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Send us your review: Describe the atmosphere and live music at a local pub, restaurant, festival, church or temple, club night.... inspire other people to check it out!
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Musician: Abdelkadar Saadoun
Location: London
Instruments: Voice/ Derbouka/ Bendir/ Mandole
Music: Algerian / 搁补茂
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HOW I CAME TO THIS MUSIC听听听听听听听听听听WHERE I PLAY听听听听听听听听听听A FAVOURITE SONG |
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听听Listen (2.43) to Abdelkader Saadoun (vocals and derbouka) perform "Inchalah" accompanied by Yazid Fentazi (oud)
听听Listen (2.13) to Abdelkader Saadoun (vocals and derbouka) perform "Abdelkader" accompanied by Yazid Fentazi (oud) and friends
听听Listen (3.17) to Abdelkader Saadoun talk about his music
听听Watch Abdulkader Saadoun and his band perform at Womad 2002.
Where I Play:
We play at festivals, parties, restaurants, weddings - wherever there is a space and people want to ask me. We were very lucky this summer because we played most of the big festivals in the UK. Most Friday nights we play in a restaurant called 'Moors the Pleasure' in Hampstead, London. I've recorded three CDs so far and I'm working on a new one.
My main aim is to teach people our culture and music. I think world music is something amazing because behind every song and behind every artist there is a story. You can learn a lot of stuff through the music, you don't actually have to understand the lyrics. It's very important for my world music that I keep the traditional instruments like the derbouka, the bandir and the other hand drums, the mandole (the big version of the mandolin), the flute and violins. Also, I want to take this music to another level. I've travelled a lot and met very interesting artists - talented jazz musicians, Spanish artists, English artists - so I'm trying to create something and combine these cultures using some other rhythms and some other instruments mixed in with traditional instruments. That's my ambition, my project: to give to people something different - Algerian music with some ingredients from Tunisia, from Morocco, from England, from Spain, from Jamaica and wherever, but still Algerian music. Because music is universal everywhere you go.
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