Dig it! Here's a delightful cassette from singer and guitarist Haim Bobtol (billed on his Tichkaphone releases as Abitbol). You can read about Botbol's history and musical career in this old post at Jewish Magrib Jukebox. As far as I can tell, Botbol is still alive and nearly 90 years old here in 2026.
The opening tracks on each side of the album are of the fun, participatory chaâbi variety where a short phase is repeated by backup singers (and the audience) in response to the singer, who reels off line after short poetic line to keep the assembly engaged until he lets the violin take over to propel the dancing. The subsequent tracks on each side lean toward the Andalusian/classical end of the chaâbi spectrum in melody and texture.
If you've read my posts, you know I love the sound 1980s wedding-type chaâbi groups with their raucous drum kits and strummy rhythm guitars. Botbol's style of orchestral chaâbi heard here emerges from an earlier generation. Many elements are the same: repertoire drawn from various Moroccan genres, violin driving the melody, several other instruments providing melodic and rhythmic support. But the sum of the parts feels different - somehow more urbane and more earthy at the same time.
A contemporary in this era and approach to chaâbi is Abdessadek Chekkara, whom we profiled here last year. Both he and Botbol are children of the 1930s, born into a musical families, raised learning elite traditions (Andalusian, mehlun), but also with interest in the broad swath of Moroccan musical styles. Both began recording in the vinyl era and continued into the cassette era.
You can hear a trace of this history in Botbol's vocal stylings - the vocal mawwal passages in the track "Lataâmal Âchir", where you can hear the ornamentation styles particular to Jewish Moroccan singers of classical genres.
The participatory chaâbi tracks feature some eclectic elements. In addition to darbuka, kamanja, female chorus and clapping, there is some kind of ghaita/oboe-sounding instrument on some of the instrumental breaks. Is it a keyboard? whatever it is, I love it. I'm also crazy about the harpsichord-sounding keyboard instrument - the same instrument can be heard on some Hajja Hamdaouia recordings of the period (late 60s? early 70s?). I wonder if there was a keyboardist in the Tichkaphone house band that added this instrument to the recordings of both artists. Finally, add Botbol's electric guitar deep down in the mix and you have a distinctive, very enjoyable track!
Hope you enjoy! I've got some more Botbol in the stash. But I'm working on a major Nass el Ghiwane post that you may see before I get back to Botbol.
Abitbol أبيطبول
Tichkaphone TCK 523 تشكافون
A1 Asbar الصبر
A2 Lataâmal Âchir لا تعمل عشير
B1 Rah Additiou راه الديتو
B2 Rassoul Lhoub رسول الحبيب
B3 Taârida

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