LAGNIAPPE RECORDS
311-B Jefferson St. Lafayette, LA 70501
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Tuareg Guitar Virtuoso Unplugged on Vinyl LP!
2024 Album Re-Recorded with Acoustic & Traditional Instruments!
If Funeral for Justice was the sound of outrage, Tears of Injustice is the sound of grief.
Tears of Injustice is a new recording of Mdou Moctar's 2024 album Funeral for Justice performed entirely on acoustic and traditional instruments. It is an evolution of the band's critically-adored breakout – the meditative mirror-image to the blistering original.
Sessions took place at Brooklyn's Bunker Studio in the summer of 2023 — booked as a way to make use of downtime while the band was briefly stranded in the United Sates in the wake of Niger's recent military coup.
"We wanted to make a separate version of Funeral for people to hear," explains the band's US-based bassist and producer, Mikey Coltun. "We're always playing around with arrangements at shows. We wanted to prove that we could do it on a record, too. And there's a whole other side of the band that comes out when we play a stripped down set. It becomes something new."
They chose to track Tears sitting together in one room, keeping the session loose, stripped down, and spontaneous. "We didn't really work on the arrangements prior to going in," recalls Coltun. "We'd just play, find the feel, and do the song." Things came together quickly, with principal recording wrapped in only two days. The hypnotic 8-minute take of "Imouhar" is actually two distinct passes through the song performed in quick succession – Moctar didn't stop playing long enough to split the takes apart. After a month, the band was able to return home to Niger and, when they did, 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.
"When Mdou writes the lyrics, he typically writes them with an acoustic guitar. So you're getting closer to that original moment," says Coltun. "It retains heaviness, but it's haunting."
STORE HOURS
OPEN: Wednesday thru Saturday
12 p.m. - 6 p.m.
NOPE: Sunday, Monday & Tuesday
Vinyl, Tapes, & Shit
*SEALED* Jacket still sealed in shrink original wrap; disc sold ungraded or "as is."
NM (Near Mint) Appears unplayed and will bear no marks, sleeve scuffs, or scratches.
EX+ (Excellent) May have one or two visible imperfections (i.e. sleeve scuffs, faint scratches, or other superficial marks) that will not affect playback.
VG+ (Very Good+) A few visible imperfections. These may include sleeve scuffs, light scratches, or other superficial marks.
VG (Very Good) Similar imperfections found on VG+ records but in slightly greater numbers. Records graded VG and above will typically not have any scratches that are deep enough to be felt with a fingernail.
VG- (Very Good-) A number of visible imperfections; the presence of a considerable number of light scratches will force a VG- grade, as will the presence of significant isolated defects such as scratches deep enough to be felt with a fingernail.
G (Good) Record can be played without skipping, but will have significant surface noise, scratches, and visible groove wear. G+ and G- are used to indicate stronger and weaker copies within this range.
*SW/DNAP* Slight warp, does not affect playback
*QUAD* Quadraphonic Sound, similar to today’s surround sound
All records are visually graded by our experienced staff, using a bright lamp and an Audio-Technica ATLP-120 turntable.