FESTIVAL - Main Program: SOUAD MASSI

Algeria, France
Základní
11. 6. 2011 - 18:05
Algeria, France
Stvanice Island

THE BRIGHT WORLD MUSIC PRINCESS OF ALGERIA COMES TO PRAGUE WITH HER LAST ALBUM “Ô HOURIA”

As a teenager she studied Andalucian flamenco, five years later she toured Algeria with a hard rock band, a job risky even for a man in a country torn apart by the fundamentalists. After she moved to France and made her first CD, often often she was compared to Joan Baez or Tracy Chapman. But her sweet and spiraling voice speaks of another culture. Like Natacha Atlas, Souad Massi stands between Europe and Africa, but contrary to Atlas she writes these unique bitter-sweet songs by herself. Her mix of North-African melodies with European guitar sounds like a musical puzzle. All her 3 albums were massive sellers in France. This spring Souad Massi won the BBC Planet Award and joined Khaled and Rachid Taha as a world ambassador of Algerian music.

Videoclip

Born in the neighbourhood of Algiers in 1972, Souad Massi grew up in a modest, working-class family with six children. She inherited some of her musical tastes from her parents; her father, who worked for the water board, was a big fan of traditional music from Algiers while her mother preferred to listen to Jacques Brel and James Brown.

Souad's elder brother, who is himself a composer, adviced her to study guitar. By 1989 Souad had gone on to launch a career on the live circuit. Soon she was contacted by one of Algiers's best-known hard rock groups, Atakor. And, in the midst of her teenage angst years, the young musician found herself playing lead guitar with the group. Souad's stint with Atakor opened new doors for her, introducing her to the music of AC/DC and Metallica, and getting her used to appearing live at various festivals. Atakor went on to bring out a debut album on cassette in 1997. In 1998 Souad brought out her first cassette album, entitled simply Souad. The 6-track album, released solely on the Algerian market, found the young singer-songwriter returning to her earlier country and folk music influences.

In January 1999 Souad was invited to Paris to perform at the Femmes d'Algérie (Women of Algeria) festival. Artists from all over Algeria came together to sing and militate against fundamentalism. But it was Souad's original repertoire and her powerful on-stage charisma that really brought the house down.

Video Live

Souad spent two years working on her debut album and Raoui (The Storyteller) was finally released in March 2001.
After packing out Paris venue La Cigale, the rising Algerian star found herself headlining the legendary Olympia six months later. Raoui went on to sell over 80,000 copies, confirming Souad as a major new voice. Her singing and songwriting talent was also crowned by two major awards in 2002, when Souad won the Charles Cros Academy's "Prix de la Chanson Etrang?re" and the "Prix du Haut Conseil de la Francophonie" for her album.

Souad's second album Deb was released in France on 25 March 2003. Deb went on to become the best-selling 'world' album in France in 2003. Inspiration for Souad's third album came from a concert she performed in Tunisia. Catching a whiff of the heady scent of honeysuckle (Mesk Elil) during the show was enough to bring back entire scenes from her childhood in Algeria. The album helped her to win the BBC Planet Award in 2006.

Albums:
Raoui 2003 / Universal
Deb 2004 / Universal
Mesk Elil 2005 / Universal
Ô Houria 2010 /Wrasse Records/

Vstupenky

Presale:
One-day Ticket 450 CZK
Two-day Ticket 550 CZK
Family Ticket (adult couple with childern under 15 y. o., both days) 600 CZK
ISIC, ITIC, IYTC: 50 CZK discount on any ticket, except for family