Témé Tan, the musical alias of multi-instrumentalist and producer Tanguy Haesevoets, today unveiled the video for Menteur, the latest track to be taken from his self-titled debut album which was released in October on [PIAS] Recordings.
Talking about the video, Témé Tan said: “Welcome to my personal Soul Train episode! The song is about how I can’t cope with having to justify what I do, where I go, who I am with. “Menteur” (Liar) is also about how one can lead a double life. This is why I wanted to blur my identity in the film by asking my younger cousins to play my role. I remember a short clip with Serge Gainsbourg being interviewed about comic strips and young kids would reply instead of him. This surrealist bit stuck to me as I was visualising the scenario.”
Apart from that detail, the video is quite straightforward so I wanted to add a comical element to it. My good friend Carl Roosens agreed to play the role of an annoying reporter called Laurent Pieds-de-Lievre. As an upcoming artist I realised how we are sometimes reduced to a few anecdotes. Obviously, Mr Pieds-de-Lievre only wants to pigeonhole/caricature what I do. His questions are so far fetched that it ultimately makes me laugh instead of crying.
Travelling is in Témé Tan’s blood – born in the Democratic Republic of Congo, his family were constantly back and forth between Belgium and Kinshasa – something which is effortlessly reflected and at the heart of his debut long-player which is both ultra modern, reflecting the life of a man who can feel at home on four continents, and shot through with a deep respect for older traditions and identities.
He grew up surrounded by the zouk and rumba music of his Congolese relatives, but it was in Brussels, while at school, that he started to make music and where it became clear he was possessed of some serious determination, and an unquenchable thirst to learn. Though he’d never played any instruments before his first band, he taught himself guitar because he’d fallen in love with Brazilian bossanova and tropicalia – unique and complex sounds both – and started learning to tap out rhythms on an MPC sampler because he wasn’t hearing the beats that he wanted anywhere else.
During this period of experimentation, people would call his tracks ‘world music’, which he “felt very strange about.” He was always happy to consider himself African (“that’s where half of my origins are”) yet in Congo he was perceived as white and European, so there was no easy identity for him. But as he travelled the globe during his studies – Latin America including Brazil, Japan, where he got deeply into sophisticated Japanese electronic pop by artists like Cornelius and Tujiko Noriko – he would discover a musical identity more complex than even his origins might have suggested.
Yet it was the release of a new Konono n°1 on Crammed Discs that eventually tied all the musical threads together. “It spoke to me so much because of growing up in Congo, I was truly overwhelmed by that ‘Congotronic’ sound,” he explained. It was at this point that things came full circle, and all the influences from his world travels – whether 1990s rap on the Belgian radio, 1960s Brazilian grooves, 2000s Japanese experimentalism or modern bands like Animal Collective and cLOUDDEAD – connected to his very earliest musical memories, and he began to conceive of a clear voice and identity for himself among all of these sounds and strands. It was here that the name Témé Tan was first coined by his Japanese friends.
2017 proved to be hectic and hugely successful 12 months for Témé Tan; the summer saw him play a number of shows and festivals across the globe, including much talked about performances at the Eurosonic and Great Escape festivals and support slots with the likes of Milky Chance, Songhoy Blues, Ibeyi & Francois And The Atlas Mountains or M- LAMOMALI. Ça Va Pas La Tête was featured on the soundtrack to FIFA 18, Témé Tan was named album of the week by the great Gilles Peterson and he made a number of national TV appearances in both France, Belgium and Holland.
Listen to ‘Menteur’ HERE…
Watch the video here: