The Michigan Daily -Friday, October 20, 1995 - 11 Jajouka's music runs deep II By Stephanie Glickman Daily Arts Writer From deep in the mountains of Mo- rocco, the Master Musicians of Jajouka, considered the world's old- est music group, have made it to Ann Arbor to perform in Rackham Audi- torium this weekend as part of their first United States tour. This 20-member ensemble is part of an aristocratic tribe of royal Mo- roccan pipersand drummers who have played their music for sultans in Mo- rocco for centuries. The musicians kept Arcadian rituals alive within their remote village, Jajouka, located in the stony Djebala foothills of the Rif Mountains of northern Morocco. The ensemble's music, strongly rooted in a 4000-year history, has been passed down in the same family, from generation to generation. The musicians belong to the clan Ah Sherif,translated"TheSaintly."None of their music is notated or recorded in writing. Rather, it is handed down from father to son. The group's cur- rent leader, Bachir Attar, inherited the position from his father, the late Master Hadj Abdesalem Attar. Bachir and his brother Mustapha are the last continuing Attar musicians. In a Daily interview, Attar described Jajouka's music as "a gift for one family" that nobody can copy. Characteristic of Arabic music, Mo- roccan music is based on a system of melodies that avoid the rich harmo- nies of western tradition. There are include ghaitas (horns), liras (flutes), violins, gimbris (four stringed instru- ments) and tarijas, bendirs and tirbougas (percussion instruments). Dance and voice are also a large com- ponent of their performances. Describing Jajouka's music, Attar said, "This is the music for peace, to heal the people, for crazy people, for sick people and for the future of the people. It is for people looking for something deepinthe world. Ifpeople have problems, they can listen to this music and find direction. It is a magic gift." Attar explained how the physi- cally and mentally sick come to the village of Jajouka to be healed by the music. "They listen to the music and become normal. In the Western world, they don't know about these things. It is difficult to explain." The group's history is twice as long as Christianity's, but the musicians of Jajouka were only discovered by the Western world in the '50s by beat writers and artists such as Paul Bowles and William Burroughs. They have since gone on to record a variety of musical artists. Their 1971 album, released by the late Brian Jones of the Rolling Stones, is considered to be the first commercially successful world music album. In 1977, they recorded with Ornette Coleman, who said of Jajouka's sound: "This music is human music, music that preserves life." Attar described Brian Jones' visit to the 400 person village of Jajouka in 1968, when Jones brought a tape re- corder and recorded the sounds of the Master Musicians ofJajouka. He was "the first hippie with big hair who came to the village. He was a wild man." The villagers stared at Jones and his wild dancing, said Attar. The musicians loved him. Jajouka has toured throughout Eu- rope, and Attar and his brother played at "Woodstock 1994," next to Santana. This is the first time, though, that the group has had the opportunity to tour the United States. Attar has been wait- ing for this tour since 1971. "We are happy to come present our music to the First World. Nobody will know about us if we don't present our music to the world." "We (Jajouka) live the history of the music. We want to share themusic with. the world," Attar said. "People should come to the show and have an open mind. They should let the music run in +kta hinn " RECORDS Continued from page 9 et 'Hooked on Comix' ahour-long video feature is actually called "Hooked on Comix" and, despite its iliar-sounding title, it probably won't help you improve your grammar skills. ertain, however, it probably will. Tomorrow night only the Ann Arbor Film Co-op I be screening this documentary about some of the most prolific underground nibook creators. Now, you might be thinking that you've seen this before. erail, the-super-popular, award-winning documentary "Crumb" (about famed ix artist R. Crumb) enjoyed widespread success earlier this year. But "Hooked Comix" goes further, tapping into many of the issues that surround these atlve icons: Censorship, the depiction of women in comics and survival as an temative" artist. Featured are such talents as Mary Fleener, creator of utburger," and J.R. Williams of "Crap" fame. Showtimes are on Saturday night 7:00, 8:15 and 9:30 p.m. In MLB Aud 3. Admission is $4. Boss Hog Boss Hog Geffen Jon Spencer did a smart thing for Boss Hog's new self-titled album; he stepped down as aleadsinger. Hisvoice may be uniqueandoften delightful, but too often he lapses into his Elvis-on- speed,hypersexual-kitsch routine. This was what made the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion's last album"Orange"agood album instead of a great one. "Boss Hog" represents aturn in the right direction for Spencer; he and singer Christina Martinez, once mem- bers of Pussy Galore, make a splendid team. Throughout "Boss Hog," Martinez supplies grating, gripping, energetic vocals. Spencer compli- ments her with his signature guitar squalor: part high-speed blues, part scorching '70s punk. The opening song, "Winn Coma," demonstrates how superb Spencer's playing can sound when produced and mixed prop- erly; the song rocks out furiously. In "Ski Bunny," the band reincarnates some ofthe shambolic intensity which made Pussy Galore so punk (shouting things like "One, two/ Fuck you!")- with the addition of spacey effects. On many of these tracks, Hollis Queen's drumming sounds a bit lack- luster (when she joined the band she hardly knew how to play), especially when juxtaposed with the excess so prominent in the other members, but it's not terribly detrimantal - just unremarkable. The album gets eclectic, often suc- cessfully so. For the song "I Dig You," Spencer and bassist Jens Jurgenson tone down their roaring instruments, allowing Martinez and Spencer to al- ternate oddly sentimental lyrics like "I dig your bony hips/I dig your... lips." One musical experiment, "Texas," blends orchestral instru- ments in a dramatic, (it would be melodramatic if it wasn't for Martinez's conviction) dark, strange song which would be pretty boring for those expecting an album com- posed solely of ferocious 3-chord pop songs. Of course, that would be bor- ing. This is the same kind of material we've gotten from Jon Spencer-affili- ated albums before, except without his amusing but overboard self-referrential antics. And, the songs are more consis- tently catchy. Outside of some margin- ally obsure, but often compelling, ex- perimentation, the "Boss Hog" does not break much musical ground, but it rocks very, very well. - Josh Herrinmton Boss Hog are an incredibly beautiful band. ~ a HORTY tted from page 9 1. 'a star vehicle in the purest sense tophrase. You can feel Sonnenfeld's biiy to resist the temptation to build devie around the image of Travolta a g downthestreet whilesurfmusic fL,'in the background - combining ;41ยง"Saturday Night Fever" and personas. 1v t-ybecauseofthsfact,"GetShorty" Slookslikeasafe,big-budget,no-risk ction"rewrite.Which isnotneces- " adt ng;it'sjustataddepressngto bw quickly Hollywood devoured 's stylistic fireworks, assimilated nd returns them to the viewer ina trniliar form. 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