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www.hassanhakmoun.com

About Me

Hassan Hakmoun presents The Gift on Triloka Records. Moroccan Gnawa Master Musician Uproots the Past, Fuses with the Future North Africa has long been at a crossroads. The Gnawa people of Morocco descend from slaves from West Africa, but they claim spiritual descent from Bilal al-Habashi, an Ethiopian who was the Prophet Mohammed's (P.B.U.H.) first muezzin (caller to prayer) and first slave to be freed in Islam. Gnawa music’s integration of African rhythms and sensibility has been compared to the Blues and Santeria. But the Arabic context produced a unique sound. Not until Hassan Hakmoun’s upcoming CD, The Gift, on Triloka Records (May 7, 2002) has the Arabic milieu of Gnawa been musically brought to the fore.Hassan Hakmoun has street smarts. By age four, he performed alongside snake charmers and fire-breathers on Marrakech streets. His mother is known throughout the city as a mystic healer. Her derdeba trance ceremonies are all-night affairs where hypnotic playing and chanting exorcise evil spirits. This musical form, steeped in Islamic mysticism and West African rhythms, lifts the spirit and heals the wounded with songs of praise. Out of these origins came an emissary infused with Gnawa music as well as rock and funk.Hassan had met composer Richard Horowitz, who came to his aid with a place to stay and a gig at a Moroccan restaurant on Bleecker Street when Hassan first arrived in NYC. That night established the seeds of many years to come. The unknowing diners were soon ecstatically dancing instead of eating. A New York Times writer was dining there and began the buzz that led Hakmoun to the US stage as a premier world musician on par with Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan (they were the first signed to Peter Gabriel’s Real World label). As fans lined up to praise Hakmoun, he disappeared again, this time with a waitress whose marriage soon became his legal passage to this land of dreams.Hakmoun has resided in the US ever since. The pentatonic scale and driving rhythms of the sintir, a three-stringed long-necked African bass lute, are instantly appealing to many Western ears, and Hakmoun, has succeeded in presenting this music outside of Morocco to widespread critical acclaim. He was the only world musician invited to play Woodstock ’94, and has performed on the Tonight Show with Jay Leno and on the WOMAD ’94 tour. Hakmoun became a regular fixture in New York’s rock, jazz, and fusion scenes, and earned his following for spanning multiple genres with his spiritually charged voice and playing.The Gift teams Hakmoun with American-born producer Fabian Alsultany. The two have tackled the landmark task of bridging Gnawa with Arabic music while maintaining a forward-looking sound. Alsultany recruited over a hundred musicians to fill out the sound with strings as is common in popular Arabic music. The CD breaks new ground with a widely popular Arabic song, "Layla Layla" (without which no Arabic wedding is complete), which is unheard of from a Gnawa musician. Hakmoun carries the healing tradition to a wider audience with the life affirming single, "This Gift," a remarkable and timely duet with Grammy-winning singer-songwriter Paula Cole, with whom he fell in love while recording this song. The two now have a five year old baby.The new Triloka release in 2002 late summer/fall tour returned Hassan Hakmoun to the world’s eyes and ears. Drawing deeply on an intensely spiritual and ancient tradition, listeners will move their bodies and souls to the sounds of The Gift. www.hassanhakmoun.comI edited my profile with Thomas' Myspace Editor V4.4

My Interests

Moroccan Hassan Hakmoun is in his third decade of dazzling Western audiences, and is now definitely on par with the elite corps of world musicians operating today. Like a Susana Baca or an Omar Sosa, Hakmoun performs a unique hybrid that transcends borders faster than a satellite transmission. Similar to Ray Lema's last project, Hassan takes his Gnawa trance and places the Afro-Arab hybrid onto the transnational stage. The end result is a thoroughly enjoyable experience, a salve to the wounded spirit. There's the steady-thumping, looped funk of "Mimouna." Paula Cole joins him for the title track, a bittersweet ballad. "Lala Aisha" and "El Hedia" are utterly mesmerizing. In fact, there is not a single moment on this disc that will fail to move you. Hakmoun's soulful, gravelly voice is as beautiful as his music, and we all need more beauty in this world. Don't we?-Bill Campbell

Music:

Congratulations: Hassan Hakmoun "The Gift" 2003 AFIM Indie Awards Best Contemporary World RecordingLos Angeles March 19, 2003 - Triloka Recording Artist Hassan Hakmoun's The Gift received the Association for Independent Music (AFIM) Indie Award for Best Contemporary World Music Recording this past Tuesday at the Annual Awards Luncheon in Orlando, FL. The "INDIE's" were conceived to recognize artistic excellence among member labels and distributors. Through the years, the INDIE Awards have honored many of the best and brightest stars in the independent galaxy, including recordings by such well known artists as Sugar, Burning Spear, Naughty By Nature, Professor Longhair, Kate Wolf, Leon Redbone, Queen Latifah, Richard Thompson, Holly Near, James Cotton, Sweet Honey in the Rock, Alison Krauss, George Winston, Frank Zappa, Robert Cray, and many, many more.Hassan Hakmoun has been a commanding and intriguing figure on the world music scene since his 1992 debut album Trance (Real World). He has fashioned an eclectic performing and recording career, exploring a plethora of musical realms from jazz and "world music" to neo-classical contemporary Western music to cerebral pop. He has engaged in startling collaborations with the likes of the late Don Cherry, Pharaoh Sanders and The Kronos Quartet, as well as Peter Gabriel and, most recently, Grammy-winning singer-songwriter Paula Cole. Gabriel has described Hakmoun's vocal capacities as "among the most piercing and intriguing in the world."The Gift (Triloka 85228) teams Hakmoun with American-born producer Fabian Alsultany. The two have tackled the landmark task of bridging Gnawa with Arabic music while maintaining a forward-looking sound. Alsultany recruited over a hundred musicians to fill out the sound with strings as is common in popular Arabic music. The CD breaks new ground with a widely popular Arabic song, "Layla Layla" (without which no Arabic wedding is complete), which is unheard of from a Gnawa musician. Hakmoun carries the healing tradition to a wider audience with the life affirming single, "This Gift," a remarkable and timely duet with Grammy-winning singer-songwriter Paula Cole.

Movies:

HASSAN HAKMOUN IN MINNESOTA MINNEAPOLIS

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Heroes:

OMAR HAKMOUN and FATNA SADDIKI HAKMOUN

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Brahim FRIBGANE with moving picture

for more info go to www. myspace.com/ Brahim Fribgane www.BrahimFribgane.com
Posted by HH on Thu, 09 Nov 2006 08:37:00 PST

Check out this video: HASSAN HAKMOUN IN MINNESOTA MINNEAPOLIS

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Posted by HH on Fri, 20 Oct 2006 01:03:00 PST