Azmari


An Azmari is an entertainer who sings and plays traditional string instruments of the Ethiopian Highlands. They are comparable to medieval European minstrels, bards or West African griots.
Azmari, who may be either male or female, are skilled at singing extemporized verses, accompanying themselves on either a masenqo or krar.

Etymology

Azmari means in Amharic. Amharas tend to call all musicians Azmari simply because there's no other word in the language denoting a person who plays a musical instrument.

History

The earliest documented mention of the Azmaris goes back to the mid-15th century, and they presumably go back much further.

Role in society

Azmaris once played an important role as social critics by improvising sophisticated texts of praise or criticism. Azmaris would mock people in high places, and even Emperors were not spared if they were found to be unpopular with the public. Azmaris were the first to convey scandals in high places.
Female Azmaris flourished in feudal Ethiopia. They were just like their male counterparts poet-musicians. The female musicians are usually wives or lovers of male Azmaris who gradually learned the repertory of their male counterparts.
Between 1841 and 1843, the English traveller Major William Cornwallis Harris captured the prevailing political atmosphere and attitudes of Sahle Selassie's court towards his enemies in a song of praise played by one of his female chorist.

Today

Azmaris have continued perform in various settings ranging from wedding ceremonies, to hotels, and in drinking establishments called tejbeit, which specialise in the serving of tej. The Azmaris introduced the popular Tizita ballad form.

Notable Azmari