Mdou Moctar

Wed Jun 12 2024 at 08:00 pm UTC-05:00

200 41st Street South Birmingham AL 35222 | Birmingham

Saturn Birmingham
Publisher/HostSaturn Birmingham
Mdou Moctar There is a beauty in listening to music made in the spirit of energetic transformation.
When the sounds transform the air and the listener. This record transports the listener
into the heart of the music of Mdou Moctar. The blending of intention and motivation
creates a burst of sound that embraces and shakes and invites one to dance! It invites
one to breathe. It invites one to be in solidarity with the music. It invites one to be in
touch with the human condition. What does it mean to be free in these times? Can the
world be liberated from the colonial mindstate that has caused such harm and mistrust?
Can we mourn our losses yet build anew to form something more astounding, more
fantastic? Funeral For Justice says we can.
A sound that carries weight makes an impact. A sound that carries time transcends
time. We are not only listening to music but we are living through it. We are living with it.
We are living in it. The artist sees history and makes poetry from it for the present.
Mdou Moctar’s Funeral For Justice requests your presence. Show up open to the
celebration of life, loved as it should be loved. Experience the exaltation and
exuberance. The words speak of ascension, awareness, sorrow, apathy, knowing, and
growth. The guitars speak of power, energy, jubilation, transcendency, immediacy, and
tradition. The drums and percussion mark the pulse of now as well as a timeless dance
that involves us all, as it did those that came before us. The wires that carry the
message feel alive with fire and purpose, explosive with possibility. This “funeral” is an
acknowledgment. This “funeral” is abundant. This “funeral” overflows into the street
filled with dance. This “funeral” stretches late into the night, kicking up the dirt, with the
hum of a generator, an ever present member of the rhythm section. This “funeral” is a
clarion call for reason and a belief that change is possible.
So join Mdou Moctar in this funeral for justice, knowing rebirth is possible. A new justice
is possible. With your voice, your heart, your dance, your stomp, a new justice is born.
Mdou Moctar welcomes you with joy and open arms. Be here. Feel here and do,
alongside this music. Don’t stand alone, join with others and do. Fight for liberation.
Stand against oppression, alongside this music and do!
– Damon Locks
Funeral For Justice is the new album by Mdou Moctar. Recorded at the close of two
years spent touring the globe following the release of 2019 breakout Afrique Victime, it
captures the Nigerien quartet in ferocious form. The music is louder, faster, and more
wild. The guitar solos are feedback-scorched and the lyrics are passionately political.
Nothing is held back or toned down.
The songs on Funeral For Justice speak unflinchingly to the plight of Niger and of the
Tuareg people. "This album is really different for me," explains Moctar, the band’s
singer, namesake, and indisputably iconic guitarist. "Now the problems of terrorist
violence are more serious in Africa. When the US and Europe came here, they said
they're going to help us, but what we see is really different. They never help us to find a
solution."
"Mdou Moctar has been a strong anti-colonial band ever since I've been a part of it,"
says producer and bassist Mikey Coltun, who has been playing with Moctar since 2017.
"France came in, fucked up the country, then said ‘you're free.’ And they're not." The
song ‘Oh France’ tackles this head on: "France's actions are frequently veiled in
cruelty/We are better off without its turbulent relation/It’s high time we grasp the endless
lethal games it plays."
On the lead single and title track, Moctar addresses African leaders directly, bidding
them: "Retake control of your resource rich countries/Build them and quit sleeping”. The
song ‘Sousoume Tamacheq’ deals with the plight of the Tuareg people to which the
band belong, and who are mainly spread across three countries: Niger, Mali and
Algeria. "Oppressed in all three/In addition to lack of unity, ignorance is the third issue."
Another song, ‘Imouhar’, calls on the Tuareg to preserve their Tamasheq language - it's
at risk of dying out, and Mdou is one of the few in his community who knows how to
write it. "People here are just using French," laments Mdou. "They're starting to forget
their own language. We feel like in a hundred years no one will speak good Tamasheq,
and that's so scary for us."
Mdou Moctar in its current iteration is first and foremost a band. Alongside Moctar, it
consists of rhythm guitarist Ahmoudou Madassane, drummer Souleymane Ibrahim, and
American bassist and producer Mikey Coltun.
The band got their start performing at traditional weddings. These are high energy
events – amps are dialed up to 11 and the whole town is invited to attend. "I grew up in
the DC punk scene and this is no different," explains Coltun. "It’s a DIY punk show:
people bring generators, they crank their amps. Things are broken, but they make it
work."
Conveying that energy and feeling of community to a new audience has been an
important goal for the band. Their first concerts in the US were sometimes, mistakenly,
organized to be tame seated affairs. That’s no longer the case. Over 100s of shows,
they’ve proven themselves as one of the world’s most vital rock bands – a group rooted
in Tuareg tradition, but undeniably its own singular organism. An Mdou Moctar concert
is now recognized to be a place for dancing, if not full-force moshing.
"Ilana was the gateway album, saying that this is a raw rock band. And Afrique Victime
was a summation of that vision,” says Coltun, who captured the bulk of the recordings
over five days in a mostly unfurnished house in upstate New York. “With Funeral For
Justice, I really wanted this to shine with the political message because of everything
that's going on. As the band got tighter and heavier live, it made sense to capture this
urgency and this aggression – it wasn't a forced thing, it was very natural.”
In July 2023 – after Funeral For Justice had been completed – Niger’s democratically
elected government was deposed in a military coup. The president was placed under
house arrest and the nation plunged into a state of chaos and uncertainty. The French
have withdrawn. The area continues to be threatened by terrorism. The band – then on
tour in the US – was, for a time, unable to return to their families.
"I don't support the coup," explains Mdou, "but I never in my life liked France in my
country. I don't hate France or French people, I don't hate American people either, but I
don't support their manipulative policies, what they do in Africa. In 2023 we want to be
free, we need to smile, you understand?"

Event Venue

200 41st Street South Birmingham AL 35222, 200 41st St S, Birmingham, AL 35222-1963, United States,Birmingham, Alabama

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