But its best to forget all the amazing stories and approach the music on its own merits. The structure of most songs is basic. The lead singer does a verse, with an electric guitar following the melody quite closely. This is followed by a verse sung by a chorus of voices (including some women). Then the guitar takes a solo, mainly reproducing the basic melody, sometimes venturing a little further. The instrumentation is rudimentary: a lead guitar, an understated backing guitar, on occasion a bass, and elementary percussion. The songs are mostly slow, stately, intense, and the overall effect is simply mesmerizing.
The star of the group is founder Ibrahim Ag Alhabibe, who sings and plays lead on the most impressive songs, and is responsible for the most inventive guitar work. His most powerful playing is heard on "Zin Es Gourmeden," a slow, raucous desert blues, punctuated by ululations from the female chorus. A series of solo vocal verses, sung choruses, and guitar solos, "Zin Es Gourmeden" is an intense, measured burn. Ibrahim's ardent vocals and ringing-bell guitar also shine on "Le Chant des Fauves" and "Mataraden Anexan." "Imidiwaren" features Kheddou Ag Ossad on vocals and solo guitar, sounding like John Lee Hooker's Touareg second cousin on a blues dirge. "Bismillah," clearly a religious song from the title, features Kheddou backing himself on acoustic guitar.
The sound sometimes reminds me of deep Mississippi blues and of Ali Farka Toure on Talking Timbuktu, and sometimes of the lilting Sudanese music produced by Abdel Gadir Salim or Muhammad Wardi when they accompany themselves on 'ud. The blues feel is certainly authentic and not borrowed from Bob Dylan. You can hear the profound affinities between Malian Tuareg music and acoustic blues on the cut, "'Yali' War Song" by an "anonymous Tuareg elder" recorded in 1930 (on The Secret Museum of Mankind: Music of North Africa from Yazoo). The stories about Tinariwen are wonderful, but you don't need to know them to tell that this is the real thing.» (Ted Swedenburg, Rootsworld)
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I love Tinariwen, Thanks so much for the post.....Love your Blog, by the way :)
music of the worlds is ...super.....
thx for blog....
wlodas from Poland
xanks for the music
from south america
regards
thanks for this and many other things on this blog!
Many thanks for a great worldview
T H X
Thanks!
Thanks for the nice music.
what a great blog!!! and you present extraordinary music so as Tinariwen.
thank you very much / may your days be sunny
Bill.Bo (Europe)
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