River of Colors

A hypnotic Gnawa trance-ceremony song from Morocco — guembri bass, iron qaraqeb, and a rough-voiced call-and-response chant weaving the ancient lila ritual into English lyrics.

River of Colors
A hypnotic Gnawa trance-ceremony song from Morocco — guembri bass, iron qaraqeb, and a rough-voiced call-and-response chant weaving the ancient lila ritual into English lyrics.
0:002:18
Genre: Gnawa — Morocco

About the Music

Gnawa is one of the oldest and most distinctive musical traditions in North Africa, rooted in the spiritual practices of sub-Saharan communities brought to Morocco centuries ago. It is both music and ceremony: the central ritual, known as a lila, is an all-night gathering where color-coded sequences of songs are performed to invite the mluk — a pantheon of spirits — and bring healing to those who need it. Seven colors, seven spirits, seven moods. The music doesn't end until dawn.
At its heart sits the guembri (also called sintir or hajhuj) — a low-slung, three-string bass lute with a camel-skin soundboard whose plucked notes land like a heartbeat, deep and slightly buzzing. Locked in dialogue with it are the qaraqeb — large iron castanets, clapped in interlocking pairs, producing a shimmering, hypnotic clatter that fills every space the bass leaves open. Together they create a groove that doesn't so much drive forward as spiral inward.
The vocal style is call-and-response: a lead singer, the maalem, delivers each phrase and a circle of voices answers back in unison. The melodies are pentatonic, ornamented with slides and microtonal bends that give every line a sense of reaching — toward something just out of reach, or just on the edge of arriving.
「River of Colors」 follows that arc: a slow trance build from the first strike of the qaraqeb to a chorus that opens like smoke rising. The word lila — the ceremony itself — becomes the refrain, a door that keeps opening.

InstrumentRole
Guembri (sintir)3-string bass lute; the rhythmic and harmonic foundation
QaraqebIron castanets; interlocking polyrhythmic shimmer
Voice (maalem lead)Deep, ornamented male vocal with microtonal slides
ChoirCall-and-response unison chant, close and raw

Tempo: ~75 BPM · Scale: pentatonic minor · Time signature: 6/8 · Duration: 2:18

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