Coopération Chine-Mozambique : pour le renforcement du partenariat stratégique global Partager    Le service militaire, un chantier royal prometteur pour former les jeunes et répondre aux exigences du marché de l'emploi    Les retraités réclament une hausse de 2.000 dirhams des pensions    Brazzaville: Denis Sassou Nguesso prête serment    Youssef Belal remporte le Hart-SLSA Book Prize 2026 pour «The Life of Shari'a»    Elections 2026 : Un projet de décret sur le soutien financier aux candidats de moins de 35 ans    Sécurité alimentaire : Le Maroc livre un deuxième lot d'engrais au Ghana    Transport routier : Hausse de 25 % du soutien octroyé aux professionnels    Transparence budgétaire : le Maroc conforte sa position dans l'EB0 2025    Bourse de Casablanca : ouverture en hausse    Ethiopie. Trois secteurs dominent l'emploi    Cyberattaques : La Namibie sous pression    Renault Captur : le renouveau du SUV urbain qui monte en gamme    L'Iran a accepté de céder son uranium enrichi, annonce Trump    Kaja Kallas : « Le Maroc, un partenaire stratégique clé pour l'Union européenne »    Ligue des champions : le FC Barcelone saisit à nouveau l'UEFA contre l'arbitrage    Lions de l'Atlas : trop de rumeurs autour de l'Olympique de Marseille ?    CAN 2025 : le buteur de la finale relance la polémique et revendique le titre pour le Sénégal    Mondial 2026 : Infantino promet un show inédit à la mi-temps de la finale    Azzedine Ounahi vers l'Atlético Madrid ? Ce que l'on sait vraiment    Riaya : Signature de deux conventions pour l'insertion sociale et professionnelle des jeunes    Le temps qu'il fera ce vendredi 17 avril 2026    Les températures attendues ce vendredi 17 avril 2026    Support fund approves 107 projects to boost women's representation in elections    Morocco and the European Union: Strengthened cooperation and support for the Sahara issue    Youssef Belal gana el premio Hart-SLSA Book Prize 2026 por «The Life of Shari'a»    Célébration à Tanger : 15 ans d'une coopération sécuritaire maroco-américaine à haute valeur stratégique    Belmkaddem : «Entre étoffes et moteurs, une célébration des cultures»    Festival Films Femmes Afrique de Dakar : Deux films marocains dans la compétition    Sahara marocain : L'UE soutient officiellement le plan d'autonomie sous souveraineté marocaine (vidéo)    Trump dit qu'Israël et le Liban sont d'accord pour un cessez-le-feu de 10 jours, sans mention du Hezbollah    Turquie: Un adolescent commet une tuerie dans une école    Alliance stratégique : Rabat et Washington officialisent une nouvelle décennie de coopération militaire renforcée    7 Soudanais sur 10 dans la pauvreté : l'alerte choc de l'ONU    Nayef Aguerd forfait pour le reste de la saison, incertitudes sur le Mondial 2026    Le 10km International de Casablanca de retour en 2026    GISS 2026 : Le Maroc et le Ghana renforcent leur coopération dans le transport    Croissance au Maroc : La demande intérieure et le secteur agricole en tête    Spectacle. Bryan Adams pose sa guitare au Maroc    CV, c'est vous ! Ep-92. Zakaria Benammi, l'expert qui simplifie la finance en darija    L'humoriste franco-marocain Booder se produit à Casablanca et à Marrakech    La France, invitée d'honneur du SIEL 2026    Stuttgart : Bilal El Khannouss relance la machine et fait taire les critiques    Alerte météo : vague de chaleur de vendredi à dimanche dans plusieurs régions    Moussem : A Moulay Abdellah, on prie, on galope, on danse... et maintenant on appelle d'offres    Réseaux sociaux : Macron pousse l'Europe à dire stop pour les moins de 15 ans    Quand la diplomatie chinoise redessine les équilibres entre le Moyen-Orient et le Pacifique    Mohamed Hmoudane : La littérature et la poésie s'invitent à la Fondation Hassan II pour les MRE    







Merci d'avoir signalé!
Cette image sera automatiquement bloquée après qu'elle soit signalée par plusieurs personnes.



Netherlands : Ethnikman, an Electronic Music producer who promotes Moroccan traditional vibes
Publié dans Yabiladi le 01 - 08 - 2017

Ethnikman, or Yassine Arrahil is a Moroccan electronic music producer and DJ living in the Netherlands. His music is a vivid mixture of electronic beats and Moroccan vibes. His love for local music and sound engineering pushed him to go through an adventurous journey moving from Holland to Marrakech and vice versa. Interview.
Giving the Moroccan music a chance to be part of the international electronic musical scene is an objective that has been put forward by Yassine Arrahil, a Moroccan DJ, electronic music producer and sound engineer nicknamed as Ethnikman. Indeed Yassine is fascinated by the Moroccan ethnic music, the culture, the vibes and unique instruments.
His fascination was translated into an album entitled 'Ahwach' released on the 27th of July. Born in the Netherlands, Ethnikman has been through a lot to accomplish his dream and be part of the music industry.
In an Interview conducted by Yabiladi, Yassine spoke about his passion, journey, and experience. He also expressed what being a music producer meant for him.
How did everything start for you ?
I was born in Rotterdam, Netherlands and I spent half of my childhood there until I moved to Marrakech at the age of 8. It is there when I discovered a lot of instruments and was introduced to the culture, and I got really fascinated by the people, the language and the music as well. I then helped producing the first unofficial tracks of Fnaïre along with other rappers in the neighborhood back then. I was nicknamed in Marrakech 'Smiley'.
Growing up in Daoudiate district in Marrakech, I was making Hip Hop music; it was around 1998 and early 2002. I grew up making music with local artists, such as Dahmoune, Soulman med amine, Mohsine from Fnaire, Rebel Moon and othmane known as K-tone along with knonw DJs namely, DJ Van and Younes B to name few and other talented musicians who did and others who did not make it to the industry.
The music was based on using Moroccan traditional instruments such as Bendir, Taarija, krakech and sampling segments from old cassette tapes. We used to make the beats by layering them using a full duplex soundcard and digital audio workstation and editing softwares. The recordings of the vocals took place either at my acoustically-untreated room or at DJ van's event rental equipment shop.
Why did you decide to go back to the Netherlands ?
I decided to go back to the Netherlands because I wasn't able to make it in Morocco due to the lack of creativity, media and infrastructure back then. It was kind of hard to find audio related-manuals and audio-visual institutes that teach this craft. Once in the Netherlands, I studied sound engineering at the SAE Institute of Rotterdam, which helped me learn the ins and outs of the field and of studio recording, mixing and mastering. I managed to have hands-on experience, real world audio technology training, and live front-of house mixing which helped me acquire the needed technical means of sound engineering and music production.
The other reason why I came back to the Netherlands was to develop myself professionally, and boost my carrier in the IT industry. I am working now as a technical support engineer for a Cloud-based Software company.
What is so unique about your music ?
What makes my music unique is that I want to bring the Moroccan touch into the dance floor and to the electronic music scene worldwide. I got a little bit tired of hearing the same repetitive synth-based chords in clubs or big events here in the Netherlands.
I felt that I had to showcase and introduce our musical heritage to the clubbing community because it has some kind of spiritual vibe and colorful tones to it. Now I finished my first commercial album 'Ahwach' that was released on the 27th of July on digital stores online. I am still in the process of producing a vinyl pressing plant to for in the next few months.
Do you think things would have been different if you stayed in Morocco ?
I would say yes, but the progress path and the production flow would have taken a bit longer, due to the limited means. It would also be affected by the fact that acquiring the right equipment to mix professionally was almost impossible.
In Holland, it was a lot easier for me as a young music producer. Borrowing technical books form the public library, and having access to digital content on related-online courses was made possible thanks to PayPal or local payment methods.
Good speakers were the hardest piece of equipment to have as a teenager, due to higher price tag. They help reveal the frequency spectrum in the full range for analysis of rhythms and sounds during the mixing and mastering phase.
You had an interesting journey moving from the Netherlands to Marrakech and then back to the city where you were born. Where have you felt the most a fish out of water, Morocco or Holland ?
A fun fact, in Rotterdam I was seen and looked at as the Moroccan kid regardless of my full and natural integration with the culture, this I would personally say, is just a part of how most societies like to define their cultural uniqueness.
On the other hand, I was born in the Netherlands and I was always considered as the Dutch kid in Morocco during my childhood. So being a fish out of water is a feeling that I learnt how to deal with, in hard and easy ways. All in all, I tried to take the best out of the two cultures making a better version of myself.
Do you think that the music industry got better compared to 1999 ?
Definitely yes, the music industry and live events have changed to a higher scale. I see a lot of great and original festivals such as Timitar in Agadir, Taragalte festival, Moga festival in Essaouira, Oasis festival, the Atlas Electronic festival for electronic music (which is organized by Dutch electronic musicians), and the Gnawa festival in Essaouira which is becoming an internationally known event. I still remember when I went to the third edition in 2000, there was no fusion artists, only the Maalems. Now the stage and the line-up have reached an international scale.
What are your future projects ?
I am planning to score original soundtracks for an upcoming movie that will be directed by Yassine El Idrissi, we have met shortly after his Film studies in Amsterdam. I am also working actually towards producing two different albums in parallel, that will introduce two different Moroccan folklore music genres into an Ethnic House style, as I am looking forward to do some remixes with artists such as Karima el Fillali, Rebel Moon and Oum.


Cliquez ici pour lire l'article depuis sa source.