Showing posts with label Fes Festival 2014. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fes Festival 2014. Show all posts

Monday, June 30, 2014

Faouzi Skali Ousted from Fes Festival Director's Role


It has been announced that Faouzi Skali, the president of the Spirit of Fes Foundation (Fondation Esprit de Fes) has been replaced by Abdelkader Ouazzane. The news came in a short note from the foundation

Faouzi Skali

The decision comes into effect on 1/07/2014.  Abdelkader Ouazzane will take on the role in an interim position for the next six months.

It is unclear what other positions will change. but a festival insider told The View from Fez that the Artistic Director Alain Weber is likely to remain in his position. The same source said that tensions had been apparent for some time and that this latest news was not unexpected. However, some have found the rapidity of the move, coming as it does just after the 20th edition of the Festival, to be surprising.

Abdelkader Ouazzane is also on the board of the Fes Festival of Sufi Culture as is Faouzi Skali. The future direction of the Sufi Festival is also in question, as is Skali's role in the festival

More news and comment to follow.


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Thursday, June 26, 2014

Fes Festival of World Sacred Music 2014 ~ The Wrap


The dust has finally settled, the venues have been stripped of chairs, stands and seating and a majority of the international visitors have returned home.   The View from Fez team  reflects on the 20th Fes Festival


Vanessa Bonnin

The quality I enjoyed most about the festival this year was community. Both between audiences and between performers.

The bond that forms among members of an audience during a shared, transporting musical experience is something very special that elevates us from individualistic human beings to participants in the human race as a whole. We enter a venue as selfish beings, caught up in our own busy lives and daily problems, intent on getting the best seats and only greeting people we already know.

Gypsy Songs of Provence 

Then, something magical happens. Music and performance takes over and we are absorbed, suddenly forgetting all the concerns we had when we arrived, relaxing into the here and now. We begin to look around us, taking in the environment, appreciating the sound of a breeze through the trees, or a snatch of bird song. We notice other people's reactions to the music, recognise that we feel the same way ourselves and a bond starts to be created - the audience is being transformed from a mass of individuals to one entity, following the highs and lows of the music, clapping, swaying, singing. We catch each others eyes and smile, we are all in this together.

Tomatito's superb dancer

Music breaks down barriers and crosses language, race and gender to unite people in a common appreciation of something beautiful. By involving several of the senses we are forced to come out of our shells and be aware of others. By the end of a good performance, you often see people who would never normally talk to 'strangers' sharing their enthusiasm with each other and perhaps striking up new friendships. Such is the power of music to create community.

The other sense of community that struck me this year was the wonderful rapport between the musicians when performing. I commented on it in many of my stories and I noticed it was particularly prevalent this year. That sense of mutual admiration for each other's skill and the enormous pleasure taken from playing, riffing and generally creating an incredible piece of music.

Altan Ensemble

It's always refreshing to see a band where there is no prima donna out the front, no central ego with backing musicians and singers, but instead a collection of talent who are all equally part of the ensemble. The stand out performances for me this year all encompassed this quality - the Altan Ensemble, Tomatito, the Sacred Gypsy Songs of Provence and Zakir Hussain all demonstrated a collaboration between wonderful musicians who had the joy of it on their faces throughout.

The camaraderie between musicians was a pleasure to behold

Even the bigger names - Johnny Clegg and his band, Youssou N'Dour and Buddy Guy - gave performances that featured thrilling solos from other members of their band and the camaraderie between them all was a pleasure to behold. This sense of mate-ship always flows from the stage to the audience and creates another level of bonding throughout the crowd.

It is this overriding sense of community that makes Fes such a special place to be during the Sacred Music Festival. The streets are cleaner, we feel safer, people are friendlier and there is a different buzz in the air. It is my hope that this effect lasts a little while longer each year, and that the musicians leave some of their magic behind after they have gone.


Stephanie Kennedy

As a first timer at the Fez Festival I wasn't sure I'd like the range of music on offer. The opening night gave me a taste of what was to come and I was still a little uncertain whether any of the programme would excite me.

Rokia Traore  

It wasn't long before I was hit by the wow factor.  When a slight African woman appeared on stage and sang her first note, I knew this was something out of the ordinary. Mali's Rokia Traore delivered a powerful concert, her love of Africa and her optimism for its future evident in the lyrics of her songs. Watching the crowd rise up as one and dance with this musical Queen of Africa was the highlight of the performance. Her final song Tuit Tuit used trilling harmonies to imitate birds and was a perfect finale tying in with the festival's theme - the Conference of the Birds.

Nouhaila El Kalai

It was not only the sweet sounds of Africa which impressed me. A young girl singing Moroccan Arabic songs was absolutely mesmerising. Nouhaila El Kalai is a teenage singing sensation who is ensuring Morocco's precious musical heritage continues for at least another generation. She had a presence on stage few 13 years olds could muster anywhere in the world. It was so obvious that she loves the traditional Melhoun songs of her native country. It's the most elaborate form of poetry that exists in Moroccan Arabic and it's the language of the artisans of the medinas. Nouhaila performed with mystical beauty and the sweet sound of this teens poems of love and tales did justice to Morocco's musical heritage and is safe in her hands.

Like the birds in Attar's Canticle of the Birds, my musical journey at Fes was far from over. The meditative sounds of India's Ustad F. Wasifuddin Dagar entranced both me and the audience. It's not the type of music that's interested me, but there's something about Dagars' dhurpad music that caught my attention. The singing started softly to a simple beat, as Dagar slowly picked up the pace he used an increasingly complex and rhythmic pattern. It was both soothing and uplifting, and as I left the Musee Batha I felt strangely calm and cleansed

There's little doubt that Fes has been a musical journey for me, I've enjoyed the variety and the world class talent that was on show here in 2014.

Will I be back? Definitely!

Larry Marshall

Being in Fez for this Sacred Music Festival was a unique experience in itself. An ancient Medina hosting people from all over the world with the aim of using music as a bridge to join cultures and faiths, to give dignity to all and proclaim the strength of difference.


The Fes Hamadcha leader

The highlights for me were the Sufi concerts each evening which brought the Fassis out in force to share their joy in this sacred music form that invites movement and seeks a connection with the divine. On the last night the Hamadcha gave us all something to remember, something to take with us in our hearts from Fez. This was the soul of the festival for me.

The lowlight was the lack of English translation at a beautiful poetic evening entitled ‘The Canticle of the Birds’ . It was an attempt to unpack the meaning behind the great poetry that lay at the centre of the symbolism of this festival of the birds. The French presenters and the musicians gave us a poignant and at times humorous reading of this text but for those without French there was no translation even on paper to help us share this moment. There were no words spoken in English and hence all the foreign visitors who were not Francophiles were disenfranchised.

Wang-li

Other moments I loved were the evening with Wang-li and the Berbers where these two ancient cultures came together musically with deep respect and great joy. Astonishing! It works so very well.

Finally, the sheer energy and brilliance of the musical light that is Rokia Traore from Mali will stay with me. Her strength and nomadic roots gave us a fusion of African and European Rhythms that were fresh and joyful. The audience were all on their feet to pay homage to, and to dance with this lovely woman.


Joel Dowling

I had a fantastic time covering the event and wanted to thank The View From Fez for the opportunity - I really appreciated  them taking a chance on me.

Hot 8 at Bab Boujloud

The events were generally great, though working with The View from Fez as a Media Partner I wish that there was some information on non-venue events like Hot Eight's procession through Boujloud.

Security was absolutely unprofessional at Boujloud and Bab el Makina. They were totally out of line and had no idea what was going on. Unfortunately, security at Dar Tazi was also extremely poor. The so called "security guards" were so wrapped up with yelling at people for sitting on the "VIP carpets" in the front that they did nothing to break up the fights erupting backstage before the last Sufi Nights performance (even when I repeatedly told them that they were needed). Maybe the security guards could have training in behaving better and also be informed that the media are also there to work.

The Fes Forums ~ Where to now?

Katherine Marshall reports : he Fes Sacred Music Festival has a unique feature and asset in the Fes Forum. Many festivals host seminars and the like, but the Fes Forum is a deeply integrated part of the Festival and can be seen as its heart. That owes much to the Festival's history, coming as it did on the heels of the First Gulf War, at the height of concerns about mounting violence and a "clash of civilizations". The festival is about understanding and building bridges across cultures and religions. And the Forum was designed to give that ambitious vision an intellectual and spiritual but also a political platform.

Katherine Marshall

The Forum was launched in 2001, and thus is 14 years old. Each year it has involved five (generally) days of full mornings devoted to discussion, dialogue, and debate. The topics range widely, but generally touch on the leading issues of our times: conflict, economic development, governance, environmental protection, business and entrepreneurship, and leadership, for example.

The Forum's supporters see this unique event as an enormous opportunity. Where else can issues be discussed with so many different kinds of people, from all over the world? Where else is it possible to talk openly and honestly about very tough issues? The idea is that music and a spiritual ambiance open hearts and minds to new ideas and new commitments. But currently the Forum lacks the continuing resources that would allow it to carry forward the ideas that are launched during discussions. There are valiant communication efforts but the ideas rarely travel very far. There is a nagging sense that Morocco and Fes have an enormous opportunity that is in reach but not quite grasped.

The paths ahead could go in two directions. The first would be more like a wonderful set of daily seminars, exploring the issues of the day in a unique setting, under an ancient and enormous barbary oak tree, serious discussions punctuated by the songs of birds. In a sense that is the Forum's current format. A second, much more ambitious vision, would be to take the idea discussed here at the Forum of creating a continuing, "spiritual Davos", anchored in a country on the bridge between east and west, north and south, and make it a reality. That would call for a continuing secretariat and international advisory committee, a communication strategy and apparatus, and a self-conscious networking strategy. It would obviously need resources. The first option is important , and the Fes Forum could continue to be a seedbed of ideas. The second involves a vision of transformation, making a difference in a complex world. Where to next?

Finally...

The View from Fez would like to thank: Vanessa Bonnin, Stephanie Kennedy, Larry Marshall, Maha McCutcheon. Rachida El Jokh and Joel Dowling for the long hours and superb work. Also, thanks to our readers and those who shared or retweeted our stories. For this year's festival we published 56 stories and reached our biggest audience ever both on The View from Fez (over  50,000 page views) and associated Facebook pages (10, 460).

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Sunday, June 22, 2014

Sensational Sufi Night Wraps Up Fes Festival ~ The Hamadcha of Fes



The Sufi Nights at the Fes Festival were an overwhelming success and reached a peak on the final night. The Hamadcha Brotherhood, under the leadership of the charismatic malem Abderrahim Amrani Marrakchi, are firm favourites in Fez, and playing to their hometown audience they were given a wonderful reception before a capacity crowd.  Larry Marshall reports for The View from Fez

Hamadcha Malem - Abderrahim Amrani Marrakchi

Saving the Best for the last - The Hamdouchia Brotherhood (and sisterhood ) of Fez

The Hamdouchia of Fez know how to play to their enormous local following. Dar Tazi is packed like never before with expectation brimming over to excitement. Suddenly the wailing sounds of the horns arrive from the back of the courtyard which is bathed in lights and seven flag bearing young men lead the group of twenty-four singers and players onto the stage.

The twenty-four strong Hamadcha members at Dar Tazi

Their director or malem, Abderrahim Amrani Marrackchi has the audience singing and clapping from the moment he hits the stage. He plays the oud and is the energetic core of the Hamdouchia of Fez.  A smaller number from the group have recently been invited to perform at the Woodford Festival in Australia, the largest festival in the Southern Hemisphere.

Younger members of the Hamadcha Brotherhood

The Hamadcha tonight included some new younger players just for this concert and they are enthusiastically jumping with the beat as the crowd roars its appreciation. An older man in a riotous orange turban leads the singers in the special movements and jumps which are part of the sacred healing rituals of the Hamdouchia experience.

 Abdel Ouahed Riffi Lotfi  and Faith Barker 

The other surprise is that for the first time the Sufi Nights, a Western woman is part of the group. Faith Barker has blonde hair and blue eyes and there are mutterings in the audience until she speaks perfect Arabic and then sings a long chant as the lead solo voice.

 Then there are heads (male and female) sagely nodding in appreciation and my Moroccan friends say she sounded like a local Arabic speaker. The entire audience give her a very warm welcome. Faith Barker, one man confides, has been a Sufi for years. Another crowd favourite is French musician Frederic Calmes, a long time member of the Brotherhood and a fine singer and gimbri player.

Frédéric Calmes


The songs are upbeat and infectious from the start with the audience participating in 'call and response'. This is the perfect concert to close these memorable Sufi nights. This sacred music has touched many hearts in the past ten days and it will continue to draw new followers to Fez in the years ahead.

Abdellatif  Moujtahid
Abdel Ouahed Riffi Lotfi 

People's Responses:

Connie from California told The View from Fez this was her first visit here but definitely not her last. "That was hypnotic music. The chanting and singing was more upbeat than I expected. It really draws you in inviting you to move your body and close your eyes. I want more."

Jordi from Spain: "The music and the movement are one thing - they are not easily separated. This music insists that you sway and move and even jump and it does call to you in some visceral way. I will come back next year to learn more deeply."

Text: Larry Marshall
Photographs: Joel Dowling 

The View from Fez is an official media partner of the Fes Festival of World Sacred Music

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Buddy Guy Closes Fes Festival With The Blues And Wicked Humour


“Ladies and gentlemen, put your hands together for six time Grammy award winner, rock and roll hall of famer, Mr Buddy Guy!”

With this Hollywood style introduction followed by a jangle of fat chords from an electric guitar, the audience at Bab al Makina knew they were in for one hell of a show, in the old school style of performance from a living legend.


Buddy Guy, a blues legend of the ilk of BB King, John Lee Hooker and Muddy Waters, who has influenced great blues-rock musicians such as Eric Clapton and Jimmy Page, strolled nonchalantly on stage in a black and white polka dot shirt, with dots as in your face as the whomping bass line that accompanied his entrance.

Coupled with crisp white trousers and topped off with a natty white flat cap, Buddy Guy stood centre stage, strummed out some classic blues chords on his electric Fender and moaned “oh babe I’ve got the blues, from my head down to my shoes…” But this was no slow and easy blues music. The bass could be felt in our chests like a heartbeat and his guitar howled like a cat on heat.


Backed by some seriously good musicians, both the keyboardist and second guitarist took their turns at stupendous solos with the confidence of accomplished professionals, super tight but free to play and riff together, bouncing back and forth with evident pleasure.

Buddy Guy enjoyed a great rapport with his fellow musicians

“You’re damn right I got the blues!” Guy wailed, and then with a cheeky Elvis style swivel and thrust of the hips, the audience got their first taste of the showmanship that was in store for them. He may have been singing the blues but the sense of humour which accompanied it made the lyrics seem very tongue in cheek.

“Lord, have you ever been mistreated?
“Then you know what I’m talking about.
“Five long years with one woman and she had the nerve to kick me out!”

This could have been a song of heartbreak but its delivery had the crowd cackling with laughter, whooping and clapping. Obviously encouraged by the response, the next number should have raised a few eyebrows, with Guy getting a conservative, Moroccan audience, at a Sacred Music Festival, to sing along the following: “While you were slipping out, someone else was slipping in…!” Perhaps the double entendre wasn’t evident to all, but the effect was deliciously hashouma.


Lyrics aside, the music kept everyone on their toes, going from one end of the spectrum to another. Guy played whisper quiet at times, telling the crowd “shh” and pulling great emotion out of little volume, then would suddenly ramp up the volume to a wild level that startled. He would also abruptly call a halt to a tune when he had something to say, and it was invariably worth hearing:

“Wait a minute!” Guy commanded and the music dropped. He paused. “This is playing so funky you can SMELL it.”


In the words of English rock guitarist Jeff Beck, Guy “transcended blues and started becoming theatre. It was high art, kind of like drama theatre when he played, you know. He was playing behind his head long before Hendrix. I once saw him throw the guitar up in the air and catch it in the same chord.”

Throwing guitar picks to the crowd

The theatrical part of the show wasn’t far off, and things began to go a little crazy when Guy left the stage with his guitar and walked into the crowd, touring around the aisles and prompting a frenzy of people trying to get next to him and snap photographs of the legend up close. After everyone had stood up there was no getting the audience to return to their seats and refreshingly, this was the first concert at Bab Makina where people were allowed to stay in front of the stage for over half of the performance.


Guy played a mix of his own material plus songs from Eric Clapton, Ray Charles, Fever by Little Willie John and Jimmy Hendrix Sunshine of Your Love. The Hendrix rendition produced the most spectacular guitar playing showmanship of the night, with Guy playing his Fender above his head, from behind, using his backside, using a drumstick, playing with a cloth with which he had just wiped the sweat from his brow, even gnawing the strings with his teeth. The man may be 77 years old but that did not stop him from giving everything he had tonight.


It was a fitting end to a festival which had had many naysayers concerning the lack of a big name headliner and Guy’s incredible performance as a master of the blues guitar should have had everyone saying “Robert Plant who?”

Text: Vanessa Bonnin
Photographs: Joel Dowling, Sandy McCutcheon, Vanessa Bonnin


The View from Fez is an official media partner of the Fes Festival of World Sacred Music

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Saturday, June 21, 2014

A musical journey with two vocal masters


Last year at the festival Columbane Mint Ely Warakane wowed the audience with her powerful earthy voice. Now in a return performance she took the crowd on a musical journey with another powerful singer, India's Raza Khan


This concert was a meeting of two great inspired traditions - the Punjabi qawwali and the Hassanid poetry of the Mauritanian Sahara – true points of convergence in a poetic journey underpinned by mystic exaltation.


Raza Khan is the new star of Sufi music touring worldwide with his extraordinary voice, vivid rhythms, and Sufi poetry in its outstanding musical forms. The transition from modular vocals to falsetto with unusual ease and the long sustains in upper register set him apart from other mainstream Sufi artists in the world.

The art of the Mauritanian griots is full of classical wisdom and Columbane Mint Ely Warakane hails from long line of griots from Trarza in southwest Mauritania. The Mauritanian griots show us Hassanid culture which is a remarkable point of convergence between Arabo-Berber culture and that of West Africa. The brutal and passionate voice combines with the intense hand-clapping in praise of ancient tribal dignitaries, evoking warriors and encampments of old. In the poetry of the desert, water and trees become metaphors for a vision of paradise; the oasis is the incarnation in the desert of the bustan (garden of fruit trees), the hidden garden that is a symbol of Arabo-Andalusian civilisation. Mauritania provides the link between north and southern Africa. In the 11th century, the Almoravid empire in Morocco took Islam south to new territory.


Today Columbane Mint Ely Warakane blended that Hassanid culture in perfect harmony with the intensity of Qawwali song. Qawwali song is the Sufi expression of the Indo-Pakistani subcontinent and comes to us from the qawwâl, the musicians and singers of the Chishtiyâ Brotherhood.

This concert was the meeting of two vocal masters and the musical relationship between them was symbiotic. Each sang independently, yet when they sang together they were harmonious and collegial.

Mint Ely Warakane sang with a powerful earthy voice and she has a gorgeous grin that is infectious. As she picked up her ardin (Moorish harp) her hands gestured out toward the audience. She urged the crowd to join her and Khan on this musical journey.

Sadly, only two-thirds of the seats were occupied and this concert lacked the energy of previous performances by Mint Ely Warakane at the Fes festival. She was no different, it was just a different audience. This crowd just wasn't enthused by the performance.

Text: Stephanie Kennedy
Photographs: Joel Dowling


The View from Fez is an official media partner of the Fes Festival of World Sacred Music

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Fes Festival Sufi Nights ~ The Ouazzania Deliver A Superb Night of Sacred Music


Malem Fouad Ouazzani

The Ouazzani Zaouia of Ouazzane filled Dar Tazi with an energetic, warm performance Friday night. The carpeted area in this lovely courtyard filled up early and a large crowd were standing all around for this penultimate night of free Sufi music


The ensemble, lead by Fouad Ouazzani, employs ten singers and, at Mr. Ouzzani’s able command, delivered a beautiful range of vocal melodies both high and low and complemented by the incredible range of their voices. The singers are backed by a cello, violin, oud, drum and tambourine. Their harmonies are strong and each of the main singers takes a solo turn. We also have solos from the cello and oud.

The crowd was filled with families sitting side by side throughout the performance, creating a peaceful atmosphere and lending a totally different vibe to the setting than that found at the Boujloud stage, another free venue not far from Dar Tazi.

Children ran and played with their friends, though their parents had little to worry about and were able to keep an eye on them within the seated, relaxed crowd.


The front center portion of the seated audience was filled with young men devoted to the spiritual subject matter Mr. Ouzzani specializes in. The young men rocked back and forth with closed eyes, fingers pointed into the air and sang along with Mr. Ouzzani throughout the performance, their smiles reflected on Mr. Ouzzani and his ensemble’s faces.

It seems that Sufi Nights can be quite addictive for some. Each night at Dar Tazi the same joyful faces appear right up close to the stage. For some the draw is the music and a community meeting place for others where new trysts are made and old friendships rekindled.


Mr. Ouzzani’s ensemble delivered a fantastic performance that had a distinct drive and urgency in its delivery. The entire ensemble spoke as one and performed in an energetic style easy for even a Sufi novice to appreciate.


There is a feeling of noisy festival and community spirit as the Fassi sing and clap and talk and sway with the singing and the music late into the sacred night.

Hassan from Lebanon – second visit "Its good to be back here in Fez, under the stars with the Fassi and their beautiful Sufi music."

Brenda from California – first visit: "I know some of the songs of our first people and there is a similar beauty in the repetitive chants that help to build a trance-like joy in the listeners heart."

A first time visitor to Sufi Nights, Bill D. from New York, said that despite his lack of familiarity with the genre, it was a treat to see the performance and to watch the crowd respond to the highs and lows of the material. For both newcomers and seasoned veterans of Sufi Nights, it certainly was a treat!


Saturday night's final concert will feature one of the most loved Sufi Tariqas  ~ the Fes Hamadcha with Abderrahim Amrani Marrakchi. Don't miss it!

Text Joel Dowling & Larry Marshall
Photographs: Joel Dowling

Fes Festival ~  Saturday June 21


Jnan Sbil Garden 4pm: Ihsan Rmiki

Batha Museum 4pm: Mint Ely Warakane & Raza Khan

Bab Boujloud Square 6.30pm: Kadim Al Sahir

Bab al Makina 9pm: Buddy Guy

Sufi Night at Dar Tazi 11pm: Hamadcha of Fez

Weather: Much cooler - Max 28 degrees Celsius (82.4 Fahrenheit) 

Fez Medina Map

The View from Fez is an official media partner of the Fes Festival of World Sacred Music

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The Best Attended Concert of the Fes Festival So Far - Kadim Al Sahir at Bab Al Makina


The prestigious, big-hearted figure of Arab singer, Kadim Al Sahir, sold out his concert in Fez and last night it was the place to be and Vanessa Bonnin was there for The View from Fez...

The skirts were short, the heels were sky-scraper high, the hair was big and the leopard print and sequins were out in force as the Fassi fabulous welcomed Iraqi heart-throb singer Kadim Al Sahir to Fes for his third concert at the festival in twenty years.

Al Sahir has been at the forefront of a return to romantic classicism in Arabic music, steering clear of the pop sound that is so prevalent today. He is known for his perfectionism and attention to detail, and praised for his non-traditional use of long forgotten maqamat (musical building blocks) in his compositions.

Kadim fashion was to the fore

Artistry aside, the majority of the female members of the audience were all about the charm and romance. Such was the desperation to get close to the host of the Middle East version of The Voice that security at Bab al Makina struggled to cope with crowds surging the barriers. The concert was completely sold out and there was a fair amount of tension generated by those who had paid 600 Dirhams for A class tickets and found themselves relegated to seats far back in the venue.


Those that did manage to get close to the stage screamed “Kadim! Kadim!” and posed for endless ‘selfies’ with their idol in the background. Song after song prompted rapturous cheers from the beyond capacity audience, with seemingly everyone knowing the lyrics by heart as they sang, clapped and waved their hands in the air in sentimental moments (of which there were many).


Qooli ohiboka, kay tazeeda wasamati
(Tell me, "I Love You", so my beauty may increase)
Fa be ghairi hobiki la akoono jameelan.
(For without your love, I can't be beautiful)
Qooli ohiboka kay taseera asabi-ee thahaban
(Tell me, "I Love You", so my fingers can turn to gold)
Wa tosbeha jabhti qindeelan.
(And my brow can light up like a candle)
Al ana qooliha! Wala tataradadi.
(Say it now! And do not hesitate)
Ba'thol hawa la yaqbalo ta'jeela
(For some love cannot stand to wait)


Apart from the lyrics, it was easy to see why Al Sahir has found his way into the hearts of so many female fans. With a full-wattage movie star smile, which he used to great effect, and impressive physique for a man of fifty-six (apparently he works out five times a week) this was definitely a handsome man who knows it. A serious musician undoubtedly, but a serious performer to boot.


“I like pop music. I think it’s beautiful. But I prefer the classical Arab music. I want to feel. When I write songs, I have to feel it. And the difficulties of life in Iraq encourage Iraqis to go deeply into things. Suffering is important some times. In Baghdad, yes, we have had too much trouble. But if life isn’t always easy, that can make you stronger. That’s why I chose Nizar’s poems. I know they’re very difficult, but I love that. I love it.” - Kadim Al Sahir


Backed by an orchestra consisting of twenty musicians and four female and five male backing singers (oh, and there was a conductor out in front), this was a full-blown production. However it was the man centre stage that had all the attention. They love him, sing along with his lyrics and couldn't get enough images of him on their mobile phones and Ipads. And, for his part, Kadim beamed the love right back at them.


As a musician, I want my music to be heard. Because whenever I play, there are lots of people from Kuwait, Saudi, all together listening to the music. Because I don’t have any [animosity], just love. Just romantic songs. You can see the whole Middle East at my concerts" ~ Kadim Al Sahir

Text: Vanessa Bonnin, Sandy McCutcheon
Photographs Vanessa Bonnin

Fes Festival ~  Saturday June 21


Jnan Sbil Garden 4pm: Ihsan Rmiki

Batha Museum 4pm: Mint Ely Warakane & Raza Khan

Bab Boujloud Square 6.30pm: Kadim Al Sahir

Bab al Makina 9pm: Buddy Guy

Sufi Night at Dar Tazi 11pm: Hamadcha of Fez

Weather: Much cooler - Max 28 degrees Celsius (82.4 Fahrenheit) 

Fez Medina Map

The View from Fez is an official media partner of the Fes Festival of World Sacred Music


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