Arab News

Blues artist Hindi Zahra pays tribute to her homeland

- Saffiya Ansari Dubai AFP

Moroccan singer Hindi Zahra recently bought her mesmerizin­g brand of music to the Louvre Abu Dhabi, where she performed as part of the Rain of Light festival on Friday.

Arab News caught up with the singer, who has been compared to the likes of Ella Fitzgerald and Patti Smith, before the show to find out more about her foot-tapping style of music and the album that her performanc­es are based on, “Homeland.”

The Paris-based musician pays tribute to her home country of Morocco in the album, which features a mix of English and Amazigh-language tracks.

“It is the country that gave me everything,” the artist, whose stage name is simply her real name inverted, told Arab News.

“It gave me… mixed culture — African culture, Mediterran­ean culture. My openness toward other cultures comes from my Moroccan roots,” she added.

Hindi was raised on a steady diet of jazz, rock and blues, which she said her uncles collected due to a familial interest in internatio­nal music.

That could be part of the reason why she is so comfortabl­e performing in multiple languages.

“I am comfortabl­e with both ( English and Amazigh), but because I… grew up with a lot of Afro-American music, it was really natural for me to improvise in English.”

In addition to a clear appreciati­on and understand­ing of Western jazz and rock music, Hindi spoke fondly about a legendary Egyptian artist whom she said has inspired her.

Abdel Halim Hafez, who worked during the country’s golden age of entertainm­ent between the 1950s to 70s, played an important role in shaping Hindi’s own style.

“I love the way he delivered feelings through music,” she said of the late singer who died in 1977.

Imbued with an appreciati­on for a wide range of internatio­nal styles, Hindi is no stranger to performing her own brand of music around the world and her only hope when it comes to her shows is “that (the audience) will dance,” she said.

“If I see them enjoying

(the) music to the point that they dance, this is the most important.”

 ?? Hindi Zahra during a previous performanc­e. ??
Hindi Zahra during a previous performanc­e.

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