MALIKA ZARRA
Artist Management, Production & Touring
AFRO-JAZZ-WORLD
NEW ALBUM
coming soon!
BIO
PRESS
Award-winning singer, composer, producer, MALIKA ZARRA is a multi- cultural shape-shifter, an enchantress who leaps effortlessly between seemingly unconnected languages and traditions, uniting them while utilizing each to further enrich the others. The exotically beautiful artist with the velvety, sinuous mezzo-soprano voice has demonstrated a rare ability to communicate both powerful and subtle ideas and feelings in Berber, Moroccan Arabic, French and English now a much-in-demand headliner at concert halls and festivals the world over.
Malika was born in Southern Morocco, in a little village called Ouled Teima. Her father's family was originally from Tata, a city on the Sahara plain, while her mother was a Berber from the High Atlas. During her early childhood, there was always music and dancing in the house. After her family emigrated to a suburb of Paris, she found herself straddling two very different societies. I had to be French at school yet retain my Moroccan cultural heritage at home, she recalls, Like many immigrant children, I learned to switch quickly between the two. It was hard but brought me a lot of good things too.
Malika's interest in music led her to take up the clarinet in grade school. Meanwhile, she was being exposed to a wide variety of musical styles, she cites fellow Moroccan Hajja Hamdaouia, Rais Mohand, the Lebanese-born, Egyptian-based ud virtuoso/ composer Farid el Atrache, Um Kalthoum and Algerian singer Warda (Al-Jazairia) as major influences. She also absorbed albums by Ella Fitzgerald, Bobby McFerrin, Thelonious Monk, Stevie Wonder and Aretha Franklin. When I decided to learn singing, I started with jazz because I was attracted by the improvisation, which is also important in Arabic music, she says. Although her family was not in favor of her pursuing a musical career, Malika nonetheless attended classes at conservatories and jazz academies at Tours and Marseille.
In the beginning, she interpreted classic material strictly in the original languages -- then a breakthrough occurred. When I started to sing in Arabic, writing new lyrics for jazz standards, I found that people reacted really strongly. There is always more emotion when you sing in your own language because your feelings are more intense. As a composer, the process was similar ; asked why and when she began writing her own songs, she says impishly, After getting tired of forgetting English lyrics!
An early visit to New York made a strong impression on her, I came the first time in 1996. It was an amazing experience. I felt that I could be more myself and learn a lot of things, musically and as a human being. In 2004, Malika decided to relocate to New York City. She moved back to France in 2019. Having crafted a repertoire that incorporated her native Berber, Gnawa (a percussive form of religious trance music) and Chaabi (Arabic working class blues) heritages, the intellectual elegance of French pop, plus freewheeling jazz rhythms and techniques, her reputation as a solo act began to grow.
With the release of Berber Taxi on April 12th, 2011 by Motéma Music (home to legendary innovators Randy Weston and Geri Allen), Zarra takes her rightful place as an important world-jazz artist on New York’s multicultural music scene. Berber Taxi takes up its journey following Zarra’s self-released 2006 debut, On the Ebony Road, which has sold largely from her gigs and by word of mouth reputation.
Malika eventually recorded and/or performed with Makoto Ozone, John Zorn, Arturo O’Farrill & The Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra, Aruan Ortiz, Tommy Campbell (Dizzy Gillespie), Will Calhoun (Living Color), Lonnie Plaxico (Cassandra Wilson), Michael Cain (Jack Dejohnette), Brad Jones (Ornette Coleman), Jacques Schwarz-Bart (Roy Hargrove), Gretchen Parlato and many others.
“Morocco's Jazz Jewel. Singing in Berber, Moroccan Arabic, English and French [Malika Zarra] is redefining the term fusion and adding her unique sound to the world”
- CNN International “African Voices”
"Throughout the evening, the cadences of Arabic and Berber dialects sat easily within the sophisticated arrangements, as did the modalities of the melodies. By the end of her set, the audience was thoroughly entranced."
- Michael Shapiro, Huffington Post
"Blending the warmth of American soul music with tricky North African rhythms, intricately yet tersely arranged, jazz-inflected melodies and lyrics in Berber, Arabic, French and English, Zarra has carved out a niche for herself which manages to be completely unique yet very accessible."
- Ludic Culture
“Through the beauty of her voice and the magic of her compositions Malika Zarra reminds us of the musical diversity of our ancestral homeland, Africa. Close your eyes and listen.” - Randy Weston
“Zarra’s timing is sharp, her command irrefutable and her instincts, among them
the knowledge of when to lie back,
the mark of a leader."
- Jeff Tamarkin, Jazz Times
"Zarra crosses musical, cultural, and linguistic boundaries with ease, creating a delicious sound centered in but not bounded by her ethnicity."
- Soundroots
"Boldly experimental, bringing in Berber chanting, dark North African harmonies, and a wholly original sensibility."
- Afropop Worldwide
VIDEO
CONTACT
COLLABORATIONS
PERFORMANCE HIGHLIGHTS
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Carnegie Hall (NYC) - Opened for Bobby McFerrin
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The Opera House - Lincoln Center (NYC)
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The Apollo Theater (NYC)
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London Jazz Festival (UK)
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Montreal Jazz Festival (Canada)
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International Black Arts Festival (Senegal)
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Teatro Colsubsidio Bogota (Colombia),
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Teatro Ateneo (Panama)
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Chicago World Music Festival
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Festival du Monde Arabe Montreal (Canada)
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Salzburg Jazz Festival (Austria)
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Festival Nuits d’Afrique Montreal (Canada)
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Toronto Festival (Canada)
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Blue Note Jazz Festival (NYC)
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Banlieues Blues Festival, (France)
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Salzburg Jazz Festival (Austria)
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Vienna Konzerthaus (Austria)
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Timitar Festival (Morocco)
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Duke Ellington Jazz Festival (DC)
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Kennedy Center (DC)
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Brooklyn Maqam festival (NYC)
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The Blue Note (NYC)
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The Jazz Standard (NYC),
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North Sea Jazz Club Amsterdam (Netherlands)
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Divadlo U Hasičů Prague (Czech Republic)
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Chorus Jazz Club, Lausane (Switzerland)
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Africa Festival Wurzburg (Germany)
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Joe's Pub (NYC),
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Sob's (Opened for Sara Tavares) (NYC)
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Smoke Jazz Club (NYC)
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Brooklyn Academy of Music (NYC)
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NYC Winter Jazzfest
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Birdland Jazz club, (NYC)
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Outpost Performance Space (New Mexico)
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Baruch Performing Arts Center (NYC)
Photo by Doug Kim, Le Poisson Rouge