TINARIWEN BIOGRAPHY
How do you compress a thirty-year epic into a few pages? Tinariwen,
whose back-story has variously been described as “the most
compelling of any band” (Songlines), “the most rock’n’roll of them
all” (The Irish Times), “hard-bitten” (Slate.com) and “dramatic”
(The Independent), are both a dream and a nightmare for any
aspiring music writer: a dream because the most superficial
‘headlines’ of their tale – rebellion, guns and guitars, desert
nomads, Ghadaffi, the real Saharan blues – are like easy nuggets of
gold to thrill-seeking journalists and literary prospectors. And a
nightmare, because none of these clichés really do the band justice
or even begin to describe who they are, what they feel or the music
they play. The following comprises only the chapter headings, the
main way markers of the long road the group have travelled from the
wild empty places of the southern Sahara desert to the concert
stages of the world.
In the early 1960s, Mali threw off the yoke of French colonial rule
and became an independent country, ruled by a new African elite
from the capital Bamako. A thousand miles away in the northern
desert regions, the nomadic Touareg or Kel Tamashek (‘The Tamashek
speaking people’) had trouble recognising the legitimacy of their
new rulers or accepting their socialist laws and taxes, their alien
ways and demands. In 1963 there was a Touareg uprising in a large
remote part of the desert called The Adrar des Iforas, around the
small outpost of Kidal with its old French Foreign Legion fort. It
was brutally suppressed by the Malian army. The period still haunts
the local population like a nightmare. Of the many stories of
suffering and incidents of callousness that survive in the
collective memory, there is one that is crucial to our story. It
concerns a mason and trader by the name of Alhabib Ag Sidi who was
arrested in front of his family in the village of Tessalit, taken
to the barracks in Kidal and executed for aiding the rebels. The
army then went and destroyed Alhabib’s herd of camels, cattle and
goats. His young four-year old son Ibrahim witnessed this wanton
act of destruction before travelling north into exile in Algeria
with his family and their one remaining cow. By 1964 the uprising
had been crushed, and the Adrar des Iforas was turned into a no-go
zone, ruled by the Army.
Ibrahim Ag Alhabib grew up in refugee camps near Bordj Moktar or in
the deserts around the southern Algerian city of Tamanrasset. He
hated school and preferred running wild in the bush. One day he saw
a film at a makeshift desert village cinema. It was a western and
it featured a cowboy playing a guitar. The instrument made Ibrahim
dream. He built his own guitar out of a tin can, a stick and
bicycle brake wire. He started to play old Touareg melodies on it,
and modern Arabic pop tunes. After a while, he became pretty good.
He was a solitary kid anyway, who kept himself to himself and was
known as ‘Abaraybone’ or ‘raggamuffin child’ by the other kids and
adults.
At the age of 9 Ibrahim ran away from home in a cement truck, to
earn some money and see the world. He grew up wandering around
Algeria and Libya doing odd jobs – carpenter, builder, tailor,
gardener. It was a precarious existence; made bearable by the
companionship of many other young Touareg men who were living the
same marginal life in exile. The northern desert regions of Mali
had been struck by a catastrophic drought in 1973-4, which had
almost wiped out the animal herds and the traditional nomadic way
of life with it. Algeria and Libya was awash with errant exiled
Touareg youth, jobless, paperless, surviving by any means
necessary. They would gather together in groups and sleep rough on
the outskirts of villages and towns, sharing food, cigarettes,
songs and stories. The police would harass them mercilessly,
shouting “Hey you! Les chomeurs! (‘unemployed’ in French).” In the
age-old tradition of the underclass, this insult was turned into a
badge of honour, and these young men became known as the ‘ishumar’
generation.
Towards the end of the 1970s, Ibrahim began to meet other Touareg
of his age who shared his passion for music of all kinds, from
traditional Touareg poetry and song to the radical chaabi protest
music of Moroccan groups like Nass El Ghiwane and Jil Jilala, from
Algerian pop rai to western rock and pop artists like Elvis
Presley, Led Zeppelin, Carlos Santana, Dire Straits, Jimmy Hendrix,
Boney M and Bob Marley. His most important early musical partners
were Inteyeden Ag Ablil, his brother Liya, aka ‘Diarra’, Ag Ablil,
and Hassan Ag Touhami aka ‘The Lion of the Desert’. This group of
friends got together in Tamanrasset, and began to play at parties
and weddings. They acquired their first real acoustic guitar in
1979, and their reputation grew. They were new and radical inasmuch
as they wrote their own poems and songs – not the old Touareg verse
of heroic deeds and fair maidens – but new lyrics about
homesickness, longing, exile and political awakening. In order to
keep out of trouble with the law, Ibrahim, Inteyeden and their
friends would often just disappear off into the desert for a night
or two, to drink tea, make music and sleep under the stars. People
began to call them ‘Kel Tinariwen’, which translates literally as
‘The People of the Deserts’ or roughly and more accurately as ‘The
Desert Boys’.
In 1980, Colonel Ghadaffi put out a decree inviting all young
Touareg men, who were living illegally in Libya, to come and
receive a full military training at a designated camp in the
southern desert. It was an opportunistic move. The Touareg had long
held a reputation as brilliant bushmen and desert fighters.
Ghadaffi dreamed of forming a Saharan regiment, made of the best
young Touareg fighters, to further his territorial ambitions in
Chad, Niger and elsewhere.
Seeing it as a heaven-sent chance to learn how to be soldiers and
take back their homeland by force, Ibrahim and most of his friends
answered the call immediately. Their training was very tough, and
lasted only nine months. Four years later, in 1985, they were
invited back into a new camp near Tripoli. This time it was run by
the leaders of the Touareg rebel movement, the MPA (Mouvement
Populaire de l’Azawad). Ibrahim, Inteyeden, Diarra and Hassan were
joined by a whole new group of aspiring musicians, including Keddou
Ag Ossade aka ‘Hiwaj’, Mohammed Ag Itlale aka ‘Japonais’, Sweiloum,
Abouhadid and the young Abdallah Ag Alhousseyni. They formed a
collective and built their own make-shift rehearsal studios,
equipping it with basic gear bought with the money from a communal
chest into which all recruits paid contributions. Their job was to
write songs about the rebellion, about the aspirations of the
Touareg for political freedom, for education and development, and
then to record these songs without payment for whoever turned up at
their door with an empty cassette. It was a propaganda machine for
a people without any other forms of media whatsoever. The cassettes
were taken back to camps and villages throughout the Sahara,
copied, and then copied again and again and again. It was a
cassette-to-cassette grapevine and the sound quality was as
atrocious as the message was powerful.
Ibrahim, Inteyeden, Japonais, Diarra, Hassan and their friends
never saw themselves as one-dimensional propagandists however. They
were musicians and poets. Their songs spoke of deep personal
struggles and of their love of their desert home, as much as they
raised the flag for the rebel movement. In 1989, frustrated by the
lack of progress and by broken promises, the members of Tinariwen
escaped from the Libyan camp and headed south into Mali. Ibrahim
found himself back in Tessalit, the village of his birth, for the
first time in 26 years. And then, in June 1990, the rebellion
began.
It lasted about six months. The Malian government offered peace
terms to the MPA in January 1991 and the Tamanrasset Accords were
signed. The rebel movement split into different factions comprising
those who were pro or contra the Accords. It was a confusing,
desperate and often dispiriting time. Most of Tinariwen decided to
leave the military life behind and go back to being musicians.
And that was it…six months of open combat in a story lasting three
decades or more. No wonder the group are frustrated and bored by
journalists who remain obsessed with the romantic myth of guns and
guitars, of rebellion and war. In 1991, Ibrahim and his friends had
no doubt that they were musicians first and foremost. They had
become soldiers only out of necessity, for a brief and painful
period. It was all over in a flicker.
The group headed home to Tessalit and Kidal, or went to seek work
in Gao, Mopti and Bamako. Some, like Keddou, accepted posts in the
army, the customs service or in education under a UN sponsored
programme aimed at reintegrating rebels into civil society. In
groups of two, three, four or more, they also began to play gigs
openly. Touareg from all over the Sahara were delighted finally to
encounter the group who had invented the modern Touareg guitar
style, who had been the pied pipers of the rebellion and whose
songs defined the story of a whole generation. Their secret was
unveiled.
But it was a discreet success. In 1992 some of the members of
Tinariwen went to Abidjan in Ivory Coast to record a cassette at
the legendary JBZ studios. They played gigs for Touareg communities
throughout north and West Africa, but not that often. They were
nomads at heart, and the collective was often spread out over
thousands of miles. But that was the group’s strength. Just two
members could get together in a village with a guitar or two, a
djembe or water can for percussion, and sing the songs of
Tinariwen. It’s often said that every Touareg from Tamanrasset to
Niamey and from Timbuktu to Ghat is a member of Tinariwen, so
widely are their songs known and treasured. They are more of a
social movement than a desert rock’n’roll band.
Then news came that a French group called Lo’Jo wanted to invite
Tinariwen to Europe. This adventurous bunch of musical troubadours
lived in Angers, in the Loire valley. Angers was twinned with
Bamako. In 1998 Lo’Jo travelled to the Malian capital for a
festival of street theatre and music, and there they met Issa Dicko
and Foy Foy, two members of the Tinariwen collective, who told them
all about the sufferings of the Touareg, the droughts, the
rebellion, the exile. Together they came up with the idea of
creating a festival based on the traditional annual gatherings of
Touareg in each part of the desert, which would hopefully open up
the desert regions to cultural exchange, tourism and investment. It
was a crazy improbable scheme. In 1999 some of the members of
Tinariwen came and did a few gigs in France under the name of
AZAWAD. And then in January 2001, the first Festival in the Desert
took place in Tin Essako, 60 km east of Kidal. About 1000 locals,
and 80 Europeans gathered in that remote beautiful spot. Tinariwen
were the stars of the show. A new international phase of their long
hard journey was about to begin.
Success came swiftly. By the end of 2001, Tinariwen had performed
at WOMAD, Roskilde and the South Bank in London. Their debut CD,
‘The Radio Tisdas Sessions’, recorded by Justin Adams and Jean-Paul
Romann in the studios of Kidal’s only Tamashek-speaking radio
station, Radio Tisdas, was released on IRL / Wayward in October.
Initially lauded by the world music scene and by African music
aficionados, Tinariwen’s magic quickly began to work on those with
little previous interest in those areas. The guitar licks, the
grungy grimy desert sound, the arcane yet effortless rhythms, the
striking turbans and robes, the wild rebel iconography, the
scintillating exoticism of Kalashnikovs and Stratocasters, the
glimpsed power of their poetry, so strange and yet somehow so
thrillingly familiar…it all synched in with a general fatigue
amongst adventurous pop and rock fans, exasperated with endless
young drum-bass-and-two-guitars, indi-rock bands.
Over the past seven years, the group have played over 700 concerts
in Europe, North America, Japan and Australia. Their name has
graced the bills of most of the world’s premier rock and world
music festivals including Glastonbury, Coachella, Roskilde, Paleo,
Les Vieilles Charrues, WOMAD and Printemps de Bourges. Their 2004
CD ‘Amassakoul’ (“The Traveller’) and its follow-up in 2007 ‘Aman
Iman’ (“Water Is Life”), have established them as one of the most
popular and best selling African groups on the planet. Their ever
expanding fan base includes a host of stars and legends: Carlos
Santana, Robert Plant, Bono and the Edge, Thom Yorke, Chris Martin,
Henry Rollins, Brian Eno, TV on the Radio. In 2005 they were
awarded a BBC Award for World Music, and in 2008 they received
Germany’s prestigious Praetorius Music Prize.
Those are the outward stats of success. Deep inside, Ibrahim,
Hassan, Japonais and Abdallah smile gently at their improbable
victory against all the odds. When they were just youths sharing a
cigarette under the shade of an acacia tree somewhere in the
southern Sahara, they always dreamed of travelling and seeing the
world. Now they’ve done it. But their biggest source of pride has
been in representing their music and their culture to the world and
spreading the message that despite all the twisted words and
propaganda to the contrary, the desert really is one of the most
beautiful, most peaceful and most inspirational places on earth.
Ibrahim’s only real regret is that his friend Inteyeden hasn’t been
at his side during these payback years. The charismatic co-inventor
of modern Touareg guitar rock died in 1994 from a mysterious
illness.
Since 2001, the founders and elders of Tinariwen have been
supported and energised by a new younger generation including
bassist Eyadou Ag Leche, percussionist Said Ag Ayad, rhythm
guitarist Elaga Ag Hamid, guitarist Abdallah Ag Lamida aka
‘Intidao’, vocalists Wonou Walet Sidati and the Walet Oumar
sisters. They were just children when the rebellion ravaged the
north of Mali and Niger. They grew up on Tinariwen’s songs. Their
presence in the group brings Tinariwen in line with so many
long-lasting music and theatre groups in Africa and elsewhere, who,
by integrating successive generations of artists into their ranks,
become self-perpetuating.
In December of 2008 the old and the young gathered in the sleepy
desert village of Tessalit to record Tinariwen’s fourth album. It
seemed like the ideal place; quiet, off the beaten track, home to
Hassan and Ibrahim, blessed with a plentiful water supply and a
friendly familiar populace. The group had expressed a strong desire
to return to their roots and recapture the raw desert sound of
their early recordings. Lo’Jo’s French sound engineer, Jean-Paul
Romann, who had worked with Justin Adams on ‘The Radio Tisdas
Sessions’ eight years previously, was recruited to produce the
album. He arrived with a studio in a suitcase, which was set up in
a rented adobe house in the middle of the village, and powered by a
chugging generator. The sessions proceeding slowly, surely, in pace
with the rhythm of life in that remote corner of Africa. There were
free concerts for the local populace in the village square, and
recording sessions far out in the bush. There were solitary nights
around the fire, under the stars, and parties here and there in the
village. It was all very strange, very familiar, just like
Tinariwen themselves.
‘Imidiwan’ is one of those big Tamashek words, to which no single
English word can ever do justice. Just like ‘Assouf’, the name
which the Touareg themselves often give Tinariwen’s guitar style.
‘Assouf’ means the blues, loneliness, heartache, longing,
homesickness, the darkness beyond the campfire. ‘Imidiwan’ means
friends, companions, soul-brothers, fellow travellers. The
juxtaposition of these two words is particularly striking. Maybe
Tinariwen are coming in from the cold and recognising all those
soul-friends, both living and departed, who have made their
incredible journey bearable, whilst warming their hands over the
camp fire and looking up at the night sky thick with stars.
Andy Morgan, May 2009.