Casablanca: Listening Bars — Maghreb Rhythms and Modern Fidelity
By Rafi Mercer
Casablanca is a city of contrasts: colonial boulevards beside souks, Atlantic breezes mixing with car horns, mosques towering over Art Deco cinemas. Its soundtrack is equally layered — chaâbi songs spilling from cafés, rai and gnawa rhythms vibrating through courtyards, electronic beats pulsing in clubs until dawn. This mixture of tradition and modernity provides fertile soil for the listening bar: intimate sanctuaries where Morocco’s musical heritage meets global vinyl culture and hi-fi precision.
The roots lie in Morocco’s deep recording history. Casablanca was long a hub for pressing and distribution, feeding records across the Maghreb. Chaâbi, gnawa, and Andalusian traditions were captured on vinyl, later joined by rai and Moroccan pop. Many of these records found new life through global DJs, sparking renewed local interest. Record shops like La Source du Son and collectors across the city have preserved archives, ensuring vinyl remains part of Casablanca’s fabric.
Among the notable spaces is La Parallèle, a hi-fi café-bar where design, natural drinks, and vinyl form the heart of the night. Its playlists move fluidly between Moroccan classics and global sounds. Le Cabestan, overlooking the Atlantic, has hosted curated vinyl sessions, while underground venues in Maarif and Gauthier districts experiment with sound systems and eclectic curation. These are often hybrid spaces — part gallery, part bar, part salon — reflecting Casablanca’s cosmopolitan spirit.
What distinguishes Casablanca’s listening bars is their fusion of Maghreb roots and cosmopolitan energy. Interiors are warm but design-led: patterned tiles, wooden counters, ambient light. Sound systems lean on vintage horns and modern amps, creating a depth suited for both gnawa’s polyrhythms and Coltrane’s modal explorations. Patrons sip mint tea, wine, or cocktails, conversations alive but attentive to the music.
Curation reflects Casablanca’s layered identity. Chaâbi and gnawa sit beside rai, Afrobeat, Brazilian grooves, and European electronica. The effect is less eclecticism than dialogue: Morocco’s traditions speaking with the world.
Globally, Casablanca matters because it shows how the listening bar thrives in cultural crossroads of North Africa. Just as Istanbul channels empire and hybridity, Casablanca channels the Maghreb: a city where fidelity becomes another way of navigating between heritage and modernity.
Sit in La Parallèle on an Atlantic evening, tea glass steaming, as a Nass El Ghiwane track slides into a Sun Ra cut, and you feel Casablanca’s contribution. Listening here is not escape. It is translation — music as a meeting of worlds.
Rafi Mercer writes about the spaces where music matters. For more stories from Tracks & Tales, subscribe or click here to read more.