But the fratricidal fighting that marks the end of the war forces her into exile, and it is France that grants her political asylum. What follows is a life familiar to millions of uprooted people in Europe: discreet integration from below, raising a family, hard work… 20 hard years that take her away from music.
Since 2013, Sahra Halgan has returned to her hometown of Hargeisa, the capital of Somaliland, to fulfil a long-held dream to help re-found her country: the creation of a place dedicated to live music and poetry, ‘Hiddo Dhawr’ (‘Preserve Culture’). This is the name the band has chosen for their new album.
The culmination of a long and close friendship, many travels and a quest for the essence of Somali music through a unique group sound, this third album places more than ever an age-old music at the heart of a modernity that is out of the ordinary, out of fashion and out of time. Traditional poetry from centuries past, songs of celebration and dance, love songs, political demands – Sahra’s voice deploys all its warmth, its ornaments, its irony or its seriousness, its mystery and its dignity, thus conveying the history of her people and its presence in the world, its tragedies and its joys.
In echo, stripped of all artifice, each instrument delivers all of its power in uncompromising simplicity: earthy, abrasive guitar riffs, solar drum grooves whose timbres combine tradition and modernity. Régis Monte, a newcomer to the band, enchants each track with acid bass, vintage organs and proto-electronic flights of fancy. ‘Hiddo Dhawr’ is the fruit of a sincere quest for authenticity and innovation, an unprecedented alliance between Somali song and original rock.
The album adds its inspiration to the most unexpected landscapes of the world music scene.
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