With a euphonious tale and a black-and-white cover to boot, one would think J.S. Ondara stepped out of the 1960s.
The Kenyan-born Ondara may be 27, but his lyrics far transcend his generation and, indeed, the twenty-first century.
His lilting melody effuses images of Chicago nightclubs during its blues explosion or an open door somewhere in Greenwich Village. Ondara sings of the contradiction of the American dream with a knowledge so pronounced that he may as well have attended a Vietnam protest first-hand.
Released by Verve Records in 2019, his debut album “Tales of America” examines the present climate of the United States through the eyes of one who left for Minnesota to follow a dream.
Each song is beautifully written and saturated in evocative imagery, with two back-to-back melodies particularly standing out: “Torch Song” and “Saying Good in Goodbye”.
In one, Ondara says his heart is “never on time, always a little behind.” In the other, he sings “there goes my innocence.”
Yet, it’s “Somebody call the doctor, from the university / Somebody call upon the witch and the wizardry / Somebody call the rabbi, the pastor and the sheik ‘cause we are coming on the days of insanity” from aptly-titled “Days of Insanity” that displays Ondara’s full writing talents and the unifying theme of the album.
Likewise, “They call her Delilah / the Queen of Deceit / they call her the girl from the magazine” soon follows in the next song, “Television Girl”. In Christian history, Delilah is infamously known for betraying Samson by cutting off his strength-giving hair.
“In the water, in the fire, I’ll go wherever you go / in the valley, in the canyons, I’ll go wherever you go” he sings in “Lebanon”.
In ending ballad “God Bless America”, he speaks for those who are unable to speak for themselves: “Will you let me in, or are you at capacity / will you set me free, are you holding onto history / Will you be sincere, are you averse to honesty / Will you dare to hear those children marching on the street”.
The record is a compilation of poem after poem, culminating in a sound that is entirely his. It’s accompanied by a wonderful array of traditional folk instruments to back him.
And their main man grew up in a family unable to afford musical instruments of their own.
The album is also a tantalizing narration redolent of Bob Dylan.
It’s no surprise, therefore, that Ondara counts Dylan as one of his greatest inspirations. He confessed to Rolling Stone in February 2019 that he first learnt of Dylan following a losing bet with a friend.
According to the interview conducted by Erik Tanner, it was Ondara’s insistence in favorite band Guns N’ Roses fathering “Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door” that led him to discover the real artist behind the song: Bob Dylan.
He became infatuated, both with Dylan and American folk music. After achieving his green card, Ondara moved to Hibbing, Minn., simply because it was Dylan’s hometown.
“‘I had been thinking I’ll move to this place and I’ll form a band, and then I’ll take it on the road. But then I get to Minnesota, and it hits me very quickly that I don’t know anyone. Getting to America was impossible, but the path ahead of me, once I got there, felt even more impossible,’” he told Tanner.
Ondara’s passion began as “the weird guy listening to a bunch of rock songs” in a Nairobi Internet café, though his notebooks were full of lyrics and poems long before he stepped into the locale. His budding career, however, started during open mic nights in Minneapolis.
Ondara and Dylan share similar themes and style, particularly to Dylan’s “Blowin’ in the Wind” (as opposed to Ondara’s “gone with the wind,”) the lull of “Girl from the North Country” compared to Ondara’s “Television Girl” and, perhaps coincidentally, “Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door.” (The album seems a response to this ballad especially.) But Ondara’s voice is, of course, very different from Dylan’s heavy American accent.
He was discovered on YouTube by DJ Andrea Swensson, was courted by various labels and then began working on an album in a Los Angeles studio.
The result lays behind a record sleeve depicting a Romanesque painting.
Ondara concluded an autumn tour in the United Kingdom, France and Australia, mere months before the January 2020 announcement of a second (sophomore) album in the works!
Not bad for that “weird” kid in Nigeria and his fascination with American/British rock music.