The Tinariwen story begins amid the grim realities of guerilla warfare – a warfare that continues today, alas, driven by Ansar Dine’s deadly Islamist violence (like the Taliban, they’ve banned music and even kidnapped one of the band members, who was thankfully released soon afterwards). As a boy, founding member Ibrahim Ag Alhabib saw his father killed during a Tamashek uprising in Mali in 1963. By 1980, with Alhassane Ag Touhami (still a band member), they were playing weddings and parties, spent time in the refugee camps of Algeria and Libya, trained for rebel sorties under Colonel Gaddafi, started making cassettes (hand-distributed across the Sahara) and, after a 1991 peace accord, turned to music full-time.
Since The Radio Tisdas Sessions of 2001 brought them global attention, they have toured the…