First published in Songlines Magazine issue 197, May 2024.
Sahra Halgan
Hiddo Dhawr
Danaya Music (48 mins)
Sahra Halgan is a hero of Somaliland’s music. At home, in the unrecognised Somali state’s capital Hargeisa, she runs the Hiddo Dhawr (‘promoting culture’) club, the first live music venue since the country declared independence in 1991. Abroad, she is taking Somali music to new places, literally and metaphorically. Her fourth album, also Hiddo Dhawr, is her best so far.
Halgan’s vibrato-heavy voice brings forth songs that speak of love and politics – often simultaneously – wrapped in the proverbs and poetics for which Somalis are so famous. But while Halgan keeps everything rooted in the Somali heritage, her France-based band introduce widespread influences, most notably from the other side of the African continent. Maël Salètes’ guitar and Aymeric Krol’s percussion reflect the sounds of the Songhai and Tuareg of northern Mali. That connection of East and West – a surprising So-Mali-Land fusion – works really well, the two areas united across the Sahara by bluesy pentatonics and laid-back grooves. The quartet is completed by Régis Monte, whose keys consciously echo the classic-era Somali pop of the 70s and 80s, and add some devilishly funky basslines whenever appropriate.
In Hiddo Dhawr, Halgan and her group rollick through up-and-dance tunes and brood over romantic laments – a testament to Somaliland’s distinctive and flexible musical culture and its champion’s forward-thinking and ceaseless advocacy.
This blog is a compendium of my music writing throughout the years. I try to post updates about a month after first publication, but I'm often very behind - please bear with me!
Friday, 5 April 2024
Ann O’aro - Bleu
First published in Songlines Magazine issue 197, May 2024.
Ann O’aro
Bleu
Buda Musique (53 mins)
Ann O’aro’s voice is breathtaking, heartbreaking. Gentle, but with great power behind it that occasionally erupts in a shocking flash… Her music has been a revelation. An enigmatic mix of classical-inspired jazz, chanson and the maloya of her homeland, La Réunion – the latter often present only in the subtleties of the voice and the rhythms of the percussion, but sometimes taking whole songs in its swirl. There is a darkness in the beauty, with unsettling sonic atmospheres reflecting the songs’ disturbing topics. But it is beauty nonetheless.
Bleu is O’aro’s third album; her previous, 2020’s wonderful Longoz, was made with a sparse trio completed by Teddy Doris on trombone and Bino Waro on percussion. The sound is bigger now: O’aro adds piano for the first time, and the trio is expanded to a quartet with the ‘machines’ of Brice Nauroy, which include electronic sounds, effects, drones and elements of musique concrète. Overdubs create trombone choirs and interweaving vocal lines, but the group retains the intimacy of a chamber ensemble. Her accompanists are inspired, but it is the solo songs, with just O’aro and her piano, that are the most affective, the most touching. With Bleu, Ann O’aro continues to go from strength to strength.
Ann O’aro
Bleu
Buda Musique (53 mins)
Ann O’aro’s voice is breathtaking, heartbreaking. Gentle, but with great power behind it that occasionally erupts in a shocking flash… Her music has been a revelation. An enigmatic mix of classical-inspired jazz, chanson and the maloya of her homeland, La Réunion – the latter often present only in the subtleties of the voice and the rhythms of the percussion, but sometimes taking whole songs in its swirl. There is a darkness in the beauty, with unsettling sonic atmospheres reflecting the songs’ disturbing topics. But it is beauty nonetheless.
Bleu is O’aro’s third album; her previous, 2020’s wonderful Longoz, was made with a sparse trio completed by Teddy Doris on trombone and Bino Waro on percussion. The sound is bigger now: O’aro adds piano for the first time, and the trio is expanded to a quartet with the ‘machines’ of Brice Nauroy, which include electronic sounds, effects, drones and elements of musique concrète. Overdubs create trombone choirs and interweaving vocal lines, but the group retains the intimacy of a chamber ensemble. Her accompanists are inspired, but it is the solo songs, with just O’aro and her piano, that are the most affective, the most touching. With Bleu, Ann O’aro continues to go from strength to strength.
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