Wedding Sound & Lights · Marrakech
paymentsPricing
groupLanguages
French · English · Arabic
eventVerified
Jul 2026
checkStatus
Under review
the profile
Audio Visual Marrakech is a technical event equipment provider working in Marrakech and across Morocco, and it sits in the sound-and-lights category as a supplier of kit rather than a design-led production house. The core of what they do is clear from their own listing: giant LED screen rental, sound systems, microphones, backline, and lighting, serving both weddings and conferences. On the screen side in particular they carry a real range, LCD, LED, and plasma screens plus modular video walls in various sizes, supplied with floor or desk stands, wall mounts, and the cabling to connect a laptop or a media player, and their LED video walls are rated for outdoor daylight use, which matters for a Marrakech reception that starts before sunset. For a couple, the useful picture is this: if your wedding needs a big screen for a photo montage or a live feed, a clean sound system for speeches and music, microphones for the ceremony, and some event lighting, this is a company that supplies exactly that inventory and delivers it around Morocco. Backline, the amps and drum kit and stands a live band plugs into, is on the list too, so a couple bringing in a live group can source it here rather than shipping gear. You book through their site at audiovisualmarrakech.com, and the range in our directory, 1,200 to 6,500, fits a straightforward screen, sound, and light package rather than a full concert production. What a couple actually gets, then, is equipment, reliably specified and delivered. That is genuinely useful, but it is also where you need to be careful, because equipment is only half of what a wedding needs. It helps to know what a Marrakech wedding actually asks of a supplier like this. You need clean speech reinforcement for the ceremony and the toasts, enough music power for the dance floor without distortion, a few wireless microphones that do not drop out, and lighting that shifts from soft dinner warmth to a proper party after dark. A screen is optional, lovely for a photo montage or to bring a distant relative into the room, but not every wedding needs one. Price the package against that real checklist rather than the biggest LED wall on their menu, because it is easy to over-buy screens and under-buy the sound and light that actually carry the night. Here is the honest caveat, and it is a real one for this vendor. The web presence is thin: I found no Instagram, no visible reviews, no team or founder names, and no wedding portfolio to browse, and the site was intermittently unreachable when I tried it, so the first step is simply to confirm they are active and to reach a human. Marrakech also has several similarly named audiovisual companies, so make sure you are dealing with audiovisualmarrakech.com specifically and not a near-namesake, because mixing them up is easy here. The most important question is whether this is dry-hire or attended. Dry-hire means they drop the equipment and leave, and you are responsible for running it; attended means a technician stays and mans the sound and lighting through the night. A wedding badly needs someone on the mixing desk during the speeches and the party, riding the microphone levels and the music, so if the answer is dry-hire, you must budget for an operator separately or your planner has to cover it. Ask for one wedding reference, a site visit to your venue to check power and coverage, and a written equipment list with a named on-site technician if you want them attended. Skip the backline unless you actually have a live band, since it is a wasted line otherwise. Do that homework, and Audio Visual Marrakech is a functional, well-stocked supplier for a couple or a planner who knows how to drive the kit; go in expecting a hands-off, design-led production partner and you will be disappointed.