Album Reviews

Ondara Embodies the American Dream

Ondara | Folk & Roll Vol. 1: Tales of Isolation ย | (Verve Forecast)
Four out of Five Starsย 

Itโ€™s one thing to aspire to the American dream. Countless immigrants have risked their lives and fortunes to share in the American ideal and embrace what the Declaration of Independence called a more perfect union. Granted, there have been divides and difficulty along the way, but the premise still holds, an ideal thatโ€™s encouraged millions of people from across the globe world to pursue that promise for themselves and their descendants. 

Videos by American Songwriter

Ondara is one example of an individual who made it his mission to come to this country and find success by following a musical mantra. A native of Kenya, he grew up wholly infatuated by a broad array of iconic musical heroes, from Bob Dylan, Jeff Buckley and Death Cab For Cutie, to Radiohead, Nirvana, Pearl Jam, and Guns Nโ€™ Roses. Dylan was a particularly strong influence, one reason Ondara chose to settle in Minneapolis, the birthplace of the Bobster and the environment where he first established his own musical identity. Once there, Odara taught himself to play guitar and proceeded to practice his craft at local open mic nights. Although his original intention was to study music therapy, he eventually abandoned that idea in order to perform full-time.

His first significant public exposure came when Minneapolis radio stationย  KCMP happened to pick up on one of his YouTube videos and give it heavy exposure on its airwaves. And much like the proverbial saga of overnight success, he was discovered by Verve Forecast and promptly offered a recording contract. Ondara reportedly had over 100 songs written for his first album, but the eleven tracks that were selected for it eventually morphed into his critically acclaimed debut, 2018โ€™s descriptively dubbed Tales of America. It was a remarkably emotive and expressive effort, one that relayed an autobiographical tale of an immigrantโ€™s adjustment to his new country and all he came to realize through his dedication and determination.

Indeed, whatever dreams he had fully came to fruition when the album, produced by Mike Viola of the Candy Butchers, was greeted with immediate critical acclaim. It climbed the heights of Billboardโ€™s Emerging Artist charts and, in turn, its Heatseekers, Americana and Album charts as well. The favorable notice eventually resulted in his nomination for Best Emerging Artist at the 2019 Americana Music Honors & Awards ceremonies. It also led to him acquiring opening slots on tours by Neil Young, the Milk Carton Kids and Lindsey Buckingham, among the many. 

While the outside observer may marvel at the way Ondara accumulated those kudos in such a seemingly short time, Ondara himself says it wasnโ€™t as instant as it may seem. โ€œIt feels like itโ€™s taken a lot of time,โ€ he demures.

That said, heโ€™s still proving his proficiency. He recently recorded a new album, tellingly titled Folk Nโ€™ Roll Vol 1: Takes of Isolation, which, like its predecessor, offers a timely commentary on real life circumstances. Recorded spontaneously at the home of a friend with whom heโ€™s been living, its music is stripped down to bare essentials โ€” vocals, guitar, harmonica, and in the case of one song, the oddly descriptive โ€œShower Song,โ€ simply handclaps. Not surprisingly, itโ€™s a stark but sensitive rumination about life in a time where the so-called โ€œnew normalโ€ reigns, when seclusion and social distancing force both physical and mental disconnection. The titles tell it all โ€” โ€œLockdown on Date Night,โ€ โ€œFrom Six Feet Awayโ€ and โ€œIsolation Depression Syndromeโ€ (one of three songs that have the word โ€œIsolationโ€ in the title) โ€” but itโ€™s Ondaraโ€™s   haunting and harrowing delivery, particularly on the riveting โ€œPulled Out of the Market,โ€ the nagging โ€œIsolation Bluesโ€ and the decidedly Dylanesque โ€œMr. Landlord,โ€ that find a common bond between tone and tenacity.  

โ€œIt just evolved over a couple of weeks,โ€ Ondara says of the albumโ€™s evolution. โ€œI found myself in this mental rut because of the isolation. I woke up one morning and basically started vomiting songs compulsively for three days. Thatโ€™s really how it felt. I didnโ€™t have any control over what was coming out. I wasnโ€™t trying to make a record, but just trying to get through the situation.โ€

He says his advisors โ€” โ€œhis team,โ€ as he refers to them โ€”encouraged him to turn his songs into an album. โ€œIt was one of the quickest turnarounds ever,โ€ he suggests. The album was released digitally on May 29, with a physical release scheduled for the fall. So too, why the title ,entions Vol. 1, Ondara hasnโ€™t committed to a Vol. 2.

โ€œPerhaps, perhaps,โ€ he concedes. โ€œI named it Folk Nโ€™ Roll because the concept came to me so fast. How it sounded very demo-like and intimate. A second volume may become something different.โ€


Whether that follow-up materializes or not, it does boast the distinction of being the first full album to address the full effect of the pandemic in personal and plaintive terms. 

For all his notoriety, Ondara still doesnโ€™t take his success in stride.

โ€œI think about it all the time,โ€ he concedes. โ€œWhen I actually sit back and think about how astounding it all is, and think about where I was a few years ago back home in Nairobi and now living in Minnesota and being on tour with Neil Young, thinking about that is extremely overwhelming. So I try not to think about it. I donโ€™t know if thatโ€™s good or bad, but itโ€™s just my way of trying to cope with it.โ€

Photo credit: Ian Flomer