Bombino ‘Agadez’ Music Review
May 5th, 2011 | Published in World
vivoscene rating: 10.0
The mesmerizing, blistering guitar and vocals by Omara ‘Bombino’ Moctar, on his new release Agadez arise straight out of the Sahara Desert, sounding for all the world like the talents of Ry Cooder, Mark Knopfler, Jimmy Page and Richard Thompson playing for all they’re worth. This is musical genius combined with the politics of despair, and in it you hear real struggle, not the kind endured by art students who decide to become rock stars but the kind that matters.
No wonder Bombino was invited by the musical elite to come to America, to come to England, to come where enervated millionaires need inspiration for their tired careers and where they search again for the lost knowledge that made them famous: how to make music of significance.
This man is the real thing, and there are few of his like left in the world.
You could do yourself no greater favour than to listen to the music of Bombino, who has been the subject of the documentary film Agadez, the Music and the Rebellion.
He was born January 1, 1980 in Tidene, Niger, a Tuareg encampment outside of Agadez. Following the outbreak of the Tuareg Rebellion in 1990, Bombino, along with his father and grandmother, were forced to flee to neighboring Algeria for safety. By 1997, Bombino had returned to Agadez and began life as a professional musician.
In 2007 tensions grew again in Niger and ultimately erupted into another Tuareg Rebellion. The government, hoping to thwart the rebellion in all its forms, banned guitars for the Tuareg, as the instrument was seen as a symbol of rebellion. Additionally, two of Bombino’s fellow musicians were executed, thus forcing him into exile in Burkina Faso, where filmmaker Ron Wyman, having heard cassette recordings of his music, decided to track him down. Wyman encouraged Bombino to properly record his music. Bombino agreed, and the two of them produced an album together in Agadez.
In January 2010 Bombino was able to return to his home in Agadez. So as to celebrate the end of the conflict, a large concert was organized at the base of the Grand Mosque in Agadez, having received the blessing of the Sultan. Bombino and his band played to over a thousand people at the concert, all dancing and celebrating the end of their struggle.
The result of Ron Wyman’s work is available now throughout the world, and the album is sensational beyond description, although many have tried to convey its magic.
Here are a few sampling of how this man’s music is being appreciated around the world.
“Agadez is a must have album from young Tuareg guitar legend, Bombino.” – Gondwana Sound
“Omara Moctar knows how to shred… [he] positively slays.” -Pitchfork
“The singer and guitarist Bombino emerges from the dunes of the Sahara with his desert folk dancing in the flames. Absolutely magical.” — Les Inrockuptibles (France)
“Bombino’s tone distinguishes him as an emerging artist with something to say. Bright and cutting on the upswing, percussive on the downbeat, snatches of Jimmy Page, Jimi Hendrix and even Jerry Garcia can be heard in the sound Bombino creates.” – No Depression
We are not the first, and we won’t be the last to say this. This man is a great talent. Our only question: where and how in God’s name did he learn to play like that?
We once read that there are only a dozen or so works of art that really affect a life, and one important task is to find those works of art that speak to you. Might take years, might take ten thousand books, films, recordings to find even one of those dozen. So we’ll stick our necks out and say this:
If you never buy another record in your life, buy Agadez and celebrate the genius of Bombino.
Passionately recommended.
Find it on Amazon.ca
Find “V2 Guitars from Agadez” on Vinyl at Amazon.ca


