
Wedding Entertainment · Marrakech
paymentsPricing
groupLanguages
French · English · Arabic
eventVerified
Jul 2026
checkStatus
Under review
the profile
Party Maroc is a Marrakech events company run by Maria and Siham, and for a couple its real value is entertainment. This is where they know the local performers, and Moroccan folklore is the heart of what they book. If you want the celebration to feel like Marrakech rather than a generic hotel party, this is the kind of supplier who brings that into the room. They work across the whole arc of a wedding, from the welcome and the henna night to the dinner and the late party, matching the act to the moment rather than dropping one troupe on stage and leaving. The signature booking is Gnawa, a spiritual, hypnotic music played on the guembri, a three-stringed lute, and the qraqeb, metal castanets that drive the rhythm. It suits a welcome or a rooftop cocktail, and it sets a tone no DJ can. For the henna night or a lively break during dinner, they bring Dekka Marrakchia, a group of percussionists on ta'rija drums with hand clapping, which is the true sound of a Marrakech celebration. For the ceremony or an elegant dinner, an Andalusian trio of oud, violin, and qanun plays classical Arab-Andalusian music with restraint. Belly dancers with live drumming carry the evening, and a fire show of fire-eating and juggling works as an entrance or a finale. They also field a Moroccan tea man who pours from silver pots in an embroidered djellaba, plus DJs, jazz bands, and acrobats if you want to mix registers. Party Maroc has staged entertainment at addresses couples actually book, including Palais Namaskar, the Beldi Country Club, and private villas across the Palmeraie. What a couple gets is a single point of contact who assembles the performers, handles their brief and timing, and slots each act into the running order so the energy climbs through the night. That coordination is the point. A wedding with four or five different acts needs someone to cue them, feed them, and keep them on schedule, and a folklore troupe that starts ten minutes late can stall a whole reception. Having Maria and Siham manage that is worth more than the individual bookings on their own. You reach them through the website at partymarocmarrakech.com, on Instagram at @partymaroc_marrakech, or by WhatsApp on +212 651 297 145, and they work in French, English, and Arabic. On budget, our directory puts their entertainment in a range of 800 to 5,000, which reflects the spread between a single performer for an hour and a full folklore programme across an evening. A lone tea man or one dancer sits at the bottom. A Gnawa group, a Dekka troupe, and a fire finale across a full night push toward the top. Ask for the programme written out act by act, with timings and headcounts, so you know exactly who arrives when. Two honest notes. First, Party Maroc is a full event-planning company, not only an entertainment agency, so the folklore acts often come bundled inside a larger planning package rather than as standalone hires. If you only want the entertainment, say so plainly and ask for a performers-only quote. Second, their public Google reviews sit at a strong 5.0 across more than 60 ratings, while our own directory scores them 7.5, and the gap is worth reading as a reminder to confirm which specific troupe or musicians they will send, since folklore quality varies by the exact people who show up. Pin down the names, and if you can, ask for recent video of the act you are buying. Booked well, this is how you make a Marrakech wedding actually feel Moroccan.