Hasna el Becharia

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Hakmet Lakdar 05:53 Tools
Bouri Bouri Manandabo 05:18 Tools
Smaa smaa 05:13 Tools
Brani Britou 05:50 Tools
Koul chi al Oualidine 04:07 Tools
El Lil Lil, El Lilibiya 07:55 Tools
Jinger Mama 04:50 Tools
Djazaïr Johara / Ah Oueja 08:31 Tools
Sadrak 04:11 Tools
Rabi-Lik 07:21 Tools
Radi Braïde 06:37 Tools
Galbi 03:57 Tools
Khawa 05:47 Tools
Bania 04:21 Tools
Lala y lala / Ya Loubena 00:00 Tools
Djazair Warda 00:00 Tools
Sidi moussa 05:31 Tools
Hamou 05:22 Tools
Djazaïr Johara/Ah Oueja 08:31 Tools
Lala y Lala (Ena Sidi)/Ya Loubena 06:16 Tools
Moulay ibrahim 04:32 Tools
Regani 04:41 Tools
Djazir warda 04:11 Tools
Gegani 04:42 Tools
Moula ibrahim 04:33 Tools
Robi-Lik 07:21 Tools
Smaa Smaa (Edit) 04:43 Tools
Lala Y lala/Ya Loubena 06:16 Tools
Djazair Johara 06:16 Tools
Djazaïr Johara 08:31 Tools
Radi Braide 08:31 Tools
Lala y Lala (Ena Sidi) Ya Loubena 08:31 Tools
Brani Britou (Hasna El Becharia) 08:31 Tools
Koul Chi Al Oualidine (Hasna el Becharia) 08:31 Tools
Hakmet Lakdar (Hasna El Becharia) 08:31 Tools
Djazaïr Johara/Ah Oueja (Hasna el Becharia) 08:31 Tools
DJazair Johara/Ah Oueja 08:31 Tools
Radi Braпde 08:31 Tools
Bouri Bouri Manandabo (Hasna el Becharia) 08:31 Tools
Hekmet Lakdar 08:31 Tools
Djazaпr Johara/Ah Oueja 08:31 Tools
Jinger Mama (Hasna el Becharia) 08:31 Tools
Lala y Lala (Ena Sidi)/Ya Loubena (Hasna el Becharia) 08:31 Tools
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Hasna el Becharia is a female Gnawa musician from Algeria. Her home town, Bechar, is in the desert area of southern Algeria. Hasna started off as an Arab-Berber style wedding musician. She started to play this type of music by herself in 1972 along with 3 friends, two of whom, Zorah and Kheira, are still with her until this day. At first, Hasna played acoustic guitar using the desert's traditional tunes. Eventually she had to resort to the electric guitar instead, so that she could be heard above the noise her vast audience was making while singing along with her! Hasna and her friends became well known in southern Algeria. A major event took place 4 years later in 1976 - a concert in Bechar organized by the Union of Algerian Women, with the legendary Hasna and her band being guest stars. Like numerous Algerian gnawa musicians, Hasna takes her roots in the popular wedding repertoire. She also plays oud, derbouka, bendir and even banjo (but never gumbri, an instrument she used to play discreetly behind closed doors in her home). In January 1999, Hasna arrived in Paris, invited to the « Women of Algeria » festival at the Cabaret Sauvage, just as Souad Massi was. Fascinated by her music, the festival organisers decided to put her on stage every night, although it had planned that she play one evening only. Journalists and producers came to see this incredible woman guitar player from the desert and the French newspaper «Libération » published an article about her. She decided to saty in Paris because the circumstances in Algeria were difficult for her to live under. In August that year Hasna joined the French electronic musician Fred Galliano in a concert at the “Festival de Jazz à Vienne”. Other highlights of Hasna's career were to star in the “Gnaoua Festival of Essaouira” and the “Beautiful Nights of Ramadan”. Both concerts were broadcast worldwide on TV5. Hasna works with the theatre/circus company 'Salam Toto' in a show where horses dance to her music. Hasna was one of the main figures of the “Festival Voix de Femmes” (Women’s Voices festival) in 2002 in Bruxelles. Hasna performed at London's South Bank in 2003. Hasna's first recording, the 9-track CD Djazair Johara, was released in 2001. Hasna composed most of the recorded songs in France. Totally uncorrupted by stage or studio performance, she takes advantage of these new experiences to explore the sound of guitars, vocal timbres on different tonalities, to improvise and make new encounters: listen out for mesmerizing polyrhythms! The recording includes great musicians from Algeria, but also from Morocco, Tunisia and Niger. They have brought perfection and rigor. Thus Hasna's work achieves a dimension far beyond the scope of Algerian music. Source: http://www.africanmusiciansprofiles.com/Hasna.htm Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.