Cheikh Namous

Overview

Known for
Acting
Gender
Other
Birthday
May 01, 1920 (105 years old)
Death date
Jan 19, 2021

Cheikh Namous

Known For

The Revolution Of El Harrachi
1h 16m
Movie 2014

The Revolution Of El Harrachi

The artistic journey of Dahmane El Harrachi, born in 1925 in Algiers, bears the mark of his experience. An attentive and vigilant observer of the environment of immigrant workers, Dahmane has always avoided falling into the ambient miserabilism. From the Algerian Chaâbi, he has kept certain melodic lines and a clear propensity for sayings drawn from the oral poetic tradition. El Harrachi uses simple language, understandable by all popular sectors of the Maghreb, which partly explains its wide success. In 1949, he went to France and it was in cafes, springboard places where people come to breathe the air of the country, that he performed regularly. Elegant, with his beautiful atmosphere, the “bluesman” of the suburbs seduces, upsets and stirs consciences. Discovered late by the new generation, the creator of Ya Rayah met a tragic end, on August 31, 1980, in a car accident, on the Algiers coast which he sublimated above all else.

Biography

Cheikh Namous, also known by his birth name Mohamed Rechidi, is an Algerian musician, born in May 1920 in the Casbah of Algiers and died in January 2021. He is considered one of the first banjo performers in Algeria and has collaborated with figures of chaâbi music, such as Hadj El Anka, Dahmane El Harrachi. Cheikh Namous, born Mohamed Rechidi, was born in May 1920 in the Casbah of Algiers, into a family from Afir, Talarous village (near Dellys in the wilaya of Boumerdès). At the age of 12, he purchased his first guembri and demonstrated an early interest in music. After receiving his school certificate in 1933, he worked in various jobs, but his passion for music was always present. He began playing the mandola before becoming a virtuoso on the banjo, his instrument of choice. In the 1930s, he joined the orchestra led by Abderrahmane Sridek, then the orchestra of Hadj El Anka, where he was one of the first to introduce the banjo into the orchestra in 1941. He is known for being one of the first banjo musicians in Algerian orchestras. During the 1950s, he worked with the Kabyle radio orchestra under the direction of Nourdine Meziane. He works in particular Chérifa, Djida, Djamila, Rabah Taleb, Abdiche Belaïd, Akli Yahyaten, Arab Ouzelague. Cheikh Namous is considered a pioneer of chaâbi music, thanks to his mastery of the banjo and his impact on this musical genre. After Algeria's independence, he continued to work with performers of the genre, such as El Hachemi Guerouabi, Boudjemaâ El Ankis, Amar Ezzahi and Dahmane El Harrachi. He also founded a music school where he trained several generations of musicians and was considered the dean of Algerian musicians. His nickname Namous (“mosquito”) was given to him because of his boundless activity and his speed in his musical playing. Namous is the father of 14 children. He died at the age of 101, at his home in the popular district of Diar Djemaâ, in El Harrach (Algiers), on the night of Monday to Tuesday of January 19, 2021.

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