La fraternelle - concert: "TisDass
Saturday 19th July at 9pm
Maison du Peuple, Saint-Claude.
A leading band on the Tuareg blues-rock scene, whose powerful rhythms will take you back to the origins of their music.
TisDass is the band of singer-guitarist Moussa Kildjate Albadé. Based in Niamey, they hail from Tchintabaraden, the emblematic town of the Tamasheq kel of Niger. The group's name means 'Pillars' in the Tamasheq language, and refers to the pillars housing the traditional Berber tents. The name is a sign of the group's strong attachment to a culture that TisDass intends to defend and promote through the power of its music.
Growing up to the sounds of Tinariwen, Bob Marley and Dire Strait, to which his father listened, the desire to fight with words and guitars came after a traumatic experience. As a child, he saw his country's army slaughter part of his family, even though they were singing of the freedom of a people and the hope of better days for a thousand-year-old culture.
He realised that weapons only breed misfortune and, like the pioneers of Tuareg blues, he learnt to play the guitar and write songs to make peace and independence possible for his people.
Saturday 19th July at 9pm
Maison du Peuple, Saint-Claude.
A leading band on the Tuareg blues-rock scene, whose powerful rhythms will take you back to the origins of their music.
TisDass is the band of singer-guitarist Moussa Kildjate Albadé. Based in Niamey, they hail from Tchintabaraden, the emblematic town of the Tamasheq kel of Niger. The group's name means 'Pillars' in the Tamasheq language, and refers to the pillars housing the traditional Berber tents. The name is a sign of the group's strong attachment to a culture that TisDass intends to defend and promote through the power of its music.
Growing up to the sounds of Tinariwen, Bob Marley and Dire Strait, to which his father listened, the desire to fight with words and guitars came after a traumatic experience. As a child, he saw his country's army slaughter part of his family, even though they were singing of the freedom of a people and the hope of better days for a thousand-year-old culture.
He realised that weapons only breed misfortune and, like the pioneers of Tuareg blues, he learnt to play the guitar and write songs to make peace and independence possible for his people.
Prices
Min | Max | Information(s) complementaire(s) | |
---|---|---|---|
Basic rate | 10 € | - | |
Reduced rate | 5 € | - | student, minor, job application, disability |
Subscriber's rate | 8 € | - |