MDOU MOCTAR release Tears Of Injustice + Agadez Session | THE LABEL
Credit: Nelson Espinal

MDOU MOCTAR release Tears Of Injustice + Agadez Session

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5 mins read

Tears of Injustice is the acoustic version of Mdou Moctar’s Funeral for Justice. It is an evolution of the band’s critically-adored breakout – the meditative mirror-image to the blistering original.

The band has also shared a new live session, The Agadez Folders: Live at Mdou’s House. The 20-minute performance features three songs – ‘Takoba,’ ‘Modern Slaves,’ and ‘Funeral For Justice’ – filmed last year at the guitarist’s home in Niger. “This was one of the first sessions we recorded on that Agadez trip,” explains bassist / producer, Mikey Coltun. “We wanted it to feel relaxed and comfortable, so, as we all gathered, Mdou’s house felt like the perfect place to film acoustic renditions of the ‘Funeral For Justice’ songs. Much like any session we’ve filmed in Niger, friends would stop by and join in, often clapping along and singing.”

Praise for Mdou Moctar

“If Mdou Moctar’s terrific 2024 album Funeral for Justice was the electric sound of the furious political protest, Tears of Injustice is the mourning after” – Rolling Stone ****

“A call for solidarity among Indigenous people across Africa” – New York Times

“This primarily acoustic reimagining brings the artistry of the Niger-based quartet to the fore with aplomb.” – MOJO

 “Their songs work at a mournful whisper as well as they do in enraged, cathartic explosion” – Dusted

WATCH THE AGADEZ FOLDERS: LIVE AT MDOU’S HOUSE

 

Tears of Injustice owes its existence to a national catastrophe. In July of 2023, Mdou Moctar was on tour in the United States when the president of Niger was deposed in a coup. Moctar, Ahmoudou Madassane, and Souleymane Ibrahim unable to return home to their families. They decided to seize the opportunity to record a companion to Funeral for Justice, one that reflected the newer and graver circumstances at home. Two days after the tour wrapped, the quartet began tracking Tears of Injustice at Brooklyn’s Bunker Studio with engineer Seth Manchester.

They chose to track Tears sitting together in one room, keeping the session loose, stripped down, and spontaneous. After a month, the band was able to return home to Niger and, when they did, bassist and producer Mikey Coltun gave Madassane a Zoom recorder to take along. The rhythm guitarist used it to record a group of Tuaregs performing call-and-response vocals, which were later added into the final mix.

On Funeral for Justice, anger at the plight of Niger and the Tuareg people is plainly expressed in the music’s volume and velocity.

On Tears, the songs retain that weight sans amplification. They are steeped in sadness, conveying the grief of a nation locked into a constant churn of poverty, colonial exploitation, and political upheaval. It is Tuareg protest music in raw and essential form.

Praise for Funeral For Justice:

“Funeral for Justice” is, in many ways, an album of protest, of resistance, of displeasure, but it is not an album of giving up or giving in. Its thrilling sonic energy, propelled by rage, operates against defeat.” – The New Yorker

“Dazzling” – The Observer (*****)

“… an amps-on-11 polemical masterpiece that warrants worldwide respect” – MOJO (****)

 “… rock revolutionaries remain wildly exciting” – NME (****)

“A cri de coeur of screaming guitars and lyrics decrying the legacy of colonialism in Niger and throughout Africa” – New York Times

 “The proud sound of rebellion”  – Pitchfork (8.4 – Best New Music)

 “The band’s most forceful album yet, tailor-made to melt minds at massive festivals” – Rolling Stone (****)

“… use this record as a roadmap in discovering the previous odd-decade of Moctar’s talent”  – The Line Of Best Fit (9/10)

“… an irresistible set that will no doubt create a serious storm when these songs are revealed on stage” – The Arts Desk (****)

 “This is a band and artist working at their peak” – AllMusic (****½)

MDOU MOCTAR

TEARS OF INJUSTICE

OUT NOW via Matador

TRACKLIST

  1. Funeral for Justice (Injustice Version)
  2. Imouhar (Injustice Version)
  3. Takoba (Injustice Version)
  4. Sousoume Tamacheq (Injustice Version)
  5. Imajighen (Injustice Version)
  6. Tchinta (Injustice Version)
  7. Oh France (Injustice Version)
  8. Modern Slaves (Injustice Version)

 

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