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Raï

Raï (/r.i/, /r/; Arabic: راي, rāʾy, [raʔi]), sometimes written rai, is a form of Algerian folk music that dates back to the 1920s. Singers of Raï are called cheb (Arabic: شاب) (or shabab, i.e. young) as opposed to sheikh (Arabic: شيخ) (shaykh, i.e. old), the name given to Chaabi singers. The tradition arose in the city of Oran, primarily among the poor. Traditionally sung by men, by the end of the 20th century, female singers had become common. The lyrics of Raï have concerned social issues such as disease and the policing of European colonies that affected native populations.[5]

Raï
Cover arts of Raï albums of the 1980s
Native name
راي
Stylistic origins
Cultural originsEarly 20th century in the Oranie region, Algeria[2]
Fusion genres
Raï'n'B
Local scenes
Other topics
Music of Algeria
Raï, popular folk song of Algeria
CountryAlgeria
DomainsOral traditions and expressions, performing arts, social practices, rituals and festive events and traditional craftsmanship
Criteria???
Reference01894
Region{{{1}}} (AST)
Inscription history
Inscription2022 (17th session)
ListRepresentative

Possible image

History

Origins

Raï is a type of Algerian popular music that arose in the 1920s[6][7] in the port city of Oran, and that self-consciously ran counter to accepted artistic and social mores. It appealed to young people who sought to modernize the traditional Islamic values and attitudes. Regional, secular, and religious drum patterns, melodies, and instruments were blended with Western electric instrumentation. Raï emerged as a major world-music genre in the late 1980s.

In the years just following World War I, the Algerian city of Oran—known as "little Paris"—was a melting pot of various cultures, full of nightclubs and cabarets; it was the place to go for a bawdy good time. Out of this milieu arose a group of male and female Muslim singers called chioukhs and cheikhates, who rejected the refined, classical poetry of traditional Algerian music. Instead, to the accompaniment of pottery drums and end-blown flutes, they sang about the adversity of urban life in a raw, gritty, sometimes vulgar, and inevitably controversial language that appealed especially to the socially and economically disadvantaged. The cheikhates further departed from tradition in that they performed not only for women but also and especially for men.

The music performed was called raï. It drew its name from the Algerian Arabic word raï ("opinion" or "advice"), which was typically inserted—and repeated—by singers to fill time as they formulated a new phrase of improvised lyrics. By the early 1940s Cheikha Rimitti el Reliziana had emerged locally as a musical and linguistic luminary in the raï tradition, and she continued to be among the music's most prominent performers into the 21st century.

 
Cheikh Hamada

In the early 20th century, Oran was divided into Jewish, French, Spanish, and Native Algerian quarters. By independence in 1962, the Jewish quarter (known as the Derb), was home to musicians like Reinette L'Oranaise, Saoud l'Oranais and Larbi Bensari. Sidi el Houari was home to Spanish fishermen and many refugees from Spain who arrived after 1939. These two-quarters had active music scenes,[8] and the French inhabitants of the city went to the Jewish and Spanish areas to examine the music. The Arabs of Oran were known for al-andalous, a classical style of music imported from Southern Spain after 1492. Hawzi classical music was popular during this time, and female singers of the genre included Cheikha Tetma, Fadila D'zirya and Myriam Fekkai. Another common musical genre was Bedoui ("Bedouin") (or gharbi ("Western")), which originated from Bedouin chants. Bedoui consisted of Melhun poetry being sung with accompaniment from guellal drums and gaspa Flutes. Bedoui was sung by male singers, known as cheikhs, who were dressed in long, white jellabas and turbans. Lyrics came from the poetry of people such as Mestfa ben Brahim and Zenagui Bouhafs. Performers of bedoui included Cheikh Hamada, Cheikh Mohammed Senoussi, Cheikh Madani, Cheikh Hachemi Bensmir and Cheikh Khaldi. Senoussi was the first to have had recorded the music in 1906.

French colonization of Algeria changed the organization of society, producing a class of poor, uneducated urban men and women. Bedoui singers mostly collaborated with the French colonizers, though one exception from such collaboration was Cheikh Hamada.[9] The problems of survival in a life of poverty were the domain of street musicians who sang bar-songs called zendanis. A common characteristic of these songs included exclamations of the word "raï!" and variations thereof. The word "rai" implies that an opinion is being expressed.

In the 1920s, the women of Oran were held to strict code of conduct. Many of those that failed became social outcasts and singers and dancers. They sang medh songs in praise of the prophet Mohammed and performed for female audiences at ceremonies such as weddings and circumcision feasts. These performers included Les Trois Filles de Baghdad, Soubira bent Menad and Kheira Essebsadija. Another group of female social outcasts were called cheikhas, who were known for their alluring dress, hedonistic lyrics, and their display of a form of music that was influenced from meddhahates and zendani singers. These cheikhas, who sang for both men and women, included people such as Cheikha Remitti el Reliziana, Cheikha Grélo, Cheikha Djenia el Mostganmia, Cheikha Bachitta de Mascara, and Cheikha a; Ouachma el Tmouchentia. The 1930s saw the rise of revolutionary organizations, including organizations motivated by Marxism, which mostly despised these early roots raï singers. At the same time, Arabic classical music was gaining huge popularity across the Maghreb, especially the music of Egypt's Umm Kulthum.

 
Cheikha Remitti (1923-2006)

When first developed, raï was a hybrid blend of rural and cabaret musical genres, invented by and targeted toward distillery workers, peasants who had lost their land to European settlers, and other types of lower class citizens. The geographical location of Oran allowed for the spread of many cultural influences, allowing raï musicians to absorb an assortment of musical styles such as flamenco from Spain, gnawa music, and French cabaret, allowing them to combine with the rhythms typical of Arab nomads. In the early 1930s, social issues afflicting the native population in the colony, such as the disease of typhus, harassment and imprisonment by the colonial police, and poverty were prominent themes of raï lyrics. However, other main lyrical themes concerned the likes of wine, love, and the meaning and experiences of leading a marginal life. From its origins, women played a significant role in the music and performance of raï. In contrast to other Algerian music, raï incorporated dancing in addition to music, particularly in a mixed-gender environment.[10][11]

In the 1930s, Raï, al-andalousm, and the Egyptian classical style influenced the formation of wahrani, a musical style popularized by Blaoui Houari. Musicians like Mohammed Belarbi and Djelloul Bendaoud added these influences to other Oranian styles, as well as Western piano and accordion, resulting in a style called bedoui citadinisé. Revolt began in the mid-1950s, and musicians which included Houari and Ahmed Saber supported the Front de Libération National. After independence in 1962, however, the government of the Houari Boumédienne regime, along with President Ahmed Ben Bella, did not tolerate criticism from musicians such as Saber, and suppression of Raï and Oranian culture ensued. The number of public performances by female raï singers decreased[clarification needed], which led to men playing an increased role in this genre of music. Meanwhile, traditional raï instruments such as the gasba (reed flute), and the derbouka (North african drums) were replaced with the violin and accordion.[10]

Post-independence

 
Rachid & Fethi

In the 1960s, Bellamou Messaoud and Belkacem Bouteldja began their career, and they changed the raï sound, eventually gaining mainstream acceptance in Algeria by 1964. In the 1970s, recording technology began growing more advanced, and more imported genres had Algerian interest as well, especially Jamaican reggae with performers like Bob Marley. Over the following decades, raï increasingly assimilated the sounds of the diverse musical styles that surfaced in Algeria. During the 1970s, raï artists brought in influences from other countries such as Egypt, Europe, and the Americas. Trumpets, the electric guitar, synthesizers, and drum machines were specific instruments that were put into music. This marked the beginning of pop raï, which was performed by a later generation which adopted the title of Cheb (male) or Chaba (female), meaning "young," to distinguish themselves from the older musicians who continued to perform in the original style.[12] Among the most prominent performers of the new raï were Chaba Fadela, Cheb Hamid,[13] and Cheb Mami.[14] However, by the time the first international raï festival was held in Algeria in 1985, Cheb Khaled had become virtually synonymous with the genre.[15] More festivals followed in Algeria and abroad, and raï became a popular and prominent new genre in the emergent world-music market. International success of the genre had begun as early as 1976 with the rise to prominence of producer Rachid Baba Ahmed.

 
Raïna Raï

The added expense of producing LPs as well as the technical aspects imposed on the medium by the music led to the genre being released almost exclusively onto cassette by the early 1980s, with a great deal of music having no LP counterpart at all and a very limited exposure on CD.

While this form of raï increased cassette sales, its association with mixed dancing, an obscene act according to orthodox Islamic views, led to government-backed suppression. However, this suppression was overturned due to raï's growing popularity in France, where it was strongly demanded by the Maghrebi Arab community. This popularity in France was increased as a result of the upsurge of Franco-Arab struggles against racism. This led to a following of a white audience that was sympathetic to the antiracist struggle.[10]

After the election of president Chadli Bendjedid in 1979, Raï music had a chance to rebuild because of his lessened moral and economic restraints. Shortly afterwards, Raï started to form into pop-raï, with the use of instruments such as electrical synthesizers, guitars, and drum machines.[16][17]

In the 1980s, raï began its period of peak popularity. Previously, the Algerian government had opposed raï because of its sexually and culturally risqué topics, such as alcohol and consumerism, two subjects that were taboo to the traditional Islamic culture.

The government eventually attempted to ban raï, banning the importation of blank cassettes and confiscating the passports of raï musicians. This was done to prevent raï from not

 

only spreading throughout the country, but to prevent it from spreading internationally and from coming in or out of Algeria. Though this limited the professional sales of raï, the music increased in popularity through the illicit sale and exchange of tapes. In 1985, Algerian Colonel Snoussi joined with French minister of culture Jack Lang to convince the Algerian state to accept raï.[18] He succeeded in getting the government to return passports to raï musicians and to allow raï to be recorded and performed in Algeria, with government sponsorship, claiming it as a part of Algerian cultural heritage. This not only allowed the Algerian government to financially gain from producing and releasing raï, but it allowed them to monitor the music and prevent the publication of "unclean" music and dance and still use it to benefit the Algerian State's image in the national world.[19] In 1985, the first state-sanctioned raï festival was held in Algeria, and a festival was also held in january 1986 in with Cheb Khaled, Cheb Saharaoui, Chebba Fadela, Cheb Hamid, Cheb Mami and the group Raï NaraÏ in the theater MC93 of Bobigny, France.

In 1988, Algerian students and youth flooded the streets to protest state-sponsored violence, the high cost of staple foods, and to support the Peoples' Algerian Army.[20] President Chadli Bendjedid, who held power from 1979 to 1992, and his FLN cronies blamed raï for the massive uprising that left 500 civilians dead in October 1988. Most raï singers denied the allegation, including Cheb Sahraoui, who said there was no connection between raï and the October rebellion. Yet raï's reputation as protest music stuck because the demonstrators adopted Khaled's song "El Harba Wayn" ("To Flee, But Where?") to aid their protesting:

Where has youth gone?

Where are the brave ones?
The rich gorge themselves
The poor work themselves to death
The Islamic charlatans show their true face...
You can always cry or complain

Or escape... but where?[21]

In the 1990s, censorship ruled raï musicians. One exiled raï singer, Cheb Hasni, accepted an offer to return to Algeria and perform at a stadium in 1994. Hasni's fame and controversial songs led to him receiving death threats from Islamic fundamentalist extremists. On September 29, 1994, he was the first raï musician to be murdered, outside his parents' home in the Gambetta district of Oran, reportedly because he let girls kiss him on the cheek during a televised concert. His death came amid other violent actions against North African performers. A few days before his death, the Kabyle singer Lounès Matoub was abducted by the GIA. The following year, on February 15, 1995, Raï producer Rachid Baba-Ahmed was assassinated in Oran.

The escalating tension of the Islamist anti-raï campaign caused raï musicians such as Chab Mami and Chaba Fadela to relocate from Algeria to France. Moving to France was a way to sustain the music's existence.[22] France was where Algerians had moved during the post-colonial era to find work, and where musicians had a greater opportunity to oppose the government without censorship.[19]

Though raï found mainstream acceptance in Algeria, Islamic fundamentalists still protested the genre, saying that it was still too liberal and too contrasting to traditional Islamic values. The fundamentalists claimed that the musical genre still promoted sexuality, alcohol and Western consumer culture, but critics of the fundamentalist viewpoint stated that fundamentalists and raï musicians were ultimately seeking converts from the same population, the youth, who often had to choose where they belonged between the two cultures. Despite the governmental support, a split remained between those citizens belonging to strict Islam and those patronizing the raï scene.[23]

International success

Cheb Khaled was the first musician with international success, including his 1988 duet album with jazz musician Safy Boutella album Kutché, though his popularity did not extend to places such as the United States and Latin America. Other prominent performers of the 1980s included Houari Benchenet, Raïna Raï, Mohamed Sahraoui, Cheb Mami, Cheba Zohra and Cheb Hamid.

International success grew in the 1990s, with Cheb Khaled's 1992 album Khaled. With Khaled no longer in Algeria, musicians such as Cheb Tahar, Cheb Nasro, and Cheb Hasni began singing lover's raï, a sentimental, pop-ballad form of raï music. Later in the decade, funk, hip hop, and other influences were added to raï, especially by performers like Faudel and Rachid Taha, the latter of whom took raï music and fused it with rock. Taha did not call his creation raï music, but rather described it as a combination of folk raï and punk.[24][25][26] Another mix of cultures in Arabic music of the late 1990s came through Franco-Arabic music released by musicians such as Aldo.

The late 1980s and early 1990s saw a rise in female raï performers. According to authors Gross, McMurray, and Swedenburg in their article "Arab Noise and Ramadan Nights: Raï, Rap, and Franco-Maghrebi Identity," raï musician Chaba Zahouania was forbidden by her family to perform or even appear in public. According to Gross et al., the raï record companies have pushed female artists to become more noticed.[27]

In 2000, raï music had international success thanks to Sting's duet with raï singer Cheb Mami on the song "Desert Rose", released January 17, 2000.[28] Sting was widely credited for introducing raï music to Western music audiences, and as such, the song was a success on many charts, reaching No. 2 in Canada, No. 3 in Switzerland, No. 4 in Italy, No. 15 in the UK, and No. 17 in the US.[29] It also reached number 1 on Billboard’s Adult Alternative and Hot Dance Single Sales charts respectively.[30][31]

Censorship

Throughout the course of raï music's development and commercialization in Algeria, there have been many attempts to stifle the genre. From lyrical content to the album cover images, raï has been a controversial music. Religious identity and transnationalism function to define the complexities of Maghrebi identity. This complex identity is expressed through raï music and is often contested and censored in many cultural contexts.

In 1962, as Algeria claimed its national independence, expression of popular culture was stifled by the conservative nature of the people. During this time of drastic restriction of female expression, many men started to become raï singers. By 1979, when president Chadli Bendjedid endorsed more liberal moral and economic standards, raï music became further associated with Algerian youth. The music remained stigmatized amongst the Salafi Islamists and the Algerian government. Termed the "raï generation", the youth found raï as a way to express sexual and cultural freedoms.[32] An example of this free expression is through the lyrics of Cheb Hasni in his song "El Berraka". Hasni sang: "I had her ... because when you're drunk that's the sort of idea that runs through your head!"[33] Hasni challenged the fundamentalists of the country and the condemnation of non-religious art forms.

Raï started to circulate on a larger scale, via tape sales, TV exposure, and radio play. However, the government attempted to "clean up" raï to adhere to conservative values.[32] Audio engineers manipulated the recordings of raï artists to submit to such standards. This tactic allowed for the economy to profit from the music by gaining conservative audiences. The conservativeness not only affected the way listeners received raï music, but also the way the artists, especially female artists, presented their own music. For instance, female raï artists usually do not appear on their album covers. Such patriarchal standards pressure women to societal privacy.[32]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Introduction to Rai Music". ThoughtCo. Retrieved March 24, 2017.
  2. ^ Auzias, Dominique; Labourdette, Jean-Paul (October 27, 2010). Algérie (in French). Petit Futé. p. 119. ISBN 9782746925755.
  3. ^ Sweeney, Marc (January 1, 1992). The Virgin Directory of World Music. Henry Holt & Co. p. 15. ISBN 978-0805023053.
  4. ^ Schade-Poulsen, Marc (July 5, 2010). Men and Popular Music in Algeria: The Social Significance of Raï. USA: University of Texas Press. ISBN 9780292787629.
  5. ^ Gross, Joan, David McMurray, and Ted Swedenburg. "Arab Noise and Ramadan Nights: Raï, Rap, and Franco-Maghrebi Identities." Diaspora 3:1 (1994): 3- 39. Reprinted in The Anthropology of Globalization: A Reader, ed. by Jonathan Xavier and Renato Rosaldo,
  6. ^ "Raï". Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica, inc. October 26, 2009. Retrieved December 30, 2017.
  7. ^ "An Introduction to Rai Music". ThoughtCo. ThoughtCo. May 2, 2017. Retrieved December 30, 2017.
  8. ^ Morgan, pp 413–424
  9. ^ "World Music, The Rough Guide". London: The Rough Guides. 1994: 126. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  10. ^ a b c Joan, Gross (2002). Jonathan Xavier and Renato Rosaldo (ed.). "Arab Noise and Ramadan Nights: Raï, Rap and Franco-Maghrebi Identities" The Anthology of Globalization: A Reader. Oxford: Blackwell.
  11. ^ Gross, Joan, David McMurray, and Ted Swedenburg. "Arab Noise and Ramadan Nights: Raï, Rap, and Franco-Maghrebi Identities." Diaspora 3:1 (1994): 3- 39. [Reprinted in The Anthropology of Globalization: A Reader, ed. by Jonathan Xavier and Renato Rosaldo, 1
  12. ^ Joan, Gross p. 7
  13. ^ Cheb Hamid All music Retrieved January 20, 2021
  14. ^ "Cheb Mami sentenced to five years in forced abortion case". Telegraph.co.uk. July 3, 2009. Retrieved April 26, 2020.
  15. ^ "Cheb Khaled for Citizens of the World Equus World". www.equus-world.com. Retrieved January 11, 2021.
  16. ^ (PDF) . Archived from the original (PDF) on October 31, 2008. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  17. ^ Lee, Atsuhiro (January 15, 2002). . Archived from the original on February 10, 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  18. ^ McMurray, David; Swedenberg, Ted (1992). ""Raï Tide Rising" Middle East Report". Middle East Report. 39–42 (169): 39–42. JSTOR 3012952.
  19. ^ a b Skilbeck, Rod (September 22, 1995). . Archived from the original on June 14, 2017. Retrieved March 18, 2008.
  20. ^ Meghelli, Samir. "Interview with Youcef (Intik)." In Tha Global Cipha: Hip Hop Culture and Consciousness, ed. by James G. Spady, H. Samy Alim, and Samir Meghelli. 656-67. Philadelphia: Black History Museum Publishers, 2006.
  21. ^ Lawrence, Bill (February 27, 2002). . Norient. Archived from the original on July 14, 2011. Retrieved November 30, 2008.
  22. ^ Pareles, Jon (February 6, 2002). "Arabic-Speaking Pop Stars Spread the Joy". The New York Times. Retrieved May 22, 2010.
  23. ^ Angelica Maria DeAngelis. "Rai, Islam and Masculinity in Maghrebi Transnational Identity". Retrieved March 18, 2008.
  24. ^ JODY ROSEN (March 13, 2005). "MUSIC; Shock the Casbah, Rock the French (And Vice Versa)". The New York Times. Retrieved June 4, 2011.
  25. ^ Curiel, Jonathan. "Arab rocker Rachid Taha's music fueled by politics, punk attitude and – what else? – romance". San Francisco Chronicle. June 27, 2005. Retrieved March 14, 2013.
  26. ^ "Punk on Raï". rockpaperscissors. Retrieved March 14, 2013.
  27. ^ Gross, Joan, David McMurray, and Ted Swedenburg. "Arab Noise and Ramadan Nights: Raï, Rap, and Franco-Maghrebi Identities." Diaspora 3:1 (1994)
  28. ^ . sting.com. Archived from the original on August 8, 2013. Retrieved January 12, 2022.
  29. ^ "Sting". Billboard.
  30. ^ "Sting". Billboard.
  31. ^ "Sting". Billboard.
  32. ^ a b c Gross, Joan, David McMurray, and Ted Swedenburg. "Arab Noise and Ramadan Nights: Raï, Rap, and Franco-Maghrebi Identities." Diaspora 3:1 (1994)
  33. ^ Freemuse: Algeria: Cheb Hasni—popular rai hero assassinated

Further reading

  • Al Taee, Nasser. "Running with the Rebels: Politics, Identity & Sexual Narrative in Algerian Raï". Retrieved on November 22, 2006.
  • Schade-Poulsen, Marc. "The Social Significance of Raï: Men and Popular Music in Algeria". copyright 1999 University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-77740-8
  • Mazouzi, Bezza. La musique algérienne et la question raï, Richard-Masse, Paris, 1990.
  • Morgan, Andy. "Music Under Fire". 2000. In Broughton, Simon and Ellingham, Mark with McConnachie, James and Duane, Orla (Ed.), World Music, Vol. 1: Africa, Europe and the Middle East, pp 413–424. Rough Guides Ltd, Penguin Books. ISBN 1-85828-636-0

raï, this, article, about, musical, genre, other, uses, arabic, راي, rāʾy, raʔi, sometimes, written, form, algerian, folk, music, that, dates, back, 1920s, singers, called, cheb, arabic, شاب, shabab, young, opposed, sheikh, arabic, شيخ, shaykh, name, given, ch. This article is about the musical genre For other uses see Rai Rai r aɪ i r aɪ Arabic راي raʾy raʔi sometimes written rai is a form of Algerian folk music that dates back to the 1920s Singers of Rai are called cheb Arabic شاب or shabab i e young as opposed to sheikh Arabic شيخ shaykh i e old the name given to Chaabi singers The tradition arose in the city of Oran primarily among the poor Traditionally sung by men by the end of the 20th century female singers had become common The lyrics of Rai have concerned social issues such as disease and the policing of European colonies that affected native populations 5 RaiCover arts of Rai albums of the 1980sNative nameرايStylistic originsBedouin music 1 malhun wahraniCultural originsEarly 20th century in the Oranie region Algeria 2 Fusion genresRai n BLocal scenesAin Temouchent Mascara Oran Oujda 3 4 Relizane Saida Sidi Bel Abbes TlemcenOther topicsMusic of AlgeriaRai popular folk song of AlgeriaUNESCO Intangible Cultural HeritageCountryAlgeriaDomainsOral traditions and expressions performing arts social practices rituals and festive events and traditional craftsmanshipCriteria Reference01894Region 1 AST Inscription historyInscription2022 17th session ListRepresentativePossible image Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 Post independence 1 3 International success 2 Censorship 3 See also 4 References 5 Further readingHistory EditOrigins Edit Rai is a type of Algerian popular music that arose in the 1920s 6 7 in the port city of Oran and that self consciously ran counter to accepted artistic and social mores It appealed to young people who sought to modernize the traditional Islamic values and attitudes Regional secular and religious drum patterns melodies and instruments were blended with Western electric instrumentation Rai emerged as a major world music genre in the late 1980s In the years just following World War I the Algerian city of Oran known as little Paris was a melting pot of various cultures full of nightclubs and cabarets it was the place to go for a bawdy good time Out of this milieu arose a group of male and female Muslim singers called chioukhs and cheikhates who rejected the refined classical poetry of traditional Algerian music Instead to the accompaniment of pottery drums and end blown flutes they sang about the adversity of urban life in a raw gritty sometimes vulgar and inevitably controversial language that appealed especially to the socially and economically disadvantaged The cheikhates further departed from tradition in that they performed not only for women but also and especially for men The music performed was called rai It drew its name from the Algerian Arabic word rai opinion or advice which was typically inserted and repeated by singers to fill time as they formulated a new phrase of improvised lyrics By the early 1940s Cheikha Rimitti el Reliziana had emerged locally as a musical and linguistic luminary in the rai tradition and she continued to be among the music s most prominent performers into the 21st century Cheikh Hamada In the early 20th century Oran was divided into Jewish French Spanish and Native Algerian quarters By independence in 1962 the Jewish quarter known as the Derb was home to musicians like Reinette L Oranaise Saoud l Oranais and Larbi Bensari Sidi el Houari was home to Spanish fishermen and many refugees from Spain who arrived after 1939 These two quarters had active music scenes 8 and the French inhabitants of the city went to the Jewish and Spanish areas to examine the music The Arabs of Oran were known for al andalous a classical style of music imported from Southern Spain after 1492 Hawzi classical music was popular during this time and female singers of the genre included Cheikha Tetma Fadila D zirya and Myriam Fekkai Another common musical genre was Bedoui Bedouin or gharbi Western which originated from Bedouin chants Bedoui consisted of Melhun poetry being sung with accompaniment from guellal drums and gaspa Flutes Bedoui was sung by male singers known as cheikhs who were dressed in long white jellabas and turbans Lyrics came from the poetry of people such as Mestfa ben Brahim and Zenagui Bouhafs Performers of bedoui included Cheikh Hamada Cheikh Mohammed Senoussi Cheikh Madani Cheikh Hachemi Bensmir and Cheikh Khaldi Senoussi was the first to have had recorded the music in 1906 French colonization of Algeria changed the organization of society producing a class of poor uneducated urban men and women Bedoui singers mostly collaborated with the French colonizers though one exception from such collaboration was Cheikh Hamada 9 The problems of survival in a life of poverty were the domain of street musicians who sang bar songs called zendanis A common characteristic of these songs included exclamations of the word rai and variations thereof The word rai implies that an opinion is being expressed In the 1920s the women of Oran were held to strict code of conduct Many of those that failed became social outcasts and singers and dancers They sang medh songs in praise of the prophet Mohammed and performed for female audiences at ceremonies such as weddings and circumcision feasts These performers included Les Trois Filles de Baghdad Soubira bent Menad and Kheira Essebsadija Another group of female social outcasts were called cheikhas who were known for their alluring dress hedonistic lyrics and their display of a form of music that was influenced from meddhahates and zendani singers These cheikhas who sang for both men and women included people such as Cheikha Remitti el Reliziana Cheikha Grelo Cheikha Djenia el Mostganmia Cheikha Bachitta de Mascara and Cheikha a Ouachma el Tmouchentia The 1930s saw the rise of revolutionary organizations including organizations motivated by Marxism which mostly despised these early roots rai singers At the same time Arabic classical music was gaining huge popularity across the Maghreb especially the music of Egypt s Umm Kulthum Cheikha Remitti 1923 2006 When first developed rai was a hybrid blend of rural and cabaret musical genres invented by and targeted toward distillery workers peasants who had lost their land to European settlers and other types of lower class citizens The geographical location of Oran allowed for the spread of many cultural influences allowing rai musicians to absorb an assortment of musical styles such as flamenco from Spain gnawa music and French cabaret allowing them to combine with the rhythms typical of Arab nomads In the early 1930s social issues afflicting the native population in the colony such as the disease of typhus harassment and imprisonment by the colonial police and poverty were prominent themes of rai lyrics However other main lyrical themes concerned the likes of wine love and the meaning and experiences of leading a marginal life From its origins women played a significant role in the music and performance of rai In contrast to other Algerian music rai incorporated dancing in addition to music particularly in a mixed gender environment 10 11 In the 1930s Rai al andalousm and the Egyptian classical style influenced the formation of wahrani a musical style popularized by Blaoui Houari Musicians like Mohammed Belarbi and Djelloul Bendaoud added these influences to other Oranian styles as well as Western piano and accordion resulting in a style called bedoui citadinise Revolt began in the mid 1950s and musicians which included Houari and Ahmed Saber supported the Front de Liberation National After independence in 1962 however the government of the Houari Boumedienne regime along with President Ahmed Ben Bella did not tolerate criticism from musicians such as Saber and suppression of Rai and Oranian culture ensued The number of public performances by female rai singers decreased clarification needed which led to men playing an increased role in this genre of music Meanwhile traditional rai instruments such as the gasba reed flute and the derbouka North african drums were replaced with the violin and accordion 10 Post independence Edit Rachid amp Fethi In the 1960s Bellamou Messaoud and Belkacem Bouteldja began their career and they changed the rai sound eventually gaining mainstream acceptance in Algeria by 1964 In the 1970s recording technology began growing more advanced and more imported genres had Algerian interest as well especially Jamaican reggae with performers like Bob Marley Over the following decades rai increasingly assimilated the sounds of the diverse musical styles that surfaced in Algeria During the 1970s rai artists brought in influences from other countries such as Egypt Europe and the Americas Trumpets the electric guitar synthesizers and drum machines were specific instruments that were put into music This marked the beginning of pop rai which was performed by a later generation which adopted the title of Cheb male or Chaba female meaning young to distinguish themselves from the older musicians who continued to perform in the original style 12 Among the most prominent performers of the new rai were Chaba Fadela Cheb Hamid 13 and Cheb Mami 14 However by the time the first international rai festival was held in Algeria in 1985 Cheb Khaled had become virtually synonymous with the genre 15 More festivals followed in Algeria and abroad and rai became a popular and prominent new genre in the emergent world music market International success of the genre had begun as early as 1976 with the rise to prominence of producer Rachid Baba Ahmed Raina Rai The added expense of producing LPs as well as the technical aspects imposed on the medium by the music led to the genre being released almost exclusively onto cassette by the early 1980s with a great deal of music having no LP counterpart at all and a very limited exposure on CD While this form of rai increased cassette sales its association with mixed dancing an obscene act according to orthodox Islamic views led to government backed suppression However this suppression was overturned due to rai s growing popularity in France where it was strongly demanded by the Maghrebi Arab community This popularity in France was increased as a result of the upsurge of Franco Arab struggles against racism This led to a following of a white audience that was sympathetic to the antiracist struggle 10 After the election of president Chadli Bendjedid in 1979 Rai music had a chance to rebuild because of his lessened moral and economic restraints Shortly afterwards Rai started to form into pop rai with the use of instruments such as electrical synthesizers guitars and drum machines 16 17 In the 1980s rai began its period of peak popularity Previously the Algerian government had opposed rai because of its sexually and culturally risque topics such as alcohol and consumerism two subjects that were taboo to the traditional Islamic culture The government eventually attempted to ban rai banning the importation of blank cassettes and confiscating the passports of rai musicians This was done to prevent rai from not Cheb Mami Cheb Khaled Cheb Hamid and Cheb Sahraoui only spreading throughout the country but to prevent it from spreading internationally and from coming in or out of Algeria Though this limited the professional sales of rai the music increased in popularity through the illicit sale and exchange of tapes In 1985 Algerian Colonel Snoussi joined with French minister of culture Jack Lang to convince the Algerian state to accept rai 18 He succeeded in getting the government to return passports to rai musicians and to allow rai to be recorded and performed in Algeria with government sponsorship claiming it as a part of Algerian cultural heritage This not only allowed the Algerian government to financially gain from producing and releasing rai but it allowed them to monitor the music and prevent the publication of unclean music and dance and still use it to benefit the Algerian State s image in the national world 19 In 1985 the first state sanctioned rai festival was held in Algeria and a festival was also held in january 1986 in with Cheb Khaled Cheb Saharaoui Chebba Fadela Cheb Hamid Cheb Mami and the group Rai NaraI in the theater MC93 of Bobigny France In 1988 Algerian students and youth flooded the streets to protest state sponsored violence the high cost of staple foods and to support the Peoples Algerian Army 20 President Chadli Bendjedid who held power from 1979 to 1992 and his FLN cronies blamed rai for the massive uprising that left 500 civilians dead in October 1988 Most rai singers denied the allegation including Cheb Sahraoui who said there was no connection between rai and the October rebellion Yet rai s reputation as protest music stuck because the demonstrators adopted Khaled s song El Harba Wayn To Flee But Where to aid their protesting Where has youth gone Where are the brave ones The rich gorge themselves The poor work themselves to death The Islamic charlatans show their true face You can always cry or complainOr escape but where 21 In the 1990s censorship ruled rai musicians One exiled rai singer Cheb Hasni accepted an offer to return to Algeria and perform at a stadium in 1994 Hasni s fame and controversial songs led to him receiving death threats from Islamic fundamentalist extremists On September 29 1994 he was the first rai musician to be murdered outside his parents home in the Gambetta district of Oran reportedly because he let girls kiss him on the cheek during a televised concert His death came amid other violent actions against North African performers A few days before his death the Kabyle singer Lounes Matoub was abducted by the GIA The following year on February 15 1995 Rai producer Rachid Baba Ahmed was assassinated in Oran The escalating tension of the Islamist anti rai campaign caused rai musicians such as Chab Mami and Chaba Fadela to relocate from Algeria to France Moving to France was a way to sustain the music s existence 22 France was where Algerians had moved during the post colonial era to find work and where musicians had a greater opportunity to oppose the government without censorship 19 Though rai found mainstream acceptance in Algeria Islamic fundamentalists still protested the genre saying that it was still too liberal and too contrasting to traditional Islamic values The fundamentalists claimed that the musical genre still promoted sexuality alcohol and Western consumer culture but critics of the fundamentalist viewpoint stated that fundamentalists and rai musicians were ultimately seeking converts from the same population the youth who often had to choose where they belonged between the two cultures Despite the governmental support a split remained between those citizens belonging to strict Islam and those patronizing the rai scene 23 International success Edit Cheb Khaled was the first musician with international success including his 1988 duet album with jazz musician Safy Boutella album Kutche though his popularity did not extend to places such as the United States and Latin America Other prominent performers of the 1980s included Houari Benchenet Raina Rai Mohamed Sahraoui Cheb Mami Cheba Zohra and Cheb Hamid International success grew in the 1990s with Cheb Khaled s 1992 album Khaled With Khaled no longer in Algeria musicians such as Cheb Tahar Cheb Nasro and Cheb Hasni began singing lover s rai a sentimental pop ballad form of rai music Later in the decade funk hip hop and other influences were added to rai especially by performers like Faudel and Rachid Taha the latter of whom took rai music and fused it with rock Taha did not call his creation rai music but rather described it as a combination of folk rai and punk 24 25 26 Another mix of cultures in Arabic music of the late 1990s came through Franco Arabic music released by musicians such as Aldo The late 1980s and early 1990s saw a rise in female rai performers According to authors Gross McMurray and Swedenburg in their article Arab Noise and Ramadan Nights Rai Rap and Franco Maghrebi Identity rai musician Chaba Zahouania was forbidden by her family to perform or even appear in public According to Gross et al the rai record companies have pushed female artists to become more noticed 27 In 2000 rai music had international success thanks to Sting s duet with rai singer Cheb Mami on the song Desert Rose released January 17 2000 28 Sting was widely credited for introducing rai music to Western music audiences and as such the song was a success on many charts reaching No 2 in Canada No 3 in Switzerland No 4 in Italy No 15 in the UK and No 17 in the US 29 It also reached number 1 on Billboard s Adult Alternative and Hot Dance Single Sales charts respectively 30 31 Censorship EditThroughout the course of rai music s development and commercialization in Algeria there have been many attempts to stifle the genre From lyrical content to the album cover images rai has been a controversial music Religious identity and transnationalism function to define the complexities of Maghrebi identity This complex identity is expressed through rai music and is often contested and censored in many cultural contexts In 1962 as Algeria claimed its national independence expression of popular culture was stifled by the conservative nature of the people During this time of drastic restriction of female expression many men started to become rai singers By 1979 when president Chadli Bendjedid endorsed more liberal moral and economic standards rai music became further associated with Algerian youth The music remained stigmatized amongst the Salafi Islamists and the Algerian government Termed the rai generation the youth found rai as a way to express sexual and cultural freedoms 32 An example of this free expression is through the lyrics of Cheb Hasni in his song El Berraka Hasni sang I had her because when you re drunk that s the sort of idea that runs through your head 33 Hasni challenged the fundamentalists of the country and the condemnation of non religious art forms Rai started to circulate on a larger scale via tape sales TV exposure and radio play However the government attempted to clean up rai to adhere to conservative values 32 Audio engineers manipulated the recordings of rai artists to submit to such standards This tactic allowed for the economy to profit from the music by gaining conservative audiences The conservativeness not only affected the way listeners received rai music but also the way the artists especially female artists presented their own music For instance female rai artists usually do not appear on their album covers Such patriarchal standards pressure women to societal privacy 32 See also EditArabic pop music List of rai musiciansReferences Edit Introduction to Rai Music ThoughtCo Retrieved March 24 2017 Auzias Dominique Labourdette Jean Paul October 27 2010 Algerie in French Petit Fute p 119 ISBN 9782746925755 Sweeney Marc January 1 1992 The Virgin Directory of World Music Henry Holt amp Co p 15 ISBN 978 0805023053 Schade Poulsen Marc July 5 2010 Men and Popular Music in Algeria The Social Significance of Rai USA University of Texas Press ISBN 9780292787629 Gross Joan David McMurray and Ted Swedenburg Arab Noise and Ramadan Nights Rai Rap and Franco Maghrebi Identities Diaspora 3 1 1994 3 39 Reprinted in The Anthropology of Globalization A Reader ed by Jonathan Xavier and Renato Rosaldo Rai Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica inc October 26 2009 Retrieved December 30 2017 An Introduction to Rai Music ThoughtCo ThoughtCo May 2 2017 Retrieved December 30 2017 Morgan pp 413 424 World Music The Rough Guide London The Rough Guides 1994 126 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b c Joan Gross 2002 Jonathan Xavier and Renato Rosaldo ed Arab Noise and Ramadan Nights Rai Rap and Franco Maghrebi Identities The Anthology of Globalization A Reader Oxford Blackwell Gross Joan David McMurray and Ted Swedenburg Arab Noise and Ramadan Nights Rai Rap and Franco Maghrebi Identities Diaspora 3 1 1994 3 39 Reprinted in The Anthropology of Globalization A Reader ed by Jonathan Xavier and Renato Rosaldo 1 Joan Gross p 7 Cheb Hamid All music Retrieved January 20 2021 Cheb Mami sentenced to five years in forced abortion case Telegraph co uk July 3 2009 Retrieved April 26 2020 Cheb Khaled for Citizens of the World Equus World www equus world com Retrieved January 11 2021 PDF https web archive org web 20081031082125 https moodle brandeis edu file php 3404 pdfs gross etal arab noise pdf Archived from the original PDF on October 31 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Lee Atsuhiro January 15 2002 Rai Rebel Music from Algeria Archived from the original on February 10 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link McMurray David Swedenberg Ted 1992 Rai Tide Rising Middle East Report Middle East Report 39 42 169 39 42 JSTOR 3012952 a b Skilbeck Rod September 22 1995 Mixing Pop and Politics The Role of Rai in Algerian Political Discourse Archived from the original on June 14 2017 Retrieved March 18 2008 Meghelli Samir Interview with Youcef Intik In Tha Global Cipha Hip Hop Culture and Consciousness ed by James G Spady H Samy Alim and Samir Meghelli 656 67 Philadelphia Black History Museum Publishers 2006 Lawrence Bill February 27 2002 Straight Outto Algiers Norient Archived from the original on July 14 2011 Retrieved November 30 2008 Pareles Jon February 6 2002 Arabic Speaking Pop Stars Spread the Joy The New York Times Retrieved May 22 2010 Angelica Maria DeAngelis Rai Islam and Masculinity in Maghrebi Transnational Identity Retrieved March 18 2008 JODY ROSEN March 13 2005 MUSIC Shock the Casbah Rock the French And Vice Versa The New York Times Retrieved June 4 2011 Curiel Jonathan Arab rocker Rachid Taha s music fueled by politics punk attitude and what else romance San Francisco Chronicle June 27 2005 Retrieved March 14 2013 Punk on Rai rockpaperscissors Retrieved March 14 2013 Gross Joan David McMurray and Ted Swedenburg Arab Noise and Ramadan Nights Rai Rap and Franco Maghrebi Identities Diaspora 3 1 1994 Sting com Official Site and Official Fan Club for Sting discography studio albums STING Desert Rose CD sting com Archived from the original on August 8 2013 Retrieved January 12 2022 Sting Billboard Sting Billboard Sting Billboard a b c Gross Joan David McMurray and Ted Swedenburg Arab Noise and Ramadan Nights Rai Rap and Franco Maghrebi Identities Diaspora 3 1 1994 Freemuse Algeria Cheb Hasni popular rai hero assassinatedFurther reading EditAl Taee Nasser Running with the Rebels Politics Identity amp Sexual Narrative in Algerian Rai Retrieved on November 22 2006 Schade Poulsen Marc The Social Significance of Rai Men and Popular Music in Algeria copyright 1999 University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 77740 8 Mazouzi Bezza La musique algerienne et la question rai Richard Masse Paris 1990 Morgan Andy Music Under Fire 2000 In Broughton Simon and Ellingham Mark with McConnachie James and Duane Orla Ed World Music Vol 1 Africa Europe and the Middle East pp 413 424 Rough Guides Ltd Penguin Books ISBN 1 85828 636 0 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rai amp oldid 1151839389, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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