Berber music

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(Redirected from
Tuareg music
)

Berber music refers to the musical traditions of the

Arab migration to the Maghreb.[1][2] Their main connections are identified by their usage of the mostly mutually unintelligible Berber languages.[3][4] Berber music varies widely across North Africa. It is stylistically diverse, with songs being predominantly African rhythms and a stock of oral literature.[5]

Ancient Berber music is stylistically diverse, with styles including

African rhythms along with singing.[6]
These ancient musical traditions have been kept alive by small bands of musicians traveling from village to village, entertaining at weddings and other social events with their songs, tales and poetry.

Most Berber music is of the village- and urban-folk musical variety. Berber music and culture is influenced by the Berber people's long-standing struggle to achieve basic language rights and identity recognition in modern North African societies, aside from aesthetics and style.[7]

Musical/vocal styles

Berber music is characterized by its use of folk oral traditions, as well as particular

pentatonic music and African rhythms.[8]
All these elements are combined to form one of the main sources of entertainment in Berber social ceremonies like marriages, as well as verses, tales and songs.

Instrumentation

The Berber people are spread out over a large part of Africa, but are mostly concentrated in the northwestern region of Africa. They use a vast array of both melodic and percussive instruments. The following instruments are part of their secular and religious dance and song:

Taghanimt reed flute
  • Taghanimt, an end-blown reed flute. Used mostly to accompany songs rather than dance, the taghanimt has a rich, breathy texture.
  • bagpipe
    ; the term literally means "bag" or "food pouch".
  • Zukra[clarification needed] (Tunisia) or ghaytah[clarification needed] (Morocco). In both countries, these instruments are combined with several percussive instruments to create large ensembles which may perform at public festivals or similar occasions.
  • Nafir, a long natural horn
    , a type of valveless trumpet. This instrument is used mostly as a signaling instrument to send out messages to large groups, although it also has some performance value.
  • Ginbri (Morocco), a fretless plucked string instrument with a skin stretched over its body on the playing side: the skin has the same acoustic function as the membrane on a banjo. Most ensembles have at least one ginbri, although some have more than one.
  • Rebab, a long-necked bowed instrument with a large body. Like the ginbri, it is constructed with a skin on the string side. This instrument has only one string, usually of horse hair, and is commonly played alongside the ginbri.
  • Tabl (Berber languages: e'ṯbel), a cylindrical double-sided drum. Although it has a similar usage and spelling to the tabla of India, no direct connection has been found between the two. The qas'ah is a large shallow kettledrum found mostly in Tunisia. Similar to the qas'ah is the Naqqarah, two ceramic kettledrums played simultaneously by both hands.
  • Bendir (Morocco and Algeria ), a snare frame-drum. A series of bendirs played simultaneously provide the main percussive rhythm for Berber music as the above-mentioned drums are more artistic than bendirs.
  • castanet-like musical instrument. Normally one is held in each hand. These may be used to keep a rhythm or to play their own pattern.[9]
  • Tende, a drum made with mortar and pestle.

Algeria

The music of the

bagpipe) and ajouag (flute).[citation needed
]

Development of Kabyle music

In the 1930s, Kabyles moved in large numbers to Paris, where they established cafes where musicians like Cheikh Nourredine [fr] added modern, Western instruments like the banjo, guitar and violin to Kabyle folk melodies. Slimane Azem was a Kabyle immigrant who was inspired by Nourredine and 19th century poet Si Mohand Ou Mohand to address homesickness, poverty and passion in his songs, and he soon (like many Kabyle musicians) became associated with the Algerian independence movement.

By the 1950s,

Cherifa, Djamilla and Hanifa
.

Algerian independence did not lead to increased freedom for Kabyle musicians, and these Berbers soon included often covert lyrics criticizing the Ben Bella government, which had little repercussion due to the Evian Accords. Many of these musicians were inspired by other singer-songwriters, including Joan Baez and Bob Dylan, Víctor Jara and Silvio Rodríguez. With the song "A Vava Inouva" (1973), Idir brought international attention to Kabyle music and paved the way for the Algerian raï genre. Ferhat Mehenni, known for his politically uncompromising lyrics, Lounis Ait Menguellet, known for his poetic and inspired lyrics, also became popular during the 1970s and Amour Abdenour, whose ongoing career started in 1969 wrote and performed about kabyle society, nature and more importantly love relationships.

By the time

Matoub Lounes
inspired many Kabyles to rally around their popular musicians.

Modern singers include

Dihya, and Messaoud Nedjahi
.

Morocco

Traditional Moroccan Berber music can be categorised into collective and professional music.[10]

Dancers (back) and musicians (front) from Ouarzazate performing ahwash during the National Folklore Festival in Marrakesh (1970)

In collective musical performances, men and women from entire families or villages participate in communal dances such as the ahwash and ahidus.[10][11] A prayer is chanted at the beginning, followed by a response from a chorus of dancers. Accompanied by drums bendir or tbel) and other percussion instruments, performers dance in two parallel rows or in a circle around the musicians.[11]

Led by an amdyaz or poet, groups of usually four professional musicians (imdyazan) travel across the region to perform in various villages.[10][11] The amdyaz recites improvised poems about current national and world affairs. His fellow musicians accompany the poem with a drum, a single-string rebab and a double clarinet.[11]

A

Shluh tradition of community music and dance is performed by the musicians and singers of the rrways style, led by a rrways or raiss. A rrways performance starts with the astara, an instrumental session on the rebab or lutar, followed by the tambourine and flute. The astara sets the basic notes of the melody.[10][11] The middle section consists of sung poetry (amarg), a choreographed overture (ammussu), a lively song (tamssust), and dance (aberdag).[10][11] The tabbayt marks the final part, in which the rhythm first accelerates and then ceases abruptly.[11] In 2021, an anthology of the art of the "Rrways - a journey into the realm of Amazigh wandering poet-singers", presenting a booklet and ten compact discs with current recordings, received the ' Prix Coups de Cœur - Musiques du Monde' of the Académie Charles Cross in France.[12]

Famous Moroccan Berber musicians include

.

Many musicians have created fusion styles from Berber and European music, including Hindi Zahra, Hassan Hakmoun, Khalid Izri, Hassan Idbasaid, Thidrin, Med Ziani, Imtlaa, Houssaine Kili, Salima Ziani, Abdelhak Akandouch and others.

Tuaregs

The Berber music of the Tuareg region uses rhythms and vocal styles similar to the music of other Berber, Iberian, and Arab music, while West African call-and-response-style singing is also common. In contrast to many of the region's peoples, among the Tuareg music is mostly the domain of women, especially playing the imzhad, a string instrument like a violin. Tuareg weddings feature unique styles of music, such as women's vocal trilling and special dances (ilkan) of slaves marking the occasion.[citation needed]

Notes and references

See also