Filed under: Morocco

The only thing I have been able to find about Samy Essaid / سامي السيد is that he had four cassette only releases on the legendary label Disques Gam of Casablanca, Morocco.
If you have any further information about this artist or anything else about this recording, please leave it in the comment section below.
Catalog number G.B.N:1 on Disques Gam of Casablanca, Morocco. No release date listed.
Filed under: Morocco

Brothers Hamid, Mohamed, Omar and Reda were from Oujda, Morocco. Their father, Benyounes Bouchnak, was a very famous Arab-Andalusian musician.
They released their first cassette in 1983 and would go on to release almost two dozen albums – all issued either as cassette or compact disc. In 1996, they participated in Eurovision with the song “Aynou Hara”. After their performance, Les Frères Bouchnak split up. Hamid and Reda then emigrated to France where they released “Ya Bent Nass” which was a big hit there. [Source]
Catalog number EH 1244 Edition Hassania of France. No release date listed.
Filed under: Morocco

Said Ziani / سعيد الزياني – also know as Said Dahman – was born in capitol city of Rabat, Morocco on December 1st, 1952. He was a singer, artist, author, composer, actor, producer, director and presenter of programs on Société Nationale de Radiodiffusion et de Télévision . In 1984, he announced his retirement and devoted the rest of his life seeking Islamic knowledge and advocacy.
Catalog number 2.225.035 on Polydor. Released 1974.
Filed under: Morocco

♬ Elli Yachak Ezin / اللي يعشق الزين
Haim Abitbol / حايم بيطبول – also seen as Botbol – was a Jewish singer born in Fez, Morocco in 1936. His father Jacob Abitbol was a leader of the malhun musical tradition in Fez. The family name Botbol / Abitbol means “father of the drum” in Darija.
As a young performer, he excelled in various styles, from aita and chaabi to Gharnati and raï. He was a multi-instrumentalist, but excelled with the oud and bendir. With his family – including his father, his brother Marcel on the violin, and his brother Claude on percussion – he formed an ensemble performing classical works and poetry. From 1950, he formed a duo with the Algerian Salim Halali, covering a number of Maghrebi classics. In the 1960s, he incorporated various influences into his music, including malhun, gnawa, salsa, reggae, and funk.
“Elli Yachak Ezin” is a cover of the Spanish rumba “El Porompompero“, first recorded by Manolo Escobar y Sus Guitarras in 1960.
Catalog number MB 281 on Boussiphone of Morocco. No release date listed.

Boussoir Maghnaoui (also seen as Boussouar el Maghnaoui) was from… Hmm. Here’s where things get a little fuzzy. Most sources that say he was from Maghnia, Algeria. But I also have other sources that say he was from Oujda, Morocco. Those two cities are roughly 28 kilometers / 17 miles apart.
Unlike most of the Raï / Proto Raï that I have heard, the organ is very prominent on this track. The song starts off with a “stwanat” – where the artist announces the record label his name as well as the name of the performers. That is followed a sort of poem – or mawwal – that doesn’t have anything to do with the usual intros and tributes to other artists or football players or cities. This song features Messaoud Bellemou – known as “The Father of Raï” – on trumpet.
Thanks to Hicham Chadly, Jonathon Ward and Loïc Guillaume for input on this post.
Catalog number N· 496 on Sawt-Hilali of Algeria. No release date listed.
Filed under: Morocco

Abdelwahab Doukkali was born in Fez, Morocco on January 2nd, 1941. At the age of 18, he moved to the capitol city of Rabat, where he worked briefly at Radio Television Maroc. He soon moved to Casablanca – the center of Morocco’s music industry. For the next three years, Doukkali pursued careers in both theatre and radio. In 1962 he toured Algeria, then left Morocco and settled in Cairo. During his three years in Egypt, he gained popularity outside North Africa, then returned to Morocco in 1965. In 1968, he tried his hand at acting with the lead role in Ahmed Mesnaoui and Mohamed Abderrahman Tazi‘s film Vaincre pour Vivre. He also recorded the theme song for that film. Doukkali would go on to act in two more films and he continued to write and perform music through the 1990s.
Although there are no production credits listed on this single, it definitely sounds like this recording was produced by J. Hendrix who also produced Algeria’s Rachid et Fethi and Morocco’s Les Frères Megri.
Catalog number ATL 5060 on Atlassiphone of Casablanca, Morocco. No release date listed.
Filed under: Morocco

For the 300th post, I wanted something special.
I have posted records by Morocco’s Abdou El Omari twice before – once for his first single and once with Naïma Samih. Since those postings, Radio Martiko has reissued his first two solo albums as well as an album of material he recorded with Naïma Samih – all three of which were originally recorded for the legendary Disques GAM label. But there is another album of material that has not been reissued: This cassette only release.
Cassettes are the last frontier for archivists / bloggers / collectors. Unlike vinyl – which had to be pressed – cassettes could be produced anywhere by pretty much anyone. And in many places they were more popular than vinyl since cassette players are more portable than turntables. But there is a lot less information of what’s out there.
Catalog number SH 1008 on Sawt El Hassania of Casablanca, Morocco. No release date listed.
Filed under: Morocco

Naima Samih (نعيمة سميح) was born in the Derb Essultan suburb of Casablanca, Morocco. She has been referred to as “Edith Piaf of Morocco”. Naima Samih was one of the first female singers to gain prominence in the late Sixties and early Seventies when the field was generally limited only to men.
She began singing at the age of nine, leaving school to pursue a career in music. In the early 1970s, Naima Samih participated to Abdelkader Rachdi talent show « Mawahib » winning applause from both the jury and the audience. During her career of over three decades, she has collaborated many Moroccan songwriters and composers – including Abdou el Omari.
The song “Zifaf Filfada” – which was also arranged by Abdou el Omari – was included on the second volume of the Waking Up Scheherazade compilations.
Catalog number GB171 on Disques Gam of Casablanca, Morocco. Released 1977.
Filed under: Morocco

On the Wikipedia page for the Music of Morocco, under the tab for Chaabi, it says:
“A sophisticated form of chaabi evolved in the 1970s competing with popular Egyptian and Lebanese music. These chaabi groups consisted of a lute and a hadjuj, with some form of drum. Eventually, new instruments like buzuks and electric guitars were added. The three most important early groups were Lemchaheb, Nass El Ghiwane and Jil Jilala. All three bands featured politicized lyrics that got the songwriters in trouble with the government.”
Although they are listed first, there is no entry for Lemchaheb on Wikipedia…
Lemchaheb was formed in Casablanca by Moulay Chérif Lamrani. Chérif had previously been a band called Sound of Today that performed Moroccan songs with Western instruments. The group was assembled by Mohamed Bakhti – who was a member of Nass El Ghiwane – and was a music teacher. He introduced Chérif to members of a band called Tyour Ghourba (Birds of Exile) from Marrakech. After trying out the names Khatou Khatou (Step) and Les Étoiles Filantes (Shooting Stars), the band finally settled on Lemchaheb – which supposedly translates as either “glowing bars on which bread is baked in the oven” or “torches that mountains inhabitants made to scare animals and keep them far from the village” – in 1973. Chérif, who had been a cartoonist, designed the groups stage outfits and concert posters. Their early tours of Europe were financed by Radiodiffusion Télévision Marocaine. The band went through many line ups, and continued performing up until 2002. Moulay Chérif Lamrani passed away in October of 2004.
These two tracks are known as “takassim” or “solo”. They are the last tracks on Side A and Side B, and are unlisted.
The majority of this information came from the Lemchaheb Blogspot and a fan MySpace page.
Catalog number 2396 202 on Polydor Records of Morocco, released 1978
Filed under: Morocco

One of the benefits of running this site, is that occasionally people will e-mail me with their questions. My favorite is when people ask me if I’ve ever heard of _________, and it’s someone I’ve never heard of. Usually, I’ll do a search right then – but I also add that name to my record list.
When Philippe Gassin e-mailed me back in September of last year, I had not even heard of Abdou el Omari. At the time, I did some poking around and found nothing. Then, when looking for material for my radio show (R.I.P.), I saw that one of his songs entitled “Fatine” had been included on an early cassette compilation that Mississippi Records had released called Chaabi Music From Al-Maghrib.
But just recently, I managed to find a little bit more information. Abdou El Omari was born in Tafraout, Morocco in 1945. He is – as the Google translator puts it – “considered among the pioneer generation of musicians who have tried to move the Moroccan song more appealing to the heavens while keeping its original rhythms.” Abdou El Omari died on March 3rd, 2010 in Casablanca.
I know that, other than this single, he recorded at least five other songs – but I do not know if that was an album or a couple of singles. If you have any further information, please contact me or leave a comment.
Catalog number GB161 on Disques Gam of Casablanca, Morocco. Released 1976.

