Gnaoua and World Music Festival 2024: Essaouira Fuses Tradition and Global Sounds

The 2024 Gnaoua and World Music Festival in Essaouira, Morocco, brought together traditional Gnaoua masters and international artists for three days of performances and cultural exchange.
A Gnaoua troupe in colorful traditional garments parades through the medina of Essaouira, Morocco, during the opening of the 2024 Gnaoua and World Music Festival. A Gnaoua troupe in colorful traditional garments parades through the medina of Essaouira, Morocco, during the opening of the 2024 Gnaoua and World Music Festival.

The 2024 Gnaoua and World Music Festival took place in Essaouira, Morocco, from June 25 to 27, drawing master musicians and international artists to celebrate and evolve the centuries-old Gnaoua tradition.

A Living Oral Tradition

Gnaoua music, named after an ethnic group descended from enslaved West Africans and Sudanese brought to Morocco, fuses African, Arab Muslim, and Amazigh elements. With no written history, the tradition is passed down orally and re-enacted in ritual performances known as lilas. During these ceremonies, a maâlem (master musician) leads call-and-response chants, playing the guembri (a three-stringed bass lute) while others click qraqeb (iron castanets). Participants may enter trance states believed to allow communication with jnun, or spirits.

Opening Parade and Free Concert

The festival began with a parade through the medina, where intergenerational Gnaoua troupes in colorful, symbolically rich garments danced, drummed, and clacked qraqeb. The opening concert on Place Moulay Hassan, a square facing the Atlantic, was free to the public. Moroccan guembri specialist Mehdi Nassouli and his troupe performed alongside Rwandan traditional dance group Troupe I Buhoro, French wind instrumentalist Sylvain Barou, Moroccan singer Sara Moullablad, and Indian vocalist ganavya, who presented devotional songs.

Global Fusions and New Generations

Throughout the three-day event, audiences heard Maâlem Mohamed Kouyou and witnessed Ethiopian singer Selamnesh Zéméné and Badume’s Band. Zéméné, a descendant of Asamris, upholds a distinct Ethiopian musical lineage. She shared the stage with rising Maâlem Mohamed Montari, part of a new generation balancing tradition with contemporary fusion.

Preserving Heritage: A Conversation with Founder Neila Tazi

Festival founder Neila Tazi, speaking at the Borj Bab Marrakech fortification, recalled the marginalization of Gnaoua culture before the event’s launch in 1998. “There’s a before and after the first festival here in Essaouira,” she said. “This culture was so marginalized, you’d never see a Gnaoui on a stage or on TV. They’d be playing in the streets or in the houses.”

International musicians invited to early fusion concerts accepted immediately, she noted, drawn by the chance to immerse themselves in the music. The festival has since expanded to include a Human Rights Forum and an immersive training program with Berklee College. Tazi also led the successful bid to inscribe Gnaoua music on the UNESCO Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.

“This is not the end of something; it’s the beginning. You have to preserve this heritage and bring more awareness to it. Gnaoua are descendants of slaves. Here in Morocco, they’re the symbol of human development. Getting this recognition means a lot about what you can reach when you do hard work.”

Rooftop Performances

The Borj’s rooftop was converted into a stage with carpets, where Asma Hamazoui, daughter of a maâlem, performed.

Previous Post
A stack of unplayable vinyl records being collected for recycling at an independent record store, part of a pilot programme by Warner Music Group and GZ Media.

Vinyl Recycling Pilot Expands to 11 US Independent Record Stores

Next Post
Spotify Beach activation at the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity, where Spotify and Coach announced a global cultural partnership.

Spotify and Coach Announce Global Cultural Partnership at Cannes Lions