Twelve days through Morocco listening to the country as much as looking at it — Sufi sema with the Tariqa Boutchichia in Moulay Idriss, Gnawa trance drumming in a Fès riad, Jajouka rhythms on Mount Zalagh, Andalusian and Sephardic music in the Marrakech Mellah. Hand-built instruments where they're made; ceremonies where they happen; not staged shows.
Live Ceremonies
Riads & Sahara Camp
Named Musicians & Guides
24/7 Concierge
Moderate Pace
About This Tour
Music of Morocco is a twelve-day journey structured around music traditions that still exist as living practice, not folklore. The Tariqa Boutchichia and Tijani brotherhoods convene sema circles in Moulay Idriss and Fès where outsiders are welcomed — provided they arrive with the right introduction. Gnawa lila ceremonies in Fès and Marrakech, where the same songs and rhythms have been used to invoke trance for four centuries. Jajouka rhythms on Mount Zalagh — the music Brian Jones and Brion Gysin made famous, but learned from the village musicians who'd been playing it for generations. Andalusian and Sephardic music in the Marrakech Mellah, where the Jewish-Muslim shared musical tradition still has practitioners. Tribal drumming with the Rokba at Erg Chebbi. Real ceremonies. Real musicians. Real introduction by name.
Highlights
Tariqa Boutchichia and Tijani sema circles, attended by introduction
Gnawa lila in Fès and Marrakech — real ceremonies, not staged for visitors
Jajouka rhythms on Mount Zalagh, learned from the village musicians
Andalusian and Sephardic music in the Marrakech Mellah
Tribal Rokba drumming at Erg Chebbi — every musician introduced by name
Itinerary Overview
Day 1
Arrive Casablanca
Met at Mohammed V airport (CMN) and transferred to a hotel near the corniche (about 30 minutes). Late afternoon orientation walk — the Habous quarter for the first Moorish atmosphere, the Hassan II Mosque opening to the Atlantic. Welcome dinner.
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Day 2
Casablanca to Moulay Idriss — first Sufi sema
Morning drive north (about 3 hours 30 minutes) to Volubilis, walked with a regional archaeologist. On to Moulay Idriss in the afternoon for the viewpoint over the white roofs of the holy town. Evening introduction to Sufi music, followed by a Hadra ceremony with the local Tariqa Boutchichia brotherhood — provided the brotherhood is convening that week. Riad in the village.
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Day 3
Fès — historic tour and Issawa drummers
Drive to Fès in the morning (about 1 hour). Settle in at a riad in the medina. Afternoon historic tour — the Mellah, the Royal Palace gates, the Batha Museum, then down into the medina to walk the Talâa Kbira past the Nejjarine fondouk, the dyers' souk, and the courtyards around Al-Karaouine. Early evening: the Issawa brotherhood drummers in the courtyard of the riad, an introduction to one of the city's oldest ceremonial traditions. Dinner at the riad.
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Day 4
Mount Zalagh and Jajouka rhythms
Free morning. Afternoon out of Fès to rural Mount Zalagh — the shrine of Sidi Ahmed Bernoussi, a quiet place that's been a retreat for centuries. Mules available for the climb. A musical group from the neighbouring village of Tebbala accompanies the walk with drums and ghita (oboe) — Jajouka rhythms played the way they have been for generations, the music Brian Jones and Brion Gysin made famous. Return to Fès for dinner.
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Day 5
Gnawa workshop and lila ceremony
Morning in the medina with a guide — the saddlers and metalworkers near Seffarine who make and repair traditional instruments. Afternoon workshop with a Gnawa maâlem on rhythms, ritual structure, and the trance tradition. Evening: a Gnawa lila ceremony with the master and his troupe — four centuries of the same songs and rhythms used to invoke trance, held in a private setting and not staged for visitors. Dinner woven into the ceremony.
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Day 6
Fès to Midelt — across the Middle Atlas
Morning departure south. Through Imouzzer du Kandar and Ifrane in the Middle Atlas, the cedar forest of Azrou (Barbary macaques visible at the roadside), continuing to Midelt at the foot of the High Atlas (about 3 hours total). Hosted lunch at a Midelt kasbah-hotel, looking up at the Jbel Ayachi range — the country opening into the south. Afternoon at leisure or a short walk in the apple orchards behind the town. Dinner at the kasbah.
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Day 7
Midelt to Merzouga — into the Sahara
Drive south through the Ziz Gorges and the long palmeries of the Tafilalt (about 4 hours 30 minutes) to Merzouga at the edge of Erg Chebbi. Settle in at a kasbah on the dunes. Late afternoon walk among the first dunes as the light softens. Dinner at the kasbah.
HotelBreakfastDinner
Day 8
Erg Chebbi — Rokba tribal drumming
Free morning at the kasbah. Afternoon excursion to Rissani — the seat of the Alaouite dynasty before the move north, and the souk town for the desert tribes. Sunset camel ride into the dunes. Camp dinner with the Tuareg, followed by Rokba Tagmount tribal dancing — a music tradition belonging specifically to the desert tribes south of Merzouga. Overnight at the dunes camp.
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Day 9
Merzouga to Ouarzazate — Todra and Dades
Drive west (about 4 hours) through the Todra Gorges and along the Dades valley, the road of a thousand kasbahs. Continue to Ouarzazate. Evening at a local home for a Houara dance performance — the southern tribal music tradition still in living practice. Dinner with the household.
HotelBreakfastDinner
Day 10
Ouarzazate to Marrakech via the Tizi n'Tichka pass
Morning departure over the Tizi n'Tichka, the highest pass in the High Atlas at 2,260 metres — the road newly rebuilt, the views the reward for the climb (about 4 hours 30 minutes total). Settle in at a riad in the Marrakech medina. Late afternoon walk through Djemaa el-Fna as it changes from daytime market into evening food stalls. Evening at a private home — Kekka and Gnawa music in a domestic setting, the Marrakech voice of the same tradition heard in Fès.
HotelBreakfastDinner
Day 11
Marrakech — Andalusian and Sephardic
Walking tour of historic Marrakech with a local guide — the Bahia Palace and its painted ceilings, the Saadian Tombs, then through the souks. Afternoon in the Mellah, the old Jewish quarter, with a musician who carries the Andalusian-Sephardic tradition. Farewell dinner at a restaurant in the Mellah with Andalusian and Sephardic music — a repertoire distinct from Fès, with its own line of practice still in living memory.
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Day 12
Until you leave Marrakech
A morning in your own hand — a last walk through the medina or a quiet morning at the riad, perhaps the hammam before checkout. The driver makes the airport transfer at a time chosen by the guests — to Marrakech Menara airport (RAK, about 30 minutes) for the international flight.
Andalusian/Sephardic evening at a Mellah restaurant
Private vehicle & driver, 4×4 transfers to Erg Chebbi
Onboard WiFi in the tour vehicle
Airport pick-up on arrival, airport drop-off on departure
All breakfasts and dinners, plus one signature lunch on us — a hosted Atlas-crossing lunch at a Midelt kasbah
All entrance fees to monuments, museums & archaeological sites
24/7 support number throughout your stay
Exclusions
International flights to and from Morocco. We can recommend agents in the UK, EU, and US.
Travel insurance — required for every guest, sourced separately. We can suggest providers.
Visa fees, where applicable. Most passports from the UK, EU, US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand do not need one for stays under ninety days.
Lunches not specifically named in the day-by-day itinerary, so the days have room to drift.
Alcoholic beverages and premium drinks. Mint tea and table water are throughout.
Gratuities for the lead guide, driver, and regional guides — discretionary, at the end of the trip.
Personal expenses — laundry, phone charges, gifts, and anything you choose to buy on the road.
Optional activities and upgrades suggested along the way. Always pre-quoted, never assumed.
Departures
Private journeys on your dates, year-round.
Every Sarah Discoveries trip is a private departure for your party — twelve guests at most, the same regional guides, the same standards. Tell us when you would travel and who is coming, and we will reply within twenty-four hours with availability and a draft itinerary.
Group size
Twelve at most
Best months
Mar – May, Sep – Nov
Reply time
Within 24 hours
Traveler Reviews
5.0
★★★★★
Based on traveller feedback
Sophie L.
United States
★★★★★
An unforgettable experience! The guides were knowledgeable, the hotels were stunning, and every detail was perfectly organized. Highly recommend!
James R.
United Kingdom
★★★★★
From start to finish, everything was exceptional. Morocco is incredible!
Emily T.
Australia
★★★★★
Luxury, authenticity, and warm hospitality. We can't wait to come back!