Chicago Sun-Times

ONCE MORE, WITH HEALING

On new album, Niger-born musician offers ‘best wishes’ for world, says he identifies with those leaving their homes for a better life

- BY JOSHUA MILLER For the Sun-Times Joshua Miller is a local freelance writer.

Niger-born musician Omar Moctar — better known as Bombino — is sympatheti­c to those trying to cross the U.S.Mexico border at all costs. He’s faced similar hardships and challenges in his own life.

When Bombino was 9, a rebellion in Niger forced his family to seek refuge in Algeria. He returned to Niger in his late teens. Having learned to play guitar in exile, he started performing music wherever he could. Niger musician and activist Haja Bebe took notice of his increasing popularity and asked him to join his band. Bebe gave him the nickname of “Bombino” — “little child” — since he was half the age of the other musicians.

A second rebellion in Niger in 2007 prompted the government to ban guitars, viewed as a symbol of dissent. Two of Bombino’s fellow band members were executed; Bombino fled into exile again.

During the exile, his music was discovered by American filmmaker Ron Wyman, who was filming a documentar­y about Niger’s Tuareg people. Bombino’s demo tape was re-released as his debut album “Agadez.” He began gaining new fans well beyond Africa’s borders with each following album.

In May, he released his latest album “Deran.” On album track “Tehigren,” he sings about leaving Africa to pursue a career in music.

“I sing about my struggle to leave my home to seek my living, and how this is the case for so many Tuareg who have left Africa,” Bombino says. “In the U.S., you hear all the time about immigratio­n and the struggles around people leaving their home to find a better life. We struggle with very similar things on the other side of the world.”

“Deran” loosely translates to “best wishes,” which is something he offers in song to a world he sees facing tumultuous times.

“We were working on the song ‘Deran Deran Alkheir’ and the meaning of it, and it occurred to us that this could be a great album title,” he says. “It is a nice sentiment to take from a traditiona­l song and use as a message for the world.”

Despite his successes, he hasn’t forgotten his home country. In fact, “Deran” is his first album recorded in Africa in nearly a decade. It’s something he’s long wanted to do. He tried to do it for the previous album “Azel,” but the logistics didn’t work out. So, he was ecstatic when things finally lined up. He and his bandmates recorded the album at Moroccan king Mohammed VI’s studio in Casablanca.

“It was actually the easiest meeting place for us since we had two in the band starting in Niger, one in Brussels and two coming from the U.S.,” he says. “It was really wonderful for me as the culture there has a lot of close connection­s to Tuareg culture.”

Bombino wrote and sung the album’s lyrics entirely in his native language of Tamasheq. “Our language is a very poetic one, so for us it goes very well with music,” he says.

Even if you don’t speak the language, his passion and talent shines through. It’s a reason he’s highly thought of by musicians such as Keith Richards, Stevie Wonder, Robert Plant and Black Keys’ singer Dan Auerbach.

“It is a fantastic feeling to connect with another person through music, even when you cannot understand each other when you speak,” Bombino says. “Music is even more profound a language than the languages that we speak.”

The eclectic mix of folk, rock, blues, funk, and Tuareggae is clear evidence of this.

“I think all of these styles are represente­d because we wish to be free to roam from one musical place to another without encounteri­ng a border,” he says.

“We were not concerned about making this album sound different from previous albums,” he continues. “I just wanted to give as pure a performanc­e as we could of the new songs. In the end, I think this album is very much the child of all the albums that came before; there is some heavy rock like on ‘Nomad,’ there is some softer, sweeter songs like on ‘Agadez,’ there is Tuareggae like on ‘Azel.’ For me, it is the most complete album of all of them.”

 ?? AKPANUDOSE­N/GETTY IMAGES FOR COACHELLA ?? Musician Bombino performs during the Coachella Valley Music & Arts Festival in 2014 in Indio, California.
AKPANUDOSE­N/GETTY IMAGES FOR COACHELLA Musician Bombino performs during the Coachella Valley Music & Arts Festival in 2014 in Indio, California.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States