival TangerGround.

Twenty DJs of 9 nationalities will spin their turntables before the enthusiasts of this musical genre.

In a statement, the initiators of the event explain that the objective of this second edition is to promote electronic music and promote an exchange between Moroccan and foreign DJs.

Lighting is promised to be spectacular

For three days, the Tangiers will celebrate. On offer are great sound and sophisticated lighting. For this second edition, the association Morocco Créations announces the participation of DJ enthusiasts who will mix before hundreds of people.


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Thursday, February 09, 2017

Gnawa and Blues Concert in Tangier

An evening of Gnawa and Blues music is taking place in Tangier  on February 10th at the Ahmed Boukmakh Cultural Centre. Performing will be Maalema Joyce Tape and Maalem Boulkheir El Gourd. According to the organisers Gnawa’n Blues is a chance for the public to “To sing Africa, to dance Africa, to tell stories of Africa … to vibrate to African rhythms with Africa.”


Abdellah Boulkhair El Gourd, one of the main ambassadors of Gnawi culture, was born in 1947 in the Kasbah of Tangier. Along with studies, he was introduced to the Gnaoua philosophy. In 1967, Abdellah Boulkhair worked at radio station Voice of America when he met American pianist Randy Weston. In 1992, the two friends realised an old dream by bringing together on the same disc the majority of the old maâlems (master musicians) active in Morocco.


Gnawa (Gnaoua) music is a rich North African repertoire of ancient African Islamic spiritual religious songs and rhythms. Its well-preserved heritage combines ritual poetry with traditional music and dancing. The music is traditionally performed at lila, entire communal nights of celebration dedicated to prayer and healing guided by the Gnawa maalem, and their group of musicians and dancers.

Though many of the influences that formed this music can be traced to sub-Saharan West-Africa, its traditional practice is concentrated in Morocco and the Béchar Province in southwestern Algeria.

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Monday, January 09, 2017

Extraordinary Photographic Exhibition to Open in Tangier


A photographic exhibition by Australian artist, Bryan Dawe, opens this week at Tangier's Volubilis Gallery.

Bryan Dawe is a well known Australian writer, comedian and political satirist, but is also known for his work as a songwriter, photographer and social activist. He has spent many months in Fez and Tangier where he developed a deep appreciation of Morocco, its people and culture.

The exhibition, which opens this Thursday, is an exciting collection of artistically enhanced images that go far beyond the usual touristic depictions. Surrealistic, with more than a hint of humour, the photographs delve into the psyche of Tangier, bringing the past swirling into the present. It is an exhibition not to be missed.



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Tuesday, November 22, 2016

Flooding in Tangier


With the onset of a week of wet and cold weather across Morocco, there was major flooding this morning in Tangier


Heavy rains flooded the city, causing some traffic disruption at the main road arteries.

According Tanja24 information site, many drivers struggled to circulate in some streets of the city of Tangier due to heavy rains in mid-day.


Tanja24 reports that the city drainpipes were not sufficient to contain the amount of water and overflowed  to the inconvenience of traffic, especially at the Beni Makada bridge. The intense rains have also caused flooding in several neighbourhoods.

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