Pure Raï fire from Algeria on the ever-searching Nashazphone label - an absolute must for anyone
snagged on contemporary, Arabic North African music by EEK/Islam Chipsy or DJ Plead’s sunstroke
‘Relentless Trills’ classic.
Sending a plume of prevailing heat from the Oran region on Algeria’s Mediterranean coast,
Cheba Wahida’s dead distinctive vocals, cloaked in autotune and set to whirling keys in
pendulous syncopation, are some of the hottest we’ve heard in 2022. Her ‘Jrouli’ collection
hails a newer, “feminized” wave of Raï artists from the region, and reaches our ears thanks to
the democratisation of digital recording, and its dissemination via social media and 3G and
4G networks that sustain the scene’s underground rhizome beyond any official corporatised
sponsorship or festivals.
Our northern British ears were first introduced to the sound of Raï via DJ/Rupture’s studious
blogging in the ‘00s, and occasional reissues and YouTube dives, as well as cars blasting it out in
Rusholme and Longsight have kept us snagged over the years, but this lot is the most significant to
reach us in recent memory. It ideally showcases the influence of US R&B and dancehall’s Arabic-
flavoured Diwali rhythm as much as its local folk roots to our outsider lugs, and parallels the
international bloom of mahraganat, or electro-shaabi from Egypt, for loose reference.
Ultimately it’s proper road and party music that hits no matter your tongue or background, one
flush with ear-worming, colourful hooks between the flute blasts of ‘Jrouli Jrouli’ and Cheba’s
plangent cry on ‘Nta Elwa3er’, with the nattiest trample and trills in ‘3andah 3akliyet Daesh’, jiggy
late ‘90s R&B flair of ‘Droussi Ga3 Tharsou’, and 8 minutes of lushly celebratory, communal sway
and crowd noise in ‘Fel Nehar Akla Fe Lil Kbiba’, with its unmissable froth of choral sampler chops