ORAN, Algeria — Legendary Algerian music label Disco Maghreb,
which launched the careers of some of the Rai folk-inspired genre’s most famous
stars, has seen a revival thanks to a hit song by DJ Snake.
اضافة اعلان
This week, the
label’s miniature headquarters at a long-shuttered record store in the eastern
city of Oran will receive another prominent guest:
French President Emmanuel Macron, whose official visit will be focused on outreach to youth in the North
African country.
Owner Boualem
Benhaoua, 68, said he has “so many memories in the music, so many memories with
Rai singers, they all came through here”.
Cheb Khaled,
Cheb Mami, Cheb Hasni, and Cheba Zahouania are among the most famous stars of
the genre, which emerged in 1920s Oran but became a major world music genre in
the 1980s, particularly popular in Algeria’s former colonial ruler France.
French-Algerian
singer DJ Snake paid tribute to the genre in his song Disco Maghreb, which has
been seen 78 million times on YouTube alone and prompted an influx of young
Algerians to take selfies at the shop with its iconic model cassette tape
hanging outside.
The singer,
whose real name is William Sami Grigahcine, has also published a video of
himself visiting the famous shop on a street corner in Oran.
“I imagined
‘Disco Maghreb’ as a bridge between different generations and origins, linking
North Africa, the Arab world, and beyond... This is a love letter to my
people,” he wrote on Twitter in May.
Inside the shop,
barely touched in years, cassettes pile up on the shelves, surrounded by
vintage audio equipment that could be in an antiques museum.
Algerian talent scout Boualem Benhaoua, poses for a picture at his studio, Disco Maghreb, in Algeria’s northern city of Oran on July 24, 2022.
Most of DJ
Snake’s fans are from the era of YouTube and
TikTok, but they queue up happily
for photos with Benhaoua and his vinyl collection.
“It’s an
emblematic place in Oran and DJ Snake’s latest track gave it more resonance,”
said airline pilot Nawel, 36.
She said she was
bringing her children for a visit and to take photos, as they live in France.
Despite the
store being closed for years, Benhaoua said he wanted it to become “a place for
artists to meet and for new talent to be discovered”.
Benhaoua said
the young singer has also shone a spotlight on Oran, with his video clip of young
people on mopeds and dancing in the street shot in the city.
Many on social
media have commented that the clip has done more to promote tourism in the city
than official tourism agencies.
Benhaoua said DJ
Snake had “the qualities of a great man”.
“He sympathizes
with people with modest incomes, he himself grew up in these conditions,” he
said.
“He’s not just a singer,
but like part of the family.”