Tinariwen & Carlos Santana : Amassakoul | Exclusive & Complete
The studio version is a masterpiece of "Assouf" (the Tuareg blues)—a hypnotic blend of interlocking guitar lines that mimic the steady, swaying gait of a camel. It’s music born from exile and rebellion, carrying the weight of the desert's "sacred darkness". A Meeting of Guitar Mystics
This blog post explores the iconic intersection of Saharan "desert blues" and Latin-infused rock, centering on the legendary 2006 live collaboration between and Carlos Santana . Tinariwen & Carlos Santana : Amassakoul
In the vast, shifting sands of the Sahara, there is a sound that feels as old as the earth itself, yet as electric as a sudden lightning strike. It’s the sound of , the Tuareg "guitar poets" who traded their rifles for Gibson SGs to tell the story of their people. But in July 2006, at the Montreux Jazz Festival , this desert soul met its spiritual match in a man whose own guitar has long been a bridge between worlds: Carlos Santana . The studio version is a masterpiece of "Assouf"
The result was a performance of the track that didn't just cross borders—it dissolved them. The Soul of "Amassakoul" In the vast, shifting sands of the Sahara,