► Download audio: blrrm.tv/br-app ► More here: blrrm.tv/mmkouyou ► Prepare yourself for a triplet-induced transcendental experience with one of the maestros of gnawa music.
this is just one of the genres of moroccan music which is greatly affected by sub saharian africa, there is much more genres and styles of music that sound way way different, some genres are affected by the middle eastt, some genres are affected by europe etc...
@@zerocoldprod You Algerian do not know anything about history because you have no history The important thing is on 12-12-2019, the Moroccan art of Gnawa is registered in UNESCO in the list of intangible cultural heritage of humanity .. Gnaoui art is Moroccan art and Morocco has an African historical depth unlike Algeria, which was associated with France and the Ottoman Empire
In France, many surgeons operate to music. I heard this for the first time in Bergonié Institute in Bordeaux, in the operating theatre. The French professional class are highly cultured, and appreciate all cultures and music. When I found out surgeons put on incredible music, I felt so happy and reassured. One love.
The power of that instrument, the Guembri, is that it's both a deep bass and a percussion instrument. Sounds like nothing else I know of. Especially against the metalic, constant rythm of the Qraqeb.
Also what you guys need to know about the lyrics, is that they are somewhat irrelevant. They speak of hope and suffering, and invoke ancestors while asking for redemptions and healing. But they have no single structure or story line as you find in western music. It's just a mosaic of a number of "phrases", key words, knit together. Exactly like those Zellij patterns you see in the back walls. The important thing here is the transe/flow experience. Gnaouas are not poets, they are masters at healing the soul with rythms and sounds, not words.
I play it at work, this music turn the area hot for dance trance spiritual love, i'm writing this at bathroom now nd dancing. At 24 min i decided to love my life nd enjoy every minutes like this. I'm moroccan, i live i died i live again in the world THANK YO HUMAN ✨☁️☁️
Such sweet sweeeeet timelessness. Beautiful how it's easy to feel & connect w this, without being of this culture. Thanks to all the artists, musicians and Boiler Room x
Ojala nunca se pierda o quede olvidada la música tradicional, la música de nuestros ancestros, esa música que, lejos de buscar el reconocimiento comercial explora cada rincón del alma y espíritu humanos y nos eleva hasta regiones donde solo la música y la poesía de sus letras nos pueden llevar.
Tnx boiler room for this, its really cool to see ppl appreciate other cultures than quick judging them cus its different from what they are used to or could understand, give time to appreciate everything and you will feel the love and the hard work of these things. One Love.
this's first music in morocco since more 400years come from mali but the lyrics was change to praise allah ( god) and the prophet muhammad and his friends , i heard stories before blues made in gnaoua this music
Just listen man. Why is everybody trying to be a historian by transmitting same false information. If it came from there then why isn't there Gnawa music in Mali or wherever. It's an expression and a music born out of the experience of slaves in Morocco but there's more to that even...there are other dimensions like the whole influence of popular culture and the importance of saints etc. Again just enjoy like you would enjoy the American Blues or Cuban Rumba. We all know the African roots of these genres of music but we would sound ignorant if we said they came from an African country x or y. It's Moroccan primarily and it expresses a Moroccan experience. Period.
@@MoSec9 People might be interested in knowing where those slaves came from. They brought something of themselves that contributed to the rich mosaic that is Morrocan culture.
Quelle magnificence, je suis fier de mon Maroc, de sa richesse culturelle, une des seules musiques qui vous transcende, qui vous caresse le coeur, et vous rend euphorique.
Redmoon tout a fait d accord avec toi machallah sa me donne envie de prendre un billet directe pr retrouver le maroc les sons les odeurs les gouts la musique gnawa touche le coeur au sens propre et figuré
They were playing the same music but the person in the video you’re getting confused with is Maalem Younes Hadir not Maalem Mohamed Koyou, although they’re both from Marrakech
The nike wink on his white sock. Is a greeting from the American capitalist system to Africa. And its history. Very elegant, yet gracefully subtle. I arrived here.
A year late... but I think I'm the only one out of 90k people who started crying 7 minutes in. This one, to me is different than Guinia's. Regardless they come from a different places, different struggles, different way of life and both express a pain as well as love that many have never experienced and never will. I honestly appreciate BR bringing diversity into the realm of a field that's partly dominated by popularity contest and substance abuse. Thanks Boiler Room, keep it up!
Gnawa tradition goes way back to the ancestors, as you well know, and the World will always thank the guiding voice of the blues to help every man and woman dance away the pain and sorrow the river of life can sometimes bring us. Long live the love, kindness and respect of the Gnawa brotherhood! I have been a fan ever since the first festival in Essaouira. Wonderful people. Peace to you and your family, Houssam Zak.
I feel this music instantly and deeply. It's awesome and extraordinary and so so beautiful. And that's without knowing what they are singing about :) Music is the international language; there is no (true) other, imo Peace and Love
loin d'avoir une barbe de 2m.... quand je pense aux paroles des gnawa... ils invoquent Dieu, le prophète. ... mais aussi une infinité d'intermédiaires dotés de "pouvoirs légendaires et insoupçonnés! !!" . ... de l'époque de l'ignorance - noblesse...... ce style de musique me fais voyager du moment ou je ne fais pas attention aux paroles: -sidi allal -sidi ayad.. -lalla icha - lalla kourrit..... wali el jouhala oui!!!! ça doit évoluer un peu.... on se reveille! nous sommes plus au moyen âge ni a l'époque des zawaya maintenues viables exprès par le mekhzen.... ces zawaya qui lui servent pour hypnotiser le peuple. ...
Je suis totalement d'accord, car ce style de musique a été créé pour une raison noble qui est la liberté et non pour s'emprisonner par ces idées préfabriquées par des personnes qui ont intérêt que les gens restent hantés par ces mythes.
abdenacer bakkouri La musique Gnawa marocaine représente les racines du Blues américain, loin de toute connotation politique ou idéologique elle reste toujours l'un des plus précieux bijoux de notre patrimoine folklorique.. elle a existé bel et bien avant l'apparition du Makhzen et aussi bien avant l'intrusion coloniale ! De la pure musicothérapie à la marocaine.