13 May 2013
A Half-Arsed Look At The Music Of Tunisia
I was in Tunisia last week.
I was sat on the balcony of our hotel room on the sixth floor, watching the swallows swoop and pink tourists, strapped to the back of speedboats with parachutes, floating. I felt wonderfully isolated.
[Right-click and "Download Document" for mp3 of Leaf House by Animal Collective]
Apart from a couple of thumping French party tracks with accompanying dance moves (one of them I can only describe ineloquently as "doing a spaz shuffle") and panpipe versions of mega-selling ballads, I didn't really hear any music. A trawl of the in-built radio in our room revealed a uniformity of sound, though of course this is down to my uneducated ears regarding
Mezwed
music.
The most interesting thing I did hear was at a
zoo
. As part of an "Authentic African Experience" there was a Tunisian folk-band, consisting of a
bendir
, a tabla-like hand-drum that was kicking out some mad rhythms and a
mizwad
, this bagpipe that appeared to be made out of a boar's head, with two horns protruding out of the nostrils. A quick look around Sousse's medina for the instrument was sadly fruitless.
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