Dreaming of the Sahara: Tinariwen

in #music6 years ago (edited)

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Did anyone else catch these guys on their tour? They are fabulous. We first heard them driving through the desert in Morocco years ago - along with bootleg CDs of Jil Jila, another desert blues band. Legend has it Tinariwen would copy music for anyone that had a blank tape. How far they have come - their last album, on vinyl 'Emmaar' also came with a CD and free downloads - as well as featuring guest appearance collab with Mark Lanegan, Matt Sweeney and Kurt Vile. Check out this gorgeous animation of one of the tracks on it:

Tinariwen means 'desert boys' and play what is called desert blues, likened to American Blues - but most Mali musicians pre-internet had never heard of American blues (check out Radio Mali by Ali Farkar Toure and his song Hani - so bluesy)

Little suprise given the African roots of the blues I suppose!

Theres a really rich sound to their guitar based music, and a sense of mournful nostalgia which their current lead singer calls 'assouf' ( they are a collective and started in the 1970s!!). This makes sense when you consider how homesick they must get for family and the sense nothings ever safe in their part of the world. Ibrahim Ag Alhabib, who started the band, did so in exile in Libya from what I have read. This is from the New Yorker that sums things up:

''Deciphering the Tuareg’s role in the region’s current wars is not easy. Subjects of oppression, they were themselves longtime slave traders (and, by some accounts, a form of slavery still exists in some Tuareg communities). Their struggle to receive recognition from the government of Mali has led to several insurgencies, and the recent introduction of Islamist sects into the region has further complicated the situation. Last year, a member of Tinariwen, Abdallah Ag Lamida (known as Intidao), was kidnapped by Islamists in northern Mali. He was held for around ten days before escaping—the other guys in the band picked him up. As several journalists who have reported from the area said, the Tuareg have been “used” by both the Islamists and local governments. Though Tinariwen’s lyrics are more poetic than specifically political, the group is working to “spread the message,” as Ag Leche put it"

Go check them out. They are remarkable, and transport me to desert skies.

Here is the tune with Lanegan. I hope you love them as much as I do.

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Thanks, for the intro — love the desert & music 🎶
Also, your outdoor tub, under the stars... far out ✨

Oh I hope you like them! Let me know what you think amd thanks so much for engaging! Now.. bath under stars AND Tinariwen.. thats total heaven!

I did enjoy them, reminded me of my desert experiences (one day, I might share those with you). Keep up the quality posts, hopefully, you will be rewarded for your efforts, soon. _/|\_

I would love to hear about your desert experiences! Did you live there?

Well, I was born and raised in Egypt, so surrounded by Desert... and, in the years before I left (I'm now based in the US) I would try to take a yearly pilgrimage there to cleanse the door of perception

I think you've sold me - which book of yours do you recommend I buy?

'as if transfixed
by a gaze, stern-serene
surveying a dream
foreign-familiar'

I'm not sure if this is what you meant, but this rings true for me. When I found myself in the desert on the edge of the Sahara, I found myself in tears, a strange kind of ecstatic joy that was reminiscent of nostalgia and longing for something beyond what I could comprehend, but also a recognition of somewhere I had returned to, as if I had been dreaming of it my entire life. A foreign-familiarity. Perhaps it was the way the words and images of literature seep into your soul, so that you actually have been to that place before in your imagination, and when stepping into it, it's like a home coming. Or maybe it was just the light - I'd been living in England, a place of valleys and shadows, and being Australian, I was missing that rich warm light that spoke of home, the 'whirling skirt of sky' and 'streaming light and stars' that was absent for me, then. I really appreciate your sharing - what a way to discover a writer, on this platform!

You're a sensitive soul. That's exactly what I meant:

in tears, a strange kind of ecstatic joy that was reminiscent of nostalgia and longing for something beyond what I could comprehend,

(Here's another ecstatic desert meditation, originally titled I Wept for Creation)

Pleasure to virtually meet, intimate stranger :) As far as which book to begin with, well, what do you like? If poetry, Balancing Acts, if essays, Trial by Ink, if conversations, The Artist as Mystic. Lastly, if aphorisms, Signposts to Elsewhere, but you'd need to purchase that from me, directly, for the time being. Thank you, for your support _/|\_

I’ve listened to these guys for a few years now! Ppl always looked at me weird when i was listening to this! I like them a lot, happy that Im not alone in this :)

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