05/10/2001 -
The Quattro opened its doors at 6pm, but there was no sign of hordes of eager Japanese fans clamouring to get in. Will Rachid T. prove to have the necessary pulling-power in Japan, I wondered, as we made our way into a small circular room set with chairs and tables. The stage was right at the back of the room, with a "standing-room only" section just in front – which was handy, because Rachid's concerts are renowned for being "dancing only"!
Making our way to the bar, there was time for a quick beer before the start of the concert (due to kick off at 7). At 7 o'clock on the dot, the hordes of Japanese music fans we'd expected to see queuing at the door poured into the Quattro and we found ourselves packed in front of the stage like sardines. The lights went down and a Japanese man dressed in a yukata (summer kimono) took to the stage, striking up a haunting Oriental melody on the flute. There was complete silence in the room as he performed and all eyes were fixed upon the musician– until a veiled dancer appeared in the background and began undulating her hips to the music. Ten minutes later the lights went up - and it felt like the evening was already over!
Rachid proceeded to run through a series of songs from his latest album Made in Medina and, as his invigorating rock'n'Raï rhythms swirled round the room, the audience abandoned their tables and started getting into the swing of things. Ecoutez
Rachid T. is an expert showman and by the time he had the audience up on their feet he was bantering away with his musicians and joking with the public. "So, I've heard the Japanese really like French singers – especially those who're getting a bit long in the tooth! … OK, here's a little song in French for you!" Warming to his act, Rachid even made a few tongue-in-cheek references to the terrorist attacks in New York: "So, people are finally beginning to understand that Afghanistan isn't an Arab country, it's in Asia, after all … We had to have a bit of a shave before they gave us our visas, actually – we used to have beards down to here, you know!"
French fans and a small contingent of Arabs in the audience laughed wholeheartedly at the joke, while Japanese members of the audience turned to us for instant translation. Rachid's bantering in between tracks, coupled with the smallness of the Quattro, gave the concert a cosy, intimate feel. And when, after a particularly wild techno version of Voilà Voilà, Rachid announced the show was almost over a shout went up from the back of the room "What about Abdel Khader?" "OK, OK!" replied a beaming Taha, "but it will have to be the short version!"
Within seconds, Taha's swirling fusion of rock and Raï rhythms powered round the room once more, crescendoing to a grand finale with the song Garab. Glancing around the crowd as the lights went up at the end of the show, I saw row upon row of ecstatic faces and many of the more exuberant dancers actually gasping for breath.There's no doubt about it, Rachid Taha has proved French music can definitely make it big in Japan. And, speaking to the hero of the moment backstage after the show, we found Rachid already begging for more. When I suggested he played a few gigs elsewhere in the country he shouted, "Love to – if someone would just ask us!" So, come on, all you Japanese promoters out there, start lining up those tour dates now!
Made in Medina (Barclay/Universal)
Out soon: Rachid Taha live (Barclay/Universal)
Up-coming tour dates:
Wuhan (China) October 7th
Peking (China) October 10th
Noumea (New Caledonia) October 13th and 14th
Sydney (Australia) October 18th and 19th
Cyril Coppini
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