Tamino filled his small music room with newly subtle but frank songs and oud improvisations, all inquisitive reflections on his own good fortunes in life and love and his worries for the world. He amassed several dozen demos that way, all closer to his core and truer to his voice. When he finally sent the songs to his longtime producer, live engineer, and trusted friend PJ Maertens, it felt like a surrender, as he finally let someone into the vulnerable world of feeling and song he’d been building at home, alone.
Even as they expanded on those sounds in the studio, with the steadfast help of bona fide band member Greenwood on bass and Ruben Vanhoutte on drums, Tamino preserved the candor of those close quarters on Sahar’s 10 songs. Indeed, for 45 minutes, Sahar puts you in that room, letting you hear of the world just as Tamino has seen it these past few years. Arabic for “just before dawn,” Sahar is an endearing distillation of what Tamino has learned in the quiet of his home, a new beginning for a generational and borderless talent.
Indeed, there are several enormous moments on Sahar, instants when—with the help of Maertens and co-producer Jo Francken—Tamino brings the experience of entertaining thousands on several continents to bear. A study of all the things he loves about his partner that he doesn’t also see in himself, “Fascination” hinges on the tiniest domestic moment imaginable—watching television together and having very different reactions to the same scene. (In this case, a flamingo stuck in salt from during Our Planet.) But with its ascendant harmonies and booming drums, it is an explosive expression of admiration and gratitude, a love song of absolute awe.
For much of his still-young career, Tamino has often been seen as a next iteration of something that has come before—his iconic Egyptian grandfather, the golden-voiced Buckley, the pioneering Radiohead. Those are all flattering comparisons, no doubt, but they are all weighted by the pressure of history and precedent. Sahar is the moment Tamino seems to emerge fully as himself, to arrive at a dawn of his own doing.
Tamino knew years ago he needed some time for himself, to live and grow and be without considering the status of his sudden career. In these 10 remarkable songs, his development—as a songwriter, a singer, a thinker, a human—is reaffirming, all reminders of how much we can learn and become. Sahar documents Tamino’s personal awakening; for you, it can be a map.