Croissance de 11 % du financement des petites et micro-entreprises en Chine en 2025    Yassir Zabiri attendu pour ses débuts en Ligue 1 face à Achraf Hakimi    Girona : Azzedine Ounahi de retour avant le choc face au FC Barcelone    Achraf Hakimi de retour : l'heure de la relance face à Rennes    Forum économique maroco-croate : vers des partenariats stratégiques multisectoriels et transméditerranéens    Revue de presse de ce vendredi 13 février 2026    Maroc Telecom affiche une croissance solide portée par ses filiales africaines    Moroccan–Croatian Economic Forum Lays the Groundwork for Strategic Multi-Sector and Trans-Mediterranean Partnerships    Abus de marché : L'AMMC publie un guide sur la prévention et la répression pour consultation publique    Maroc Telecom : Le RNPG culmine à près de 7 MMDH en 2025    L'ambassadeur russe salue la stabilité et la croissance du Maroc    Sécurité : l'UE veut durcir les conditions d'enregistrement des drones    Libye : première attribution internationale de blocs pétroliers depuis plus de 17 ans    Live. Suivez le débat de La Vie Eco sur l'investissement public et privé    Asile : Quels effets des nouvelles mesures européennes sur le Maroc ?    Sahara : L'Algérie se tourne vers Moscou après les pressions américaines    La journaliste Nassira El Moaddem publie son livre-enquête «Main basse sur la ville»    Info en images. UNESCO : «L'artisanat marocain» célébré à Paris comme patrimoine vivant «en mouvement»    CasablancaRun revient pour une 5e édition les 14 et 15 février    Intempéries : aucune perte enregistrée dans les établissements pénitentiaires    Souffian El Karouani met les choses au clair concernant la rumeur Al Qadisiah    Réformes fiscales : le FMI salue les avancées réalisées par le Maroc    De la CAN 2025 au Mondial 2030, le Maroc construit bien plus qu'un événement    Intempéries : Programme d'aide de 3 milliards de dirhams sur Hautes Instructions Royales    Addis-Abeba : Le Maroc participe à la 48ème session du Conseil exécutif de l'UA    Marruecos: 3 mil millones de dirhams para apoyar a las poblaciones afectadas    King Mohammed VI orders 3 billion dirham aid plan for flood-hit provinces    Autonomía del Sahara: Desacuerdos sobre la diplomacia, el regreso de los saharauis de los campamentos de Tinduf y los recursos naturales    Amadou Chérif Diouf : « Ce qui unit le Maroc et le Sénégal est plus fort que ce qui pourrait nous diviser »    Nizar Baraka : « Les réserves actuelles peuvent garantir jusqu'à deux années d'approvisionnement en eau »    Bulletin d'alerte : fortes pluies orageuses, neige et rafales de vent vendredi et samedi    Maroc–Emirats arabes unis : Partenariat stratégique renforcé en santé    Coupe de la CAF (6è journée/Gr. B) : Wydad Casablanca/Azzam FC, bataille pour une place en quart de finale    Venezuela : vers la fin de l'embargo pétrolier américain après un accord énergétique inédit avec Washington    Les Marocains, 2èmes bénéficiaires des visas Schengen accordés par la France en 2025    Le trafic maritime entre Tarifa et Tanger suspendu    CAN 2028 : La FRMF entretient le mystère sur une éventuelle candidature du Maroc    Maroc : Un séisme d'une magnitude de 3,7 près de Setti Fadma    Intempéries : Ouverture de 124 sur 168 tronçons routiers endommagés    Officiel : annonce du premier pays arabe fixant la date du début du Ramadan    Intempéries en France: Un mort et un blessé grave, cinq départements en alerte maximale    Berlinale 2026 : Le cinéma marocain sous les projecteurs à l'European Film Market    Une chanteuse namibienne entre dans le catalogue mondial de Sony Music    Trafic record à l'aéroport de Dubaï en 2025, avec 95,2 millions de passagers    UNESCO : « L'artisanat marocain » célébré à Paris comme patrimoine vivant « en mouvement »    Dakar Restaurant Week 2026 : la capitale sénégalaise célèbre la gastronomie    « 3ech Tma3 » : le thriller choc qui va secouer le public pendant le Ramadan    Stoïcisme à l'ère numérique : une philosophie vendue en 15 secondes ?    







Merci d'avoir signalé!
Cette image sera automatiquement bloquée après qu'elle soit signalée par plusieurs personnes.



Randy Weston, rediscovering the African roots of Jazz in Tangier
Publié dans Yabiladi le 04 - 09 - 2018

Born in Brooklyn but in love with Morocco, American pianist and Jazz composer Randy Weston lived in Rabat and Tangier, fusioning his music with the Gnawa folklore. On Saturday he died, leaving behind a heritage that links Morocco to the States.
He loved Jazz and believed in its African roots to the point that he left Brooklyn for Morocco. American pianist and composer Randy Weston passed away on Saturday, 1st of September, leaving behind musical pieces that linked the States to the North African Kingdom.
Born in New York to an African-American restaurateur and a Virginia-native mother, Weston was fascinated by Jazz that he created his own African version of it, mixing it with the Gnawa music while in Morocco.
A State Department tour to Africa
The artist's story with the country began in the 60s when he toured Africa in a trip sponsored by the American government.
Interviewed in May 1972 by «Black Enterprise» (86 pages, Vol. 2, No. 10), a New York-based magazine, Weston said that he «first visited Morocco in April, 1967, at the end of a three-month, fourteen-country State Department tour to West and North Africa with [his] sextet».
The tour, which was launched to help African American musicians foster musical and cultural exchanges, was too enjoyable for Weston that he decided to stay. «We were enormously stimulated by the diversity and richness of Africa and her people … But we found the energy to play for those beautiful Moroccans and their response was overwhelming», he told the American magazine.
Famous in Morocco
After his Africa tour, Weston returned to Brooklyn but his popularity grew fast in Morocco that he had to settle down in the country. According to «Traveling Spirit Masters: Moroccan Gnawa Trance and Music in the Global Marketplace» (Wesleyan University Press, Oct 26, 2007), a book by New York Univesity professor Deborah Kapchan, who had the chance to meet the pianist, Weston returned to Morocco because of the «response of the audience».
«The Moroccans so loved Weston's playing that when he returned to the States, he immediately received an invitation to return to Morocco», she recalled.
Randy Weston acknowledged that in his interview too, stating that «Moroccans kept urging [them] to return, and later in 1967 [he] went back to do a trio tour of Tunisia and Morocco».
«I decided to stay attracted by the warmth and hospitality of the Moroccans, the beauty of the country, the interesting folk music I was hearing all around me, and the feeling I had of the real possibility of planting the seed of African-American musical exchange there, in the African soil».
Randy Weston
Indeed, the Jazz giant lived in Rabat and then Tangier for five years, said the New York Times in a recent article.
Away from the capital, Randy Weston unleashed his talents and embraced the local music, collaborating with Gnawa masters.
The African Rhythms private club in Tangier
In Tangier Weston founded a private club he called African Rhythms. «With the help of my Moroccan partner Abdeslam Akaaboune, and many other people from Morocco and from other parts of Africa, Europe, the Caribbean and the United States, I've opened a club- African Rhythms- in Tangier», Weston told Black Entreprise.
In his club, he and his son Azzedin used to perform every night from April through September. Describing, Weston's African Rhythms, the Rolling Stones wrote that it was «an opultent upstairs den, above the Mauritania cinema and across the Avenue Prince Heriter».
«Weston's club is dark and smoky, many of its habitués all but invisible … to reach it you climb a winding orange staircase decorated with indistinct black faces into abstract tribal designs».
Rolling Stones
The club operated from 11 p.m. till the hours before dawn, receiving the city's expatriates in love with Weston's music. «The floor will be filled with couples dancing to the latest James Brown records or cleared with Weston's patented brand of jazz, which owes as much to the rhythms of Moroccan folklore», wrote the Rolling Stones.
Near the African Rhythms club in Tangier owned by Randy Weston./Ph. DR
The club also served as a platform for Gnawa Derdeba Lila, and local masters who came to perform with their band with Weston's mesmerizing piano solos. The location was so famous that it laid the founding stones of the first Tangier Jazz Festival.
By the mid-seventies, Weston left Tangier for Brooklyn but he returned yearly to play for the Tangier Jazz Festival and to perform in other cities, reported Deborah Kapchan.
In 1973, and thanks to his stay in Morocco he earned Grammy nominations for his album «Tanjah» for best jazz performance by a big band. According to New York Times, in 1995 he received the same recognition for «The Splendid Master Gnawa Musicians of Morocco» as the best world music album category. The album featured 11 Moroccan Gnawa masters, he met in the Kingdom.
In May, 2011, Randy Weston was decorated by King Mohammed VI. The Wissam was granted to him during the 4th edition of the «World Nomads Morocco» festival in New York.
The artist, 92, known as America's African Musical Ambassador left this world on Saturday in his Brooklyn house, as confirmed by his lawyer Gail Boyd.


Cliquez ici pour lire l'article depuis sa source.