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Traditional Moroccan Music — Gnaoua, Andalusian, Chaabi, Malhoun & Amazigh

Traditional Moroccan music is one of the world’s great musical cultures — a tapestry woven from Berber (Amazigh) roots, Arab civilisation, Andalusian refinement, sub-Saharan African rhythms and Mediterranean influences into something that is recognisably and irreducibly Moroccan. For events, it offers an inexhaustible palette of sounds, emotions and cultural experiences. Maison Scene is your gateway to the full spectrum of Morocco’s traditional musical heritage.

The Major Traditions of Traditional Moroccan Music

Gnaoua

Rooted in the sub-Saharan African heritage of Morocco’s Black communities, Gnaoua music is performed by maalems on the guembri (three-stringed bass lute) and krakeb (iron castanets). Originally a healing ceremony tradition, it has become Morocco’s most internationally recognised musical export — performed at world festivals and in collaboration with jazz, rock and electronic artists globally. In Marrakech and Essaouira, it remains a living, daily practice.

Andalusian Music (Al-Ala & Gharnati)

Morocco’s classical music, inherited from the Muslim civilisation of medieval Spain. Two schools: Al-Ala (practised in Fès, Rabat, Tétouan) and Gharnati (Oujda). Performed in long suites called nubas, combining classical Arabic poetry, oud, rabab, tar and voices in intricate arrangements of extraordinary sophistication. UNESCO-recognised Intangible Cultural Heritage.

Chaabi

The popular music of urban Morocco: songs in Darija (Moroccan Arabic) on everyday themes of love, life and celebration, performed with guembri, banjo, karkabat and percussion. The most participatory Moroccan musical tradition — audiences sing along, clap and dance. The beating heart of any Moroccan celebration.

Malhoun

Classical Moroccan sung poetry in Darija, traditionally performed by male vocal ensembles with guembri, luth and percussion. Its texts — sophisticated poetic compositions on love, nature, mysticism and the beauty of Moroccan cities — are deeply literary and culturally resonant for educated Moroccan audiences.

Amazigh Music

The musical traditions of Morocco’s Berber (Amazigh) populations: Ahwach (collective dance and song of the High Atlas), Ahouach (Souss and Anti-Atlas), Rif music and the distinctive call-and-response traditions of the Saharan South. Performed at weddings and festivals, Amazigh music connects participants to the oldest musical layer of Moroccan culture.

Sufi Music (Hamdaoui, Aïssawa, Hamadcha)

The devotional music of Morocco’s Sufi brotherhoods: trance-inducing, rhythmically complex and spiritually charged. Performed at religious festivals and, increasingly, at cultural events and destination weddings seeking a profound encounter with Morocco’s spiritual musical heritage.

Traditional Music at Events — Matching Tradition to Occasion

Tradition Event moment Atmosphere Guest type
Gnaoua Opening show, cocktail Dramatic, visceral All, especially international
Andalusian Al-Ala Cocktail, cultural dinner Refined, historical Educated, Moroccan diaspora
Chaabi Dance party Joyful, participatory All Moroccan, cross-generational
Malhoun Intimate dinner, cultural event Literary, contemplative Cultivated Moroccan families
Amazigh Cultural moment, wedding Earthy, communal Souss, Atlas regional families
Sufi Immersive cultural experience Spiritual, trance-like Culturally adventurous guests

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