The medieval Moroccan city of Fez hosts the renowned Fes Festival of World Sacred Music every year in May or June, and in 2019, it runs from 14-22 June. Artists representing the world’s religions and philosophies perform in spectacular venues, showcasing their passions and beliefs.

Started 25 years ago, the festival advocates music as a means of promoting dialogue and harmony between civilisations. For nine days, Fez’s ancient medina reverberates to a huge variety of sounds from flamenco to Colombian harps and Persian flutes to Irish song.

Fes Festival of World Sacred Music - A tribute show to Persian poet Omar Khayyam is played during the opening ceremony of the 18th World Sacred Music Festival in Fez, Morocco
The Fes Festival of World Sacred Music draws a diverse programme of artists and interests © Abdelhak Senna / AFP / Getty Images

Evening concerts

Major-draw concerts are held at Bab Makina, the enormous parade ground in front of the Royal Palace of Fez. Opening night features many of the artists for the coming week accompanied by magnificent lighting effects on the ancient crenellated walls. In 2019, British-Iranian singer-songwriter Sami Yusuf will thrill festival attendees, as will renowned flamenco stars Tomatito and José Mercé. Popular Lebanese oud player Marcel Khalife returns with a large orchestra, and there will be fascinating Arab muwashah orchestral music and singing from Aleppo with the Syrian Orchestra of Paris and the Fez Orchestra.

Fes Festival of World Sacred Music - Fountain at Jnan Sbil Garden, Fez, Morocco
Take to Jnan Sbil Garden for a musical afternoon during the festival © GoodLifeStudio / Getty Images

Balmy afternoons

The luxuriant Jnan Sbil Garden, with its stately palms, shady pathways and waterwheels, plays host to glorious afternoon concerts such as the Irish choir Anúna, Iranian and Armenian musicians, Canticum Novum with their music of the Mediterranean with its Muslim, Christian and Jewish influences and delightful kora-player Ballaké Sissoko from Mali.

Fes Festival of World Sacred Music - XV111-21 perform during the Fes Festival of World Sacred Music in Fez, Morocco.
Musicians perform in a range of stunning venues around the city © Judith Burrows / Redferns / Getty Images

Nights in the medina

Beautiful riads, the old Ibn Danan synagogue and the stately Glaoui Palace provide smaller venues for these evening concerts where the audience sit on carpets on the floor. Attendees will be mesmerised by the flashing colours and gestures of Indian dance, the ritual of Omani Sufis, mountain songs from the Balkans and the High Atlas of Morocco, Spanish bagpipes from Galicia, harpists from South America and Jewish music from Germany. The concerts often surprise, when two seemingly vastly different genres are fused.

For the 2019 edition, the Dhrupad Fantasia, a visionary idea linking Indian raga-based improvisations with polyphonic instrumental music, delivers the 16th-century court music of Elizabethan England alongside that of the Mughal emperors of India.

Sufi Nights end the evenings at 11pm, featuring Sufi brotherhoods from Morocco and beyond who perform their spiritual music to lead them closer to God. Their huge following of locals and visitors is testament to their popularity, and the gardens of Dar Tazi fill with families, all swaying, clapping and singing along.

The concerts cost €15, and the Sufi Nights are free of charge.

Make it happen

The Festival of World Sacred Music is peak season in Fez, so book accommodation well in advance. Traditional guesthouses in the central and western areas of the medina are convenient for concert venues.

Top tips

  • Be weather wise: it’s usually very hot, but it can rain too. Bring layers.

  • You’ll need to walk to all the venues, so wear comfortable shoes.

  • Some venues are hard to find, so have a map or GPS.

A pass to all events costs €350, or you can buy tickets to individual events. Find more information on the festival’s website.

https://shop.lonelyplanet.com/products/morocco-travel-guide-12

Explore related stories

Features - family looking through binoculars at the city

Food

Are you kidding me? Seven surprisingly child-friendly cities

Feb 22, 2019 • 7 min read