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Channel: The Master Musicians of Joujouka Festival, Joujouka, Morocco, 5-7 June 2020
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Frank Rynne A Rolling Stone's Moroccan Odyssey from the Irish Time 22 July 2008

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An article from The Irish Times from July 22 2008 by Frank Rynne Master Musiicans of Joujouka manager since 1994. To view the original  article see http://brianjonesjoujoukafestival.blogspot.com/2009_03_01_archive.html and click on thumbnail
Booking for this year's Brian Jones festival has been swift but there are places available see www.joujouka.net or http://brianjonesjoujoukafestival.blogspot.com/2011/11/master-musicians-of-joujouka-festival-8_6513.html

A Rolling Stone's Moroccan Odyssey from the Irish Time 22 July 2008
The group’s founder member Brian Jones’s obsession with the haunting music of Joujouka is to be recalled at a Moroccan festival in his honour, writes Frank Rynne


WHEN I FIRST visited Morocco in 1994, I took a one-way charter flight to Malaga and a ferry across the Straits of Gibraltar. On one side of the Straits were the burnt hills of Southern Spain, on the other the high colossus of the Rif Mountains.

Soon I was standing in the ship’s restaurant being inspected by curious frontier police in line with Djellaba clad men, women in fine silk robes and the odd backpacker. Having had my passport stamped in Arabic script, I could stay up to three months. Arriving at Tangier port, I was assailed by offers of taxi rides, protection, and beggars. The contrast with the sedate south of Spain could not have been greater.
I made my way to the Café de Paris to meet Hamri. Hamri had famously brought Beat writers Paul Bowles, William Burroughs and the painter Brion Gysin to his village in the 1950s. In the 1960s, he had taken Rolling Stones founder Brian Jones and LSD guru Timothy Leary. By 1973, Ornette Coleman, the inventor of “free jazz”, had made the same pilgrimage to visit the Master Musicians of Joujouka. The musicians were described by Burroughs and Leary as a “4,000-year-old rock’n’roll band”. According to Gysin, the musicians held a secret, hidden even from themselves: they still practised “the Rites of Pan under the ragged cloak of Islam”. The “ragged” referring to the musicians’ poverty.
The Master Musicians of Joujouka are Sufi trance musicians from a tiny village in the Southern Rif Mountains. They play a form of trance music which is used for healing. Each year in the village, a boy is sewn into goat skins to dance as Boujeloud, who appears to Westerners as Pan. The flute-playing goat god is the protector of shepherd boys who brings fertility in springtime. The musicians play ancient music to drive Boujeloud back to his cave. With the beast appeased by their music, they can expect a good harvest. Women touched by his flailing palm fronds will bear healthy children.
Hamri took me to his studio, where beautiful paintings hung in various stages of completion. Soon the smell of linseed oil and canvas was penetrated by cumin, coriander and chicken as Hamri prepared his famous harira soup.

The next morning, we took a series of taxis to Joujouka, making the last leg of the journey on foot, up a steep impassable track. We were laden with meat, tea, sugar, mint and other basic provisions for the musicians, the mosque and the sanctuary of the village’s patron saint. Since the 9th century, Sidi Ahmed Schiech’s sanctuary in Joujouka has been a place of pilgrimage for the Ahl Srif tribe.

I first met the Master Musicians in 1992. I helped bring them to Dublin to participate in the Here to Go show at the old Project Arts Centre. The show, in honour of Gysin, was the first joint exhibition of his and Burroughs’ paintings. Gysin had invented the Cut-Up method of writing which Burroughs famously used to deconstruct the modern novel. Burroughs said of Gysin: “He was the only man I ever respected.” He died in 1986 having never achieved the recognition that Burroughs felt he deserved. Hamri and Gysin had exhibited together in the early 1950s. Having heard the Master Musicians of Joujouka, Gysin abandoned the Western art scene and spent 23 years in Morocco to be close to them and their music. It was Hamri who suggested that an art show for Brion would be incomplete without Joujouka music.

At Hamri’s house in the village, the musicians began to arrive singly and in small groups. I was overwhelmed by the welcome I received from the musicians who had been to Dublin. Soon a large group of cloaked men were sitting on the veranda. Tea was brewing and a tagine of lamb was slowly bubbling. Bamboo flutes, drums and sepsi pipes for smoking kif, a mix of mild marijuana and home grown tobacco, were produced.

The music began with long plaintive notes segueing into repetitive refrains and hypnotic drumming. This music is haunting and unworldly. They played the tunes left by their patron saint, which the musicians and their ancestors have played for centuries to heal illness and mental disturbances. They continued for several hours until dinner was served on a large plate from which we all ate communally.

After the meal, the musicians produced long mahogany double reed horns called rhiatas, which are similar to oboes. Their massed sound carries for miles in the little hills of the Ahl Srif.

The musicians use long extended notes and utilise circular breathing techniques. The horn players divide into sections and play extended loops following a lead section. They are loud as any rock band. IT WAS MY LOVE of the Rolling Stones and, in particular, the enigmatic talents of their founder Brian Jones, that first made me aware of Joujouka. In 1982, I saw the Stones in all their stadia glory at Slane Castle. The subtle elegance of Jones’ 1960s experiments with Eastern rhythm and instrumentation had been replaced by the hard edged, over-sexed blues rock that conquered the American mid-West.


Last week, I asked Anita Pallenberg what had set Brian Jones apart. “He was a renaissance man and a blues man, way ahead of his time,” she said. Anita had famously been Brian’s girlfriend when he entered a spiritual decline. Since his untimely death in 1969, the rock world has become all too familiar with such sensitive souls being crushed by the demands of an over-commercial oeuvre.

On July 29th, 1968, Gysin and Hamri brought Jones and his engineer George Chkiantz to Joujouka to record the Masters. For Jones, the experience was to dominate the last year of his life. His obsession with the music of Joujouka was yet another factor that distanced him from Jagger and Richards. Jones wished to incorporate it into the Stones’s sound.

John Dunbar was a friend of the Stones’s first manager Andrew Loog Oldham as well as Burroughs, Gysin and Jones. He remembers Brian on his return from Morocco coming to his flat to play the tapes. According to Dunbar: “Brian loved Joujouka and he hawked those tapes around trying to do something for the musicians. This really was going in a different direction from Mick and Keith.”

Brian spent the rest of the summer preparing the art work and sleeve design for the LP. In the studio he experimented, playing the music out of synch. Jagger recently said that Brian’s Joujouka experiments were the equivalent to scratching in the early days of hip hop.

In Morocco, Hamri, Gysin and the Master Musicians anxiously awaited the result of the star’s labours. The musicians had received some money and they hoped that Brian’s interest would rescue them from poverty by making their music popular in the West.

Hamri and Gysin had spent the 1950s and 1960s keeping the village going by employing troupes of musicians to play at their 1001 Nights restaurant in Tangier. Later, Hamri opened a second 1001 Nights in Asilah. It was in the latter that Jones first came to know the music and the musicians. Hamri would tell stories from his village to a reclining Jones. When Hamri would assume that Brian was asleep and stop his story, Brian would say in an English accent which Hamri imitated in recollection: “And then?” And the stories continued.

When the Rolling Stones set up their own record label in 1971, the first release was Brian Jones presents the Pipes of Pan at Joujouka. The cover painted by Hamri features Brian in the centre of the Masters. Some friends felt it was the least they could have done for Brian.

Over the last decade-and-a-half, I have visited Joujouka nearly 50 times, recording three CDs. Nearly all the older musicians who played on the Brian Jones record are now dead. Ahmed Attar, who at 12 years of age drummed on Pipes of Pan, leads the group in the village.

An old musician, Mujehid Mujdoubi, once asked me: “Why do you Irish people have swimming pools filled with milk, when the cows in Joujouka give barely one cup a day?” Having been to Ireland in 1980 as part of the group that appear in Bob Quinn’s Atlantean documentary, he was referring to a modern dairy farm so different from Joujouka’s medieval agriculture. IN 2006, BILLY Corgan of Smashing Pumpkins contacted me and came to the village. I was on my way there anyway to bring the group to Casa Da Musica in Porto. After a week, he felt the music was the loudest and most intense acoustic music imaginable.

The lure of stardom led one musician, Bachir Attar, who emigrated to New York, to claim he was the hereditary leader of the musicians. Although he was a toddler in 1968, this claim was readily accepted by music business executives, leading to Brian Jones’ LP being reissued in 1995 but bringing no benefit to the village. Hamri’s original cover art was replaced with by a contemporary photograph of Bachir. All mention of Hamri was excised from Brion Gysin’s original sleeve notes. Bachir trades under the eponymous “Master Musicians of Jajouka featuring Bachir Attar”. In contrast to the musicians in Joujouka, he states he likes to work in the studio. On July 29th, the Master Musicians of Joujouka host the Brian Jones 40th Anniversary Festival in the village square. Fifty Westerners will join the villagers for the festival of Boujeloud, celebrated to highlight Jones’ contribution to the village and promote peace. Last year, the musicians built a two-room guest house for visitors. The legacy of Jones still affects the music and musicians.

A standard song now in the village repertoire is Brian Jones Joujouka Very Stoned. The lyrics go: “Joujouka mezyana b sseyyed dyala (Joujouka is good because the Sanctuary is powerful)./ Oh Brian Jones Joujouka very stoned, Oh Brian Jones Joujouka Rolling Stone.

Master Musicians of Joujouka present the Brian Jones 40th Anniversary Festival in Joujouka, Morocco. www.joujouka.net Frank Rynne has produced three CDs of Master Musicians of Joujouka, Joujouka Black Eyes (1995), Sufi: Moroccan Trance (1996) and Boujeloud (2006). He is an historian currently researching the Fenians and the Land War 1879-1882.

Master Musicians of Joujouka feature on new Rough Guide to the Music of Morocco

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The Master Musicians of Joujouka feature on the new edition of the The Rough Guide to The Music of Morocco. The 2 CD set will be available this month in all good record stores, online stores and for download. The disc were compiled by Andy Morgan who managed Tinariwen.

The new  Rough Guide to the Music of Morocco is a great entry to both contemporary and ancient styles. You can listen to clips here http://www.amazon.fr/gp/product/B006ZG3HT4/ref=dm_ap_alb4/276-2502358-0684362





Track List
CD1
01 Fnaïre Feat. Salah Edin: Sah Raoui
02 Compagnies Musicales Du Tafilalet: Compagnie El Hamri/Ya Rijal L'bled
03 Amira Saqati: El Aloua
04 Les Imazighen: Iberdane
05 U-Cef: Boolandrix
06 Lemchaheb: Moulana (Notre Chant)
07 Maalem Said Damir & Gnawa Allstars: Bania Bambara
08 H-Kayne: Jil Jdid
09 Samy Elmaghribi: Mal Hbibi Malou
10 Mazagan: Ya Labess
11 Master Musicians Of Joujouka: Mali Mal Hal M'Halmaz


CD2 - Bonus Album by Groupe Mazagan
01 Abdelillah
02 Ayli Ayli (Feat. Outlandish)
03 La Vignette
04 Atay
05 Ya Sidi Chafi (Duo)
06 Allah Allah
07 Sogui Belati
08 Salamo Salam
09 Asmae Allah
10 Instrumental
11 Ayli Ayli (Solo)


Release date 27 Feb 2012

Major feature on the Master Musicians from TheQuietus.com

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Master Musicians of Joujouka and Boujeloud opening the 
Glastonbury Festival Pyramid Stage 2011. Photo Jill Furmanovsky/http://www.rockarchive.com/

Richie Troughton explores the history and current state of the two groups of Master Musicians , Master Musicians of Jajouka led by Bachir Attar and The Master Musicians of Joujouka/Jajouka. the artcile also reviews last summers triumphal return of Master Musicians to Glastonbury

Jajouka Or Joujouka? The Conflicted Legacy Of The Master Musicians 
Richie Troughton , February 9th, 2012 13:04

For decades, the music from one small village in Morocco has rung out internationally. But a long-running dispute between two separate factions of the Master Musicians of Jajouka/Joujouka has threatened to overshadow the success of both. Richie Troughton explores the legacy of the two groups and their current projects

For more see http://thequietus.com/articles/07488-master-musicians-of-jajouka-joujouka-glastonbury

Master Musicans of Joujouka at the Stone Circle Glastonbury Festival 2011

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The Master Musicians of Joujouka opened the headline, Pyramid Stage and the Glastonbury Festival in June 2011. For the rest of the weekend they played a series of impromptu sessions throughout the festival site. This was recorded at the megalithic stone circle at Worthy Farm on Saturday 25th June. Along the way the Master run into their friend the legendary photographer Jill Furmanovsky and their manager of old Rikki Stein. Such is the magic of Glastonbury Festival. The video was shot by Joachim Montessuis who collaborates with the Master Musicians for their Joujouka Interzone project. The musicians own festival is held in their village each June and is booking on www.joujouka.net.



For booking details email joujouka@gmail.com 

Brian Jones and The Rolling Stones 1965

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The 44th Anniversary Brain Jones/Master Musicans of Joujouka   Festival takes places in 8-10 June 2012 in Joujouka Morocco. Booking www.joujouka.net

Info joujouka@gmail.com
Last 10 tickets available now

Take me into insanity: In the Moroccan mountains, village musicians gather each year to worship the goat-man Boujeloud ... and Brian Jones. Mark Paytress

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Take me into insanity: In the Moroccan mountains, village musicians gather each year to worship the goat-man Boujeloud ... and Brian Jones. Mark Paytress joins in the wild party



 Mark Paytress



May 29, 2009  The Guardian 
Joujouka, a village nestled in the foothills of the Rif mountains in northern Morocco, has been attracting enlightenment-chasing subversives and sonic novelty-seekers for decades. They are drawn by its Sufi trance music, played by the Master Musicians of Joujouka on a pipe called the rhaita and a drum called the tebel. In the 50s, Paul Bowles and William Burroughs visited, and the latter concluded: "We need more diabolic music everywhere." Timothy Leary proclaimed the Master Musicians to be "a 4,000-year-old rock'n'roll band". And in July 1968, Brian Jones of the Rolling Stones dropped in to record the village's Boujeloud - or Rites of Pan - festival.
That gruellingly intense annual night of music, magic and fertility still takes place every year, though the village has changed since Jones's visit: it now has electricity and a mobile phone mast that dwarfs the minaret of the mosque. Much, however, remains medieval: there is no running water, and the climate and landscape still dictate how life is lived.
When Jones's recordings were released posthumously in 1971, as The Pipes of Pan at Joujouka, the village gained a new level of fame - the guitarist was followed by more musicians, including Ornette Coleman - and Jones himself gained a new status in the village as a near-saint. Last July, I was among 40 or so westerners who went to Joujouka to mark the 40th anniversary of his visit. I often heard the Master Musicians chanting "Ah, Brahim Jones, really stones" as they worked through a rhythm.
The idea to commemorate Jones's trip came from Frank Rynne a frequent visitor to Joujouka since he stumbled on its music at a Burroughs-related event in Dublin in 1992. "Brian Jones is so revered here that I felt the anniversary of his visit should be marked," Rynne says.
However, the festival long predates Jones. Its origins lie in the legend of the goat-man Boujeloud bestowing the gift of music on the village in return for the hand of one of its women. Every year, the festival pays homage to Boujeloud in order to guarantee the village healthy crops and purposeful procreation. Much has been made of the magic and transcendence associated with this ancient fertility rite, but its real purpose is to heal. "Yes, the music makes people go into a trance," Master Musician Mohamed el Attar tells me, "but it also heals souls. Psychopaths get better when they hear it. That is the secret of this place."
As the ceremony begins, I follow the nine magnificently attired Masters - resplendent in yellow hats, white collarless shirts and dark, one-shoulder robes - as they make their way down a long, dusty track to a gently lit corner of the village square, where some 120 villagers and visitors are gathered. Without realising it, I perch upon the same rock Jones sat on 40 years ago, as the Masters hit their transcendent stride.
A group of watching youths, some dressed in baseball caps and logo-emblazoned T-shirts, bounce boisterously in front of the bonfire. Women huddle in the shadows. When the rhaitas, sounding something like a herd of aroused elephants, nudge up a semitone, the tingle factor really kicks in. A trick long favoured by a generation of superstar DJs is, it seems, as old as time itself.
Then out hops the sprite-like Boujeloud. Hours ago, he was the soberly attired master of the house where I slept. Now, this apparition in a straw hat and goat-skin is mad-eyed and rubber-necked; he thrashes me with a pair of olive branches. My fertility apparently secured, at least for another year, I leap to my feet and join in this primal scream of a party. For five long hours, these rhythms and rituals play out against a backdrop of spitting bonfires, screams and the endless high-jinks of Boujeloud. At about five in the morning, it winds down. "Boujeloud" is back in his bum-freezer jacket and handing out cups of mint tea to the small handful of us who have survived this exhilarating, extraordinary but exhausting musical endurance test.
When Brian Jones returned to London in August 1968, he spent hours in the studio doctoring his tapes with psychedelic effects (mainly phasing), in an attempt to accentuate the far-outness of an experience he likened to "an incantation to those of another plane". Many later sonic adventurers, working in jazz or rock or experimental music, have drawn inspiration from the music of Joujouka. Even the Stones milked what Mick Jagger admitted was "a tenuous musical connection" by using the Master Musicians on their 1989 Steel Wheels album.
Since that time, artists from the village have travelled to the west - drawn as much by the financial as the spiritual rewards - to perform music from Joujouka and the surrounding region. As we drive off at dawn the following morning, the first of the day's five calls to prayer ringing in our ears, I wonder whether I have just witnessed a long, loud, final blast of a tradition that's now staring extinction in the face. But Rynne is more optimistic. He says the event has brought enough money and supplies to the village to keep the place thriving until the winter - and that's before the cash from a planned CD/DVD release rolls in.
"You saw the young men last night," he smiles, referring to the mass outbreak of Boujeloud-inspired mayhem. "It's impossible to my mind that those boys, growing up in the houses of musicians, won't one day be picking up drums themselves."
Maybe so. But whether they'll stay put in Joujouka rather than try their luck on the international stage is, of course, another matter.

Booking for 2012 Master Musicans of Joujoka Frestival 8-10 June www.joujouka.net


Contact details for Master Musicians of Joujouka Brian Jones Festival 2012

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This year’s Master Musicians of Joujouka Festival will be the best attended to date. The phone numbers for contact during the festival are Moroccan mobile 0624481100 or from outside Morocco or your mobile 00 212 624481100 or an alternative phone number             00 353 87 625 4901      . Should any guest miss their train or have transport difficulties or delays please call and we will ensure you are picked up in Ksar El Kebir and transported to the village. All the people of Joujouka are looking forward to a great festival.
Booking for the festival is now closed! For any last minute requests, media requests etc please phone the above numbers from Wed 6 June.

Dates for Master Musicians of Joujouka Festival 2013 7-9 June

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Guests at the 2012 Master Musicians of Joujouka festival at the Sanctuary of Sidi Ahmed Schiech Photo Victoria Stevenson 

Boujeloud 10 June 2012 photo Phil Hostak
Si Ahmed Talha who stars in  the new Hurtado brothers Movie
"Jajouka, quelque chose de bon vient vers toi"  Photo Phil Hostak 
Thanks to everyone who attended this year's Master Musicians of Joujouka Festival in their village in Morocco. It was the most successful festival to date with three days and nights of music, food and dancing.
The 2013 edition which marks the 45th Anniversary of Brian Jones recording Brian Jones presents the Pipes of Pan at Joujouka (Rolling Stones Records 1971) takes place 7-9 June 2013 Booking will open soon.
You can see more photos form the 2012 edition on our facebook page https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.394588020578893.78792.105892372781794&type=1

Joujouka Interzone booking now for 2013

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Joujouka Interzone is a live aural and visual collaborative between Moroccan's legendary trance masters, the Master Musicians of Joujouka, Joachim Montessuis and Frank Rynne. Joujouka Interzone explores the world of deep exploration into cut-ups and flicker which Master Musicians of Joujouka inspired through their connection with Brion Gysin and William Burroughs in the 1950s and 1960s, utilising archival and specially commissioned images and film which is mixed live while the Master Musicians perform their authentic and unrelenting ritual music. The world premiere was staged at the Casablanca International Digital Arts Festival on 29 Oct 2011. For more info email joujouka@gmail.com

Boujeloud Master Musicans of Joujouka Festival 2012

The Master Musicians of Joujouka Festival 2013 booking now open for 14-16 June 2013.

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The Master Musicians of Joujouka Festival 2013 booking now open for 14-16 June 2013. 




Sunset through the ancient olive trees at the Sufi shrine pic Frank Rynne


Boujeloud 2012 by Herman Vanaershot
The Master Musicians of Joujouka's annual summer festival began in 2008 with the Master Musicians Brian Jones 40th Anniversary Festival.     
The festival is a true micro festival and has received rave  writes ups  and reports from Mojo, The Guardian, Liberation, BBC with forthcoming pieces from Al Jazeera and The Irish Times.
The ideology of the festival  is to allow a very small group of people the opportunity to hang out and live in the village for a few days with the Master Musicians as their hosts.   Numbers are therefore strictly limited in order to ensure that people have a unique and personal experience in the village and with their individual and collective hosts The Master Musicians of Joujouka. There will be some people on hand who have long connections with the village who speak French, Arabic and English and any questions you have while in the village can be addressed as your comfort and enjoyment is key to the continued success of this truly unique experience.
Afternoon session pic Phil Hostak

Naturally the highlight of the festival is the three days of music and the intimate access to the Masters, the spectacular vistas and the hospitality.




Above Slide show from 2011 Festival "Joujouka Some Stones" by Hermann Vanaerschot click to view

Press from recent years Click on title to go to article


Arrangements
You will be  collected  at EL Ksar El Kebir train station (see  www.oncf.ma for trian times from all Moroccan cities) on June 8th by prior  arrangement with the festival. Having been collected at the train  station you  will be transported to the village.You will be returned to Ksar El Kebir to meet your connections after the Festival. Due to the high demand for 2013 only  3 day tickets are available. If you wish to come for one or two days please email joujouka@gmail.com for rates and availability.

The cave of Boujeloud by Victoria Stephenson 2012

Magara  cave of Boujeloud situated about 1km from the village by Lars Movin  2010 

What is included in ticket price 
The ticket price includes your meals, soft drinks, bottled water, tea, coffee, accommodation and forward and return  transport to the village from Ksar El Kebir  in order to meet your connections .
The Master Musicians will perform each day both informally and with full performances each night. Guests stay with the Master Musicians of Joujouka in their homes.

Food
Lunch 2010 photo by Joachim Montessuis
The food is excellent. We can cater for vegetarians easily and vegans with a far bit of hassle but we do so every year.
Breakfast at the house of Master Musicians leader Ahmed El Attar by Phil Hostak
The festival (ie The Master Musicians and the villagers) provide all  meals. Food is sourced locally.
Friday 14th June  lunch and dinner.
Saturday 15th June  Breakfast, lunch, and dinner
16th  Breakfast,  lunch and dinner.
17th. Breakfast and transport to Ksar El Kebir to meet your train or onward connections.

Snacks are available at your host families house as required!!! They may appear to be meals in themselves.

 Figs fresh from the trees in Joujouka 2010 photo Tomas McGrail White
The festival is restricted in numbers of guests to ensure you have a very chilled out and personal experience of life in the village. We provide your bottled water plus tea, coffee. Alcohol is prohibited in the village!!

Accommodation
The House where Brian Jones stayed in 1968 with well and fig trees by Manno Franco 2009
You will accommodated with the family of one of the Master Musicians.

Relaxing in the home of Ahmed Attar pic Syra Trek
Breakfast is served in the house you stay in and you will be accommodated in a room to yourself or with your friends or partner.  Let us know your desired accommodation arrangements when you are contacted after your booking or email before hand if you have any queries. You will not be sharing a room with strangers. 
All your  personal  arrangements will be worked out by email or phone with you before you arrive.

During the day the Master Musicians play in an informal way and   most people hang out as they please at their HQ/house / school while each night the Master Musicians of Joujouka perform  their ritual music.
Inside the courtyard of the  home of Master Musician Abdelslam Errtoubi Photo Lars Movin 2010


The easiest  airport to come from if you are only coming to Morocco for the festival is Tanger with train connections from Tanger Ville ( Taxi costs 100 MAD).  However  Fez and Casablanca are 4 hours train journey from El Ksar El Kebir (Marrakesh is 8 hours) so any airport is good except Agadir which has no direct train connections.

The vista from the grave of Mohamed Hamri by Maki Kita
This year we are facilitating installment payments of 50.You can use the same button to pay a single deposit that will ensure you a reserved place at the festival subject to balance being paid. If you require assistance or further information email joujouka@gmail.com


Using the paypal button below you can pay for a full ticket for the 3 day event at €350 or a €50 non refundable deposit or if you have paid a deposit and wish to pay the balance of €300.

Options

Full Balance is payable by 1 March 2013 unless you have made a prior arrangemnet with festival by emailing joujouka@gmail.com Deposit will forfeited on cancellation. However if you pay in full before 1 March and cancel on or before 1 March the balance above 50 euros will be returned to you within 7 days.



Master Musicans of Joujouka Festival 14-16 June 2013. Guests will leave morning of 17th.


Master Musicians of Joujouka Mali mal M'Halmaz Everyone is together by MasterMusiciansofJoujouka


Master Musicians of Joujouka Brain Jones 40th Anniversary Festival 2008









Guests chatting after lunch copyright Herman Vanaershot
Post lunch relaxing in the performance tent photo copyright Herman Vanaershot



Boujeloud in the flames, photo by Robert Hampson master Musicians of Joujouka Festival 2010 

Facing the music: Morocco's tenuous balancing act - Opinion - Al Jazeera English

A Musical Mecca Irish Times on Master Musicians 2012 Festival

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Click on image below to read article Words by Kevin Barrington images by Herman Vanaershot 


The Irish Times Magazine
14 Jul 2012














Or read here  http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/travel/2012/0714/1224319895508.html


A musical mecca

GO MOROCCO : A small festival in the foothills of Morocco’s Rif mountains has become a place of sonic pilgrimage for artists, thrill-seekers and rock stars, writesKEVIN BARRINGTON 
ARRIVING IN THE village of Joujouka in the foothills of Morocco’s Rif mountains, it’s easy to see that electricity and mobile phones are relatively recent arrivals while running water has yet to make an appearance. Far less discernible, however, is the fact that the village is a musical Mecca, a place of pilgrimage for artists, oddballs, thrill-seekers and sonic subversives.
Although it is only a couple of hours drive south of Tangiers, Joujouka is well off the tourist track and home to only a few hundred people. Yet the village’s visitor list reads like a counter-culture’s Who’s Who, featuring a host of such iconic figures as William Burroughs, Brian Jones and Timothy Leary. One of the latest in a long list of those seduced by Joujouka’s charm is Frank Rynne, the former frontman of Irish group The Baby Snakes, who is now a doctoral student of history at Trinity College Dublin.
Rynne became involved with the village’s Sufi trance musicians when the Moroccan painter Hamri introduced him to the place about 20 years ago. He now manages the Master Musicians of Joujouka and for the past five years has been hosting a small annual festival in the village showcasing the group’s talents.
Rynne tries to maintain a balance between providing the musicians with a living and protecting traditional village life from an invasion of hordes of Western hipsters. This year’s festival attracted about 50 guests. “That’s the most people we feel we can have without creating too much chaos and jettisoning the unique intimate charm that brings people back year after year,” he says.
Although there’s stunning scenery, great hospitality and excellent food, Rynne says he is not comfortable with the term “boutique festival”.
“Joujouka is a farming village. It’s pretty basic. We’re certainly not talking chichi here,” he says. If the festival had a programme, it would run like this: a sheep is slaughtered, bread is broken, talk is had and then the musicians kick off until dawn looms and the first cry of the muezzin signals time for bed.
The wild Byzantine sound of the Master Musicians has led to collaborations with the Rolling Stones, jazz experimentalist Ornette Coleman and, more recently, Jane’s Addiction. Rynne brought Billy Corgan of the Smashing Pumpkins to the village to see the group in action. Beat writer and artist Brion Gysin was perhaps the main person responsible for taking the group to a wider audience. “I want to hear that music every day of my life,” Gysin said after he had first heard the Masters in the 1950s. In his book The Process, Gysin paints a vivid picture of the life and sounds of Joujouka at that time. He brought his friend and colleague William Burroughs to listen to the group and he too was enraptured.Burroughs later told Led Zeppelin’s Jimmy Page that the feeling of energy and exhilaration he experienced at one of Zeppelin’s gigs was similar to what he had felt in Morocco listening to the Masters. Acid guru Timothy Leary shared Burroughs’ enthusiasm for the group’s sound and labelled the Masters a “4,000 year old rock ’n’ roll band”.
Joujouka looks like just a small, poor but idyllic, mountain village. Its true allure, its wild spectral nature, comes alive and makes sense only when the first notes of music ring out. When the Masters start with their pipes and drums — ghiata and tibel — and merge with the braying of donkeys and the chorus of crickets, they form the perfect soundtrack to complement the vast, surprisingly lush vista of the rolling foothills of the Rif Mountains.
When the Masters get into their groove, pumping out astonishing volume with their acoustic instruments, you understand instantly why this is a place of sonic pilgrimage. Like sean nós on the Aran Islands or blues in the Mississippi Delta, this is local history and culture brilliantly captured and conveyed in sound and rhythm.
The pipes scream North Africa with its serpentine souks and bewildering mosaics, while underneath, the drums beat out a hypnotising African rhythm. This is the sound of the Maghreb, underpinned by pure primordial rhythm.
The keen ear catches snatches of all the very best of world music. A little Irish here. A touch of Miles Davis there. A flash of gypsy Balkan. Then the Velvet Underground. And somewhere in a white noise finale there’s a flicker of Radiohead. Anita Pallenberg, a guest at the first year’s festival and former partner of both Brian Jones and Keith Richards, said she particularly loved the group’s “Zeppelin riffs”. When it comes to taking a throbbing circular rhythm and upping the adrenalin-drenched tempo, there isn’t a superstar DJ from Chicago to the Balearics who has anything new to teach the Masters.
At the end of the first night, I complimented musician Ahmed Attar, telling him that he was Islam’s Elvis. The master of the Masters looked quizzically at me and replied: “Shkun Elvis?” Who is Elvis?
The Masters are no strangers to five-hour sets and they tend to kick off where most of the best Western rock ’n’ roll winds up. They take what we know as a few frenzied minutes of encore and carry it on for an hour or more. Finally the audience, assaulted by bass and bewildered by treble, loses itself in ecstatic trance.
The music’s religious origins lie in this saintly sonic bliss. This is Sufi religious transcendence fuelled by pagan passion. According to Gysin, the musicians hold a secret, hidden even from themselves: they practise “the Rites of Pan under the ragged cloak of Islam”. The musicians weave arabesque soundscapes, the intensity building. When the Muezzin’s cry sent the revellers to bed, one guest shook his head in bewilderment: “If the Yanks had any cop on, they would close Gitmo and send the Jihadis to Joujouka and subject them, not to torture, but to this sublime sound.”
Sunday night saw a primordial panoply of fire, magic, dance, beauty, lust and fertility. Forging the most intricate of aural jewellery, the Masters brought the night to a crystalline climax.
Rynne explained that the spiritual power of the music originates with Sidi (saint) Ahmed Sheikh, a learned Persian scholar who brought Islam to northern Morocco around 800AD. The Sufi saint is buried in the village shrine and legend has it that he blessed the music of the Master Musicians giving them the power to heal the sick and the crazy.
To this day, the ill chain themselves to a fig tree in the courtyard of the shrine seeking solace. The Masters then come, play to the infirm and blow their madness away. “Electric shock treatment? Give me this cure any day,” Rynne said.
The group, whose current line-up ranges in age of 40-80 years, has been going for centuries and the skills are passed down from father to son. Their sublime Sufi sound strikes quite a contrast to the popular perception of Islam, which is dominated by the dour Wahhabi sect promoted by Saudi Arabia.
Shattering stereotypes, the Masters opened the Glastonbury festival on the main Pyramid stage last summer with an Islamic blessing before delivering a rousing set of ancient rock ’n’ roll. They then left the stage to younger and less experienced musicians such as U2 who have also cited the Masters as an influence.
Getting there 
The 2013 Master Musicians of Joujouka Festival takes place June 7th-9th with tickets costing €350. Booking is available on joujouka.netjoujouka.net The three-night ticket includes the pick up and return to the train station in the nearby town of Ksar El Kebir, music, food, accommodation, soft drinks, bottled water, tea and coffee. Guests stay in the homes of the musicians.
There are no direct flights from Ireland to the north of Morocco. Ryanair fly to Tangier from Paris (Beauvais) and Brussels (Charleroi). Easyjet fly to Tangier from Paris (Charles de Gaulle).
While there are direct flights from Dublin to Agadir, it is some 700km from Ksar El Kebir and there is no direct train service. Scheduled services with Royal Air Maroc operate from Heathrow and
Paris Orly. royalairmaroc.com

Brian Jones recorded Master Musicians of Joujouka LP 44 years ago today

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Cover of the promotion press package  for Brian Jones presents the Pipes of Pan at Joujouka (Rolling Stones Records 1971)
On July 29th July 1968 Mohamed Hamri brought Brian Jones, Brion Gysin, Brian's girlfriend Suki Potier, Olympic Studios recording engineer George Chkiantz and a select group to his native village for a recording session that would influence the lives of hundreds of villagers and 10s of thousands of music lovers. The resulting LP was released in 1971 2 years after Brian Jones' death on Rolling Stones records. It was the first release on the Rolling Stones own label. Having witnessed the Master Musiicans playing their strongest Brian said
"I don't know if I have the stamina incredible constant strain of the Festival".

 Brian died in July 1969, Suki Poiter died in a tragic car accident with her husband in 1982, Brion Gysin died in July 1986, Mohamed Hamri in 2000 and the last Master still alive who played on the recording is Mallim Ali El Attar who is 102 years old.
In 2008 Master Musicians of Joujouka celebrated the 40th Anniversary of Brian Jones's recording with a festival in their village. It has been running ever since in his honor and in honor of the traditions of the village.
The festival since 2009 has been moved to June to avoid the likely 40 degree temperatures in late July. Booking for 2013 festival is available www.joujouka.net  To ensure a place book now. 

Master Musicians of Joujouka feature in The Wire 1995


Major photo feature on Master Musicians of Joujouka Brian Jones 40th Anniversary Festival 2008

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Kings of the Stone Age by Mark Paytress and photos by Jill Furmanovsky


This is an amazing 11 page photo feature on the Master Musicians of Joujouka Brian Jones 40th Anniversary Festival held in Joujouka on this day in 2008. Words are by Rolling Stone's expert Mark Paytress and photos by global legend Jill Furmanovsky.  Click link to read PDF, print or download.
http://www.scribd.com/doc/101439578/Master-Musicans-of-Joujouka-Kings-of-the-Stone-Age-Photos-Jill-Furmanovsky-words-Mark-Paytress-One-Life-2008

Booking for the 2013 edition is open now on www.joujouka.netMaster Musicans of Joujouka "Kings of the Stone Age" Photos Jill Furmanovsky words Mark P...

Brion Gysin's Dreamachine buy direct here profits help Master Musicians of Joujouka

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For the first time in a half century, 500 Limited Edition Dreamachines based on Brion Gysin’s original specifications are now available.

Designed in Canada, The Dreamachine also functions as a stationary Table Lamp. It is made of museum quality Stainless Steel, with North American or European electrical adaptation, rotating at 78rpm / 10hz corresponding with Alpha Brainwaves. Product details here.

At this time, Dreamachines are only available through dreamachine.ca distributed internationally by Innovative Integrated Solutions. Shipping details here

Please joujouka@gmail.com with your Questions.
Not for use by children and not for use by people with problems associated with flicker or flash photography eg epileptics.
Dreamachine US or European
Note that buying directly from Master Musicians of Joujouka websites helps the Master Musicians of Joujouka and  the village through a substantial donation from Brion Gysin Dreamachine.

Choose either US/Canada or Europe on drop down menu below
Price $399 plus $50 shipping USA and Canada
$399 plus $150 shipping to all other places ie Japan, Europe, Australia etc etc ie The Rest of the World Note there are two options either 110v or 240v .
Not for sale to under 18 year olds and see disclaimer regarding usage and medical

Dreamachines 4 options globally



ANY QUESTION EMAIL JOUJOUKA@GMAIL.COM
RETURNS AS PER POLICY AND CONDITIONS SET OUT BELOW
Product Specifications, returns policy, disclaimer and warning
Dreamachine Size: 7″ x 7″ x 26″ Inches (18cm x 18cm x 66cm)
Shipping Size: -” x -” x -” Inches (-cm x -cm x -cm)
Shipping Weight: 11.4 Pounds (5.2kg)
Material:  Brushed Stainless Steel
North American Voltage: 110v AC (United States, Canada, Mexico, Columbia, Brazil, Venezuela, Equador, Peru, West Indies, Japan)
Global Voltage: Voltage: 240v AC (European Union, Russia, Australia, Africa, China, Bolivia, Paraguay, Uruguay, Argentina, Chile)
The bulb required is an incandescent light bulb with E27 (Edison 27 mm) male screw base and is not included with the product.
MONEY BACK GUARANTEE
Dreamachine.ca offers a THIRTY (30) day money-back guarantee on all Dreamachine.ca products, effective from the date of purchase. This guarantee is subject to the condition that the product has not been subjected to unauthorized repair or abuse, and that ALL original components are returned in the original packaging.
RETURNS ARE TO BE MADE TO THE ORIGINAL PLACE OF PURCHASE (retail store, online retailer, etc.). If a unit was purchased directly from Dreamachine.ca, please contact Dreamachine.ca by telephone, toll-free @             1-855-866-1850       for instructions prior to returning the unit for refund. All products must be received and inspected by Dreamachine.ca prior to issuing a refund.
NOTE: Money-back guarantee applies ONLY to the actual purchase price paid for any Dreamachine.ca product; SHIPPING AND HANDLING COSTS ARE NOT REFUNDABLE.
WARRANTY
Dreamachine.ca warrants, subject to the conditions set forth below, that should any Dreamachine.ca product be defective by reason of improper workmanship or material during the specified warranty period, Dreamachine.ca will repair the same effecting all necessary parts replacements, without charge for either parts or labour ONE (1) Year from the date of original purchase.
CONDITIONS
1. Unauthorized Repair, Abuse, Etc.: The unit must not have been previously altered, modified, repaired or serviced by anyone other than Dreamachine.ca The serial number on the unit must not have been altered or removed. The unit must not have been subject to accident, misuse, abuse, or operated contrary to the instructions contained in the Owner’s Guide. Should the unit be used for commercial purposes or rental, Dreamachine.ca’s standard warranty shall not apply and be voided.
2. Proper Delivery: Before returning the unit for repair or replacement, please contact Dreamachine.ca by telephone, toll-free @             1-855-866-1850       for a Return Authorization Number and shipping instructions. The unit must be shipped to Dreamachine.ca in either its original package or similar package affording an equal degree of protection and with instructions indicating an address to which the repaired unit must be returned. Defective accessories should be returned to Dreamachine.ca as a separate repair item. The repaired unit or accessory will be returned to customer freight prepaid. Service inquiries should be directed to the above telephone numbers.
REPLACEMENT POLICY: Prior to a replacement unit being shipped, a credit card number will be required to ensure defective products are returned to Dreamachine.ca If the defective product is not returned within 2 weeks of delivery of the replacement, the customer’s credit card will be charged for the cost of the replacement unit.
3. Proof of Date of Purchase: This warranty applies to the product from the original date of purchase. Therefore, the owner must furnish proof of original purchase with either invoice or receipt.
EXCEPT TO THE EXTENT PROHIBITED BY APPLICABLE LAW, DREAMACHINE.CA EXPRESSLY DISCLAIMS ALL OTHER WARRANTIES AND CONDITIONS, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, AND WHETHER ARISING BY LAW, STATUTE, BY COURSE OF DEALINGS OR USAGE OF TRADE, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION IMPLIED WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF MERCHANTABLE QUALITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES SHALL DREAMACHINE.CA BE LIABLE FOR AN AMOUNT GREATER THAN THE ACTUAL PURCHASE PRICE OF THE UNIT OR FOR ANY SPECIAL. INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES SUSTAINED IN CONNECTION WITH SAID UNIT AND DREAMACHINE.CA NEITHER ASSUMES NOR AUTHORIZES ANY REPRESENTATIVE OR OTHER PERSON TO ASSUME FOR IT ANY OBLIGATION OR LIABILITY OTHER THAN AS IS EXPRESSLY SET FORTH HEREIN.
DISCLAIMER
The Dreamachine device is intended for mood lighting and entertainment purposes only. Only operate if you are 18 years of age or older and use at your own risk. If use causes persistent headache, nausea, or a ‘stinging’ sensation in the eyes, or any adverse reaction, discontinue use.
Do not use if you have a light sensitivity, including as a result of taking medication or herbal supplements such as antibiotics or St. John’s wort or having corrective laser eye surgery within the last 30 days, or if you suffer from one of the following medical conditions associated with light sensitivity: visual photosensitivity, macular degeneration, epilepsy, seizures, brain damage, concussion, mental health problems or other neurological problems, pacemaker, porphyria, cardiac arrhythmia, heart disease, or if you are pregnant. Do not use if you have been diagnosed with seasonal affective disorder, depression, bipolar disorder, a mood disorder or a sleep disorder, or if you are taking medication for the treatment of depression or a mood disorder, including but not limited to antidepressant medication.

Master Musicians of Joujouka Festival 7-9 June 2013 Booking Now

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Please copy and share these ads Booking www.joujouka.net




Brion Gysin Dreamachine Canadian launch 10.11.12

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Attention all our friends in Ontario
Brion Gysin Dreamachine launch 
Event: Dreamachine Official Canadian Release
Location: The Gladstone Hotel Art Gallery 2nd Floor 1214 Queen Street Toronto Canada
Date & Time: Thursday 11th October 2012, 7-11pm

On the occasion of Aid al-Adha the Master Musicians of Joujouka wish you Happy Aid Mubarak

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Joujouka by and © herman vanaershot  all rights reserved


بمناسبة عيد الاضحى المبارك مجموعة زهجوكة تتمنى لكم عيد مبارك سعيد و كل عام و أنتم بألف خير
On the occasion of Aid al-Adha the Master Musicians of Joujouka wish you Happy Aid Mubarak 

and every year you have good health
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