Ali Farka Touré & Touami Diabete - In The Hart Of The Moon 2005 (REPOST)
Blues
Winner - 48th Grammy® Awards (Feb 8, 2006),Best Traditional World Music Album.
In the Heart of the Moon is a duet recording by Malian guitar slinger Ali Farka Toure and Mandé lineage griot Toumani Diabate on kora. There are a few other players who contribute percussion here and there, and Ry Cooder plays a Kawai piano on a couple of tracks and a Ripley guitar on one, but other than these cats, this is a live duo set without edits or enhancements of any kind. There were three sessions in the conference room of the Mande Hotel in Mali, the first of which was on the eve of Farka Toure being elected mayor of his town, Niafunké. Most of the music here dates back to the Jurana Kura (translated as new era) cultural movement, which was part of the independence struggle in the 1950s and early '60s. The music created by the Jurana Kura for the guitar created a entirely new style of rhythmic fingerpicking. For those familiar with Farka Toure's blazing lead style, this disc may come as a shock. While he does solo many times here, he is also playing in balance with Diabate, whose kora has the larger lyric and harmonic palette, so he is in a supporting role. It doesn't matter. Whether the song is "Kaira" (written and performed by Diabate's father in the '50s and the earliest recorded track on the album, from before the Mande sessions), "Ai Ga Bani (I Love You)" and "Soumbou Ya Ya" (both written for young people during the Jurana Kura), or one of Farka Toure's originals near the end of the set, such as "Gomni," the style is the same. Everything echoes this earlier era because it has informed all Malian and Guinean music since. The purpose was to make people aware not only of its existence but to inspire and exhort. The music is insistent but not strident. It contains a gentleness and tenderness that seem to drip from the region, one of the poorest in the world. The players' focus and intensity are captured, but they make it all come off so easily that the listener gets lost in the pleasure of these gorgeous melodies and the call-and-response style of interaction between the players. Simply put, In the Heart of the Moon is nothing short of remarkable, and one of the best offerings World Circuit/Nonesuch have ever released.
By Thom Jurek. AMG.
**
Sekou Kanté- Guitar (Bass)
James Thompson- Shaker
Lekan Babalola- Percussion
Joachim Cooder- Percussion
Orlando "Cachaito" Lopez- Bass
Ali Farka Touré- Guitar, Arranger, Liner Notes, Vocals
Ry Cooder- Guitar, Kawai, Piano
**
01 Debe
02.Kala
03.Mamadou Boutiquier
04.Monsieur Le Maire De Niafunke
05.Kaira
06.Simbo
07.Ai Ga Bani
08.Soumbou Ya Ya
09.Naweye Toro
10.Kadi Kadi
11.Gomni
12.Hawa Dolo
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Showing posts with label Ali Farka Touré. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ali Farka Touré. Show all posts
Friday, November 6, 2009
Thursday, October 29, 2009
Ali Farka Touré - The Source 1992
Ali Farka Touré - The Source 1992
Blues
The most well-known African guitarist in history, Ali Farka Toure enthralled fans around the world with his deep-rooted, bluesy music. He played both acoustic and electric guitars (including a guitar with a speaker and pick-up that ran on batteries) as well as a shrill one-string violin, and was usually accompanied by a percussionist playing a calabash gourd with sticks. He made his initial mark in Mali's capital, Bamako, and later in Paris as a virtuoso guitarist and singer of traditionally inspired songs. His first performance in London in the late 1980s convinced musicologists that they had discovered the roots of the blues; however upon further inquiry, he cited John Lee Hooker as an influence. However, while his deep, nasal-toned voice and blues-like riffs remind one of the Mississippi Delta, the spirit of his music goes back centuries to ancient Malian folklore. He went on to record with the Chieftains, Taj Mahal and Ry Cooder, while his landmark 1994 collaboration with Cooder, Talking Timbuktu, spent a record eight months atop Billboard's world music charts. In 2005 he recorded his final two albums, one of which, his collaboration with Toumani Diabate,
just before Toure succumbed to bone cancer at the age of 67.
By Robert Leaver.
**
The source of the Niger River? The source of the blues? Ali Farka Toure is one of the great African guitarists, one who has experimented in the most subtle of ways, seeking inspiration but never creating fusions with other popular music styles. The Source is more roots and less fronds than his Ry Cooder recording Talking Timbuktu; this earlier recording did find him working with Taj Mahal and harmonica player Rory McLeod, but mostly this is a recording with his amazing band, calabash players Amadou Sisse and Hamma Sankare and conga player Oumar Toure, plus a chorus of singers.
The emphasis is on the guitar of Toure and the source of the music, the soil of Mali itself.
By Louis Gibson.
**
01.Goye Kur 6.23
02.Inchana Massina 5.12
03.Roucky 8.16
04.Dofana 7.31
05.Karaw 6.27
06.Hawa Dolo 5.46
07.Cinquante Six 5.31
08.I Go Ka 4.04
09.Yenna 5.54
10.Mahini Me 5.25
**
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Blues
The most well-known African guitarist in history, Ali Farka Toure enthralled fans around the world with his deep-rooted, bluesy music. He played both acoustic and electric guitars (including a guitar with a speaker and pick-up that ran on batteries) as well as a shrill one-string violin, and was usually accompanied by a percussionist playing a calabash gourd with sticks. He made his initial mark in Mali's capital, Bamako, and later in Paris as a virtuoso guitarist and singer of traditionally inspired songs. His first performance in London in the late 1980s convinced musicologists that they had discovered the roots of the blues; however upon further inquiry, he cited John Lee Hooker as an influence. However, while his deep, nasal-toned voice and blues-like riffs remind one of the Mississippi Delta, the spirit of his music goes back centuries to ancient Malian folklore. He went on to record with the Chieftains, Taj Mahal and Ry Cooder, while his landmark 1994 collaboration with Cooder, Talking Timbuktu, spent a record eight months atop Billboard's world music charts. In 2005 he recorded his final two albums, one of which, his collaboration with Toumani Diabate,
just before Toure succumbed to bone cancer at the age of 67.
By Robert Leaver.
**
The source of the Niger River? The source of the blues? Ali Farka Toure is one of the great African guitarists, one who has experimented in the most subtle of ways, seeking inspiration but never creating fusions with other popular music styles. The Source is more roots and less fronds than his Ry Cooder recording Talking Timbuktu; this earlier recording did find him working with Taj Mahal and harmonica player Rory McLeod, but mostly this is a recording with his amazing band, calabash players Amadou Sisse and Hamma Sankare and conga player Oumar Toure, plus a chorus of singers.
The emphasis is on the guitar of Toure and the source of the music, the soil of Mali itself.
By Louis Gibson.
**
01.Goye Kur 6.23
02.Inchana Massina 5.12
03.Roucky 8.16
04.Dofana 7.31
05.Karaw 6.27
06.Hawa Dolo 5.46
07.Cinquante Six 5.31
08.I Go Ka 4.04
09.Yenna 5.54
10.Mahini Me 5.25
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Monday, October 5, 2009
Ali Farka Touré - Niafunke 1999
Ali Farka Touré - Niafunke 1999
Label: Hannibal
Blues
NIAFUNKE was nominated for the 2000 Grammy Award for Best World Music Album.
Ali Farka Toure is a guitarist from Mali whose style draws almost equally upon the folk music of his homeland and American blues, particularly the dark and minimal repetitive-trance style of John Lee Hooker and acoustic country blues guitarists such as Mississippi John Hurt. In the past, his (uniformly fine) albums have featured guest shots and collaborations with Ry Cooder and members of the Irish trad-folk group the Chieftans, but here it's back to the roots.
Recorded in a Toure's home village in Mali, with a small group of singers and players, NIAFUNKE is delightfully low-key and captivating. Beautifully picked acoustic guitar combines with shimmering electric guitar percussion, voices, and violin to weave the spacious, circular melodies that explore the common ground shared by the blues and African folk music. "Tulumba" glimmers like a desert mirage, and "Pieter Botha" sounds like a Delta blues tune played by a wandering musician while traveling through Spain and England in the Middle Ages.
From CD Universe.
**
Ali Farka Toure's first album since his 1994 collaboration with Ry Cooder, Talking Timbuktu, makes a convincing argument for the adage that home is where the art is. Recorded in an abandoned brick edifice located between Toure's extensive rice fields and the Sahara-bordering village of Niafunké, Mali, this is the guitarist's most purely African album yet. Local percussionists, a sensuous village chorus, and a lonely one-stringed njarka violin accompany Toure here, replacing the Western guests who've tended to stilt his prior records. More relaxed and less gratuitously ornamental than before (especially when he plays acoustically), Toure digs deeply into spare, loping pentatonic grooves that extend beyond the usual John Lee Hooker blues comparisons into territory older, richer, and more folkloric (and Islamic) than earlier records have approached.
By Richard Gehr.
**
Ali Ibrahim “Farka” Touré (October 31, 1939 – March 6, 2006) was a Malian singer and guitarist, and one of the African continent’s most internationally renowned musicians. His music is widely regarded as representing a point of intersection of traditional Malian music and its North American cousin, the blues. The belief that the latter is historically derived from the former is reflected in Martin Scorsese’s often quoted characterization of Touré’s tradition as constituting "the DNA of the blues". Touré was ranked number 76 on Rolling Stone's list of "The 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time."
**
Ali Farka Toure's "Niafunke" is one great album, showcasing the West African approach to the guitar, and proving that Toure is getting better with each passing year. It was genius to avoid the homogenization of "world" music by recording this CD in Mali, near home, with local musicians. The music can be described as a sort of "Sahara blues", a mix of North and West African traditional music and American blues, but there's much more to it than that. Play this CD, be taken away by it, listen to the voices and instruments (African drums and strings), and you'll agree with Toure, who says that "Timbuktu [is] right at the heart of the world."
By Ed Gibbon.
**
Ali Farke Toure- (Vocals, Acoustic & Electric Guitars, Njarka Violin, Percussion);
Affel Bocoum- (Vocals, Acoustic Guitar);
Voro Cisse- (Njurkle traditional Guitar);
Guidado Diallo- (Njarka Violin);
Oumar Toure- (Congas, background Vocals);
Hammer Sankare- (Calabash, Background Vocals);
Souleye Kane- (Djembe);
Djeneba Doukoure, Fatoumata Traore, Hamidou Sare- (Background Vocals).
**
01. Ali's Here
02. Allah Uya
03. Mali Dje
04. Saukare
05. Hilly Yoro
06. Tulumba
07. Instrumental
08. ASCO
09. Jangali Famata
10. Howkouna
11. Cousins
12. Pieter Botha
**
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Label: Hannibal
Blues
NIAFUNKE was nominated for the 2000 Grammy Award for Best World Music Album.
Ali Farka Toure is a guitarist from Mali whose style draws almost equally upon the folk music of his homeland and American blues, particularly the dark and minimal repetitive-trance style of John Lee Hooker and acoustic country blues guitarists such as Mississippi John Hurt. In the past, his (uniformly fine) albums have featured guest shots and collaborations with Ry Cooder and members of the Irish trad-folk group the Chieftans, but here it's back to the roots.
Recorded in a Toure's home village in Mali, with a small group of singers and players, NIAFUNKE is delightfully low-key and captivating. Beautifully picked acoustic guitar combines with shimmering electric guitar percussion, voices, and violin to weave the spacious, circular melodies that explore the common ground shared by the blues and African folk music. "Tulumba" glimmers like a desert mirage, and "Pieter Botha" sounds like a Delta blues tune played by a wandering musician while traveling through Spain and England in the Middle Ages.
From CD Universe.
**
Ali Farka Toure's first album since his 1994 collaboration with Ry Cooder, Talking Timbuktu, makes a convincing argument for the adage that home is where the art is. Recorded in an abandoned brick edifice located between Toure's extensive rice fields and the Sahara-bordering village of Niafunké, Mali, this is the guitarist's most purely African album yet. Local percussionists, a sensuous village chorus, and a lonely one-stringed njarka violin accompany Toure here, replacing the Western guests who've tended to stilt his prior records. More relaxed and less gratuitously ornamental than before (especially when he plays acoustically), Toure digs deeply into spare, loping pentatonic grooves that extend beyond the usual John Lee Hooker blues comparisons into territory older, richer, and more folkloric (and Islamic) than earlier records have approached.
By Richard Gehr.
**
Ali Ibrahim “Farka” Touré (October 31, 1939 – March 6, 2006) was a Malian singer and guitarist, and one of the African continent’s most internationally renowned musicians. His music is widely regarded as representing a point of intersection of traditional Malian music and its North American cousin, the blues. The belief that the latter is historically derived from the former is reflected in Martin Scorsese’s often quoted characterization of Touré’s tradition as constituting "the DNA of the blues". Touré was ranked number 76 on Rolling Stone's list of "The 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time."
**
Ali Farka Toure's "Niafunke" is one great album, showcasing the West African approach to the guitar, and proving that Toure is getting better with each passing year. It was genius to avoid the homogenization of "world" music by recording this CD in Mali, near home, with local musicians. The music can be described as a sort of "Sahara blues", a mix of North and West African traditional music and American blues, but there's much more to it than that. Play this CD, be taken away by it, listen to the voices and instruments (African drums and strings), and you'll agree with Toure, who says that "Timbuktu [is] right at the heart of the world."
By Ed Gibbon.
**
Ali Farke Toure- (Vocals, Acoustic & Electric Guitars, Njarka Violin, Percussion);
Affel Bocoum- (Vocals, Acoustic Guitar);
Voro Cisse- (Njurkle traditional Guitar);
Guidado Diallo- (Njarka Violin);
Oumar Toure- (Congas, background Vocals);
Hammer Sankare- (Calabash, Background Vocals);
Souleye Kane- (Djembe);
Djeneba Doukoure, Fatoumata Traore, Hamidou Sare- (Background Vocals).
**
01. Ali's Here
02. Allah Uya
03. Mali Dje
04. Saukare
05. Hilly Yoro
06. Tulumba
07. Instrumental
08. ASCO
09. Jangali Famata
10. Howkouna
11. Cousins
12. Pieter Botha
**
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Ali Farka TOURÉ - The River 1990
Ali Farka TOURÉ - The River 1990
Label:World Circuit
Blues
Ali Farka Toure was born in 1949 in Niafounke into a North Malian noble family who trace their roots back to the Spanish Moors who first crossed the Sahara to control the salt and gold trade. In 1956, after a chance meeting with the director of Guinea's National Ballet, Keita Fodeba, Toure made the decision to learn the guitar.
It was a prescient choice as today Toure is known as the Bluesman of Africa because of his highly distinctive blues style that's a cross-mix of the Arabic-influenced Malian sound with American blues reminicent of bluesmen such as John Lee Hooker, Lightnin' Hopkins, and Big Joe Williams. He most commonly tours with his brother on calabash, and cousin on congas
From The African Music Encyclopedia.
**
Many commentators have noted how Touré plays in a style uncannily close to the original Delta blues of Robert Johnson and his successors. This coincidence, picked up on by British world music critics and broadcasters in the late 80s, gave him a flush of popularity in Europe and the USA. His first tour to the UK in 1987 was followed by return visits in the following two years. Linking with World Circuit Records, Touré issued two acclaimed early 90s albums, The River and The Source. The first featured musicians such as Rory McLeod, Steve Williamson, Séan Keane and Kevin Conneff of the Chieftains. The second was an even better selection, boasting the services of Taj Mahal, Nana Tsiboe
and Nitin Sawhney.
From NME.
**
Ali Farka Touré- (Vocals; Electric Guitar; Acoustic Guitar; N'jarka)
Amadou Cisse- (Calabash; Percussion; Vocals)
Mamaye Kouyate- (N'goni 3,7)
Rory McLeod- (Harmonica 4)
Seane Keane- (Fiddle 2; Bodhran 2)
Kevin Conneff- (Fiddle 2;Bodhran 2)
**
01. Ai Bine 6:17
02. Kenouna 4:58
03. Toungere 7:28
04. Heygana (Touré) 5:55
05. Jungou 7:21
06. Goydiotodam 6:22
07. Lobo 6:40
08. Tamala 8:03
09. Boyrei 5:18
10. Tangambara 5:18
11. Instrumental 2:58
**
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Label:World Circuit
Blues
Ali Farka Toure was born in 1949 in Niafounke into a North Malian noble family who trace their roots back to the Spanish Moors who first crossed the Sahara to control the salt and gold trade. In 1956, after a chance meeting with the director of Guinea's National Ballet, Keita Fodeba, Toure made the decision to learn the guitar.
It was a prescient choice as today Toure is known as the Bluesman of Africa because of his highly distinctive blues style that's a cross-mix of the Arabic-influenced Malian sound with American blues reminicent of bluesmen such as John Lee Hooker, Lightnin' Hopkins, and Big Joe Williams. He most commonly tours with his brother on calabash, and cousin on congas
From The African Music Encyclopedia.
**
Many commentators have noted how Touré plays in a style uncannily close to the original Delta blues of Robert Johnson and his successors. This coincidence, picked up on by British world music critics and broadcasters in the late 80s, gave him a flush of popularity in Europe and the USA. His first tour to the UK in 1987 was followed by return visits in the following two years. Linking with World Circuit Records, Touré issued two acclaimed early 90s albums, The River and The Source. The first featured musicians such as Rory McLeod, Steve Williamson, Séan Keane and Kevin Conneff of the Chieftains. The second was an even better selection, boasting the services of Taj Mahal, Nana Tsiboe
and Nitin Sawhney.
From NME.
**
Ali Farka Touré- (Vocals; Electric Guitar; Acoustic Guitar; N'jarka)
Amadou Cisse- (Calabash; Percussion; Vocals)
Mamaye Kouyate- (N'goni 3,7)
Rory McLeod- (Harmonica 4)
Seane Keane- (Fiddle 2; Bodhran 2)
Kevin Conneff- (Fiddle 2;Bodhran 2)
**
01. Ai Bine 6:17
02. Kenouna 4:58
03. Toungere 7:28
04. Heygana (Touré) 5:55
05. Jungou 7:21
06. Goydiotodam 6:22
07. Lobo 6:40
08. Tamala 8:03
09. Boyrei 5:18
10. Tangambara 5:18
11. Instrumental 2:58
**
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Ali Farka Touré - Savane 2006
Ali Farka Touré - Savane 2006
Label: World Circuit / Nonesuch
Blues
Savane, the great African guitarist and bluesman Ali Farka Touré's final solo studio album, was recorded in his native Mali toward the end of his life, when the artist knew his days were numbered. He spent his last years in his home village of Niafunké, concentrating on farming and family matters, jamming with local musicians of an evening. This impassioned, roots-drenched, mostly acoustic valedictory finds the Maestro's stalking rhythms and high-noon-at-the-crossroads, dusty desert-to-delta vocals in no less than life-summing form. "Soya" (track 5) seems to stand still in a million directions, while "Hanana Soko" (track 9) features a searing njarka fiddle spinning delirious circles around its throaty accompanying percussion. Pee Wee Ellis (sax) and Little George Sueref (harmonica) each manage to make strong impressions while adhering to the groove at hand. Afel Boucoum, a talented younger musician who has been mentioned as Touré's most likely successor (as if such a thing were possible!), graces "Njarou," the last tune. The other players are also at the top of their game, as fluttering ngoni (a West African spike lute) riffs weave in and out and airy female vocals float like a breeze off the river Niger. There are reports that Touré senior sat in on his son's upcoming album and scads of archival material will undoubtedly materialize. But his unsentimental, voluptuously masculine, spirit-guided magic is captured at its best, for all time, in this magnificent farewell.
By Christina Roden.
**
One immediate response, when presented with these two albums—the first posthumous release by the extraordinary Malian guitarist and singer Ali Farka Toure, and the first ever release by his son, Vieux Farka Toure—might be to see in the albums the passing of the "desert blues" flame from one generation to the next. In a sense, of course, that is indeed what Savane and Vieux Farka Toure represent, for the transmission of tradition from father to son is established practice amongst West African musicians—and Ali duly anoints his son's debut with two cameo appearances, one of which is amongst the album's highlights.
But such a perspective would be an oversimplification. While Vieux is demonstrably well versed in his father's music, what we are actually hearing is the emergence of a rather different aesthetic, one that seeks to include music from beyond Africa—notably reggae, rock and funk—at its core. Just how successful Vieux will be in this endeavour remains to be seen. He will need to harness not only invention but also strength of character, for many of his father's fans will be hoping for a more or less unbroken continuation of Ali's style, and the pressures on young Vieux to deliver will be considerable. One thinks of Ravi Coltrane, Femi Kuti and Jeff Buckley, for instance.
There is, however, already much to enjoy in Vieux's tentative first steps towards singularity. The majestic Savane, meanwhile, is indisputably his father's late-period masterpiece...
Although enthusiastically embraced by world music fans since the late 1980s, first as a shape-shifting Delta blues guitarist—for the resonances with Robert Johnson and John Lee Hooker were indeed spookily powerful—and later as a stylist in his own right, Ali's attitude towards Western acceptance was always ambivalent. On the very cusp of major international breakthrough, following the release of collaborations with Taj Mahal (The Source, World Circuit, 1993) and Ry Cooder (Talking Timbuktu, World Circuit, 1994), Toure seemed deliberately to shoot his chances of international stardom in the foot—by retiring from the recording studio for almost five years, before returning with the profoundly Mali-centric album Niafunke (World Circuit) in 1999. All he seemed to want from the West were sufficient funds to acquire some high-grade recording equipment and improve the quality of life in Niafunke, his home village. Once he had them, his career priority became managing their effective expenditure on the ground.
So to hail the intensely traditional Savane as a return to the roots, as some have done, is nonsensical, for Ali never left them. From his earliest albums, made in the mid 1970s and featuring just voice, acoustic guitar and ngoni (Malian lute), through the Mahal and Cooder projects and on to Savane, Toure played in exactly the same way. His adoption of electric guitar was to enable a sonically enriched reading of traditional ngoni music, not a conscious attempt at overseas breakthrough. Toure's music got deeper and better over the years, but it never fundamentally changed.
Savane is, however, his most perfectly realised celebration of Malian deep roots music. Sung almost exclusively in regional languages, at its core are Toure's rough diamond guitar and the throbbingly percussive ngonis of Mama Sissoko and Bassekou Kouyate. Everything else, and there's plenty of magic going on in the percussion section, is supporting cast, except perhaps Ali's voice. The rolling, tumbling riffs that the three players create together, and the solo variations they take turns contributing—Sissoko on bass ngoni, Kouyate on alto—are at the heart of practically every piece. Fanga Diawara's abrasive njarka violin adds to the atmosphere on three tracks.
Guest appearances from the London-based harmonica player Little George Sueref and tenor saxophonist Pee Wee Ellis, who are each briefly featured on three tunes, probably at the suggestion of producer Nick Gold, are enjoyable, but decorative features only. Ellis' playing is nicely sensitive to the setting, while Sueref tends to charge ahead in a generic, Little Walter-ish fashion.
Savane almost certainly won't be Ali Farka Toure's last album—other sessions are in the can for future release—but it may well prove to be his most enduring.
By Chris May.
**
Toure recorded Savane in the Malian capital of Bamako, as part of a three-disc project dubbed the Hotel Mande Sessions, after the studio in which the albums were cut. Savane is the last, perhaps most eloquent, installment. In concept and execution, the sessions recall teh magical combination of spontaneity and virtuosity that marked the debut releases from the Buena Vista Social Club. Toure offers reverberating, incantatory vocals to accompany his lean, hypnotically repetitive guitar lines.
**
Ali Farka Toure- Guitar, vocals, Bass Drum, Bongos, Percussion;
Mama Sissoko, Dassy Sarre, Bassekou Kouyate- Ngoni;
Fanga Diawara- Njarka;
Little George Sueref- Harmonica;
Pee Wee Ellis- Tenor Sax;
Yves Wernert, Etienne Mbappe, Sonny- Bass;
Massambou Wele Diallo- Bolon;
Fain Duenas- Percussion;
Alou Coulibaly- Water Calabash;
Ali Magassa- Guitar, Backing Vocals;
Souleye Kane- Calabash, Backing Vocals;
Oumar Toure- Congas, Backing vocals;
Hammer Sankare, Ali Magassa, Afel Bocoum, Brehima Toure, Ramata Diakite- Backing Vocals.
**
01.Erdi
02.Inchana Massina
03.Beto
04.Savane
05.Soya
06.Penda Yoro
07.Machengoidi
08.Ledi Coumbe
09.Hanana
10.Soko Yhinka
11.Gambari Didi
13.N'Jarou
**
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Label: World Circuit / Nonesuch
Blues
Savane, the great African guitarist and bluesman Ali Farka Touré's final solo studio album, was recorded in his native Mali toward the end of his life, when the artist knew his days were numbered. He spent his last years in his home village of Niafunké, concentrating on farming and family matters, jamming with local musicians of an evening. This impassioned, roots-drenched, mostly acoustic valedictory finds the Maestro's stalking rhythms and high-noon-at-the-crossroads, dusty desert-to-delta vocals in no less than life-summing form. "Soya" (track 5) seems to stand still in a million directions, while "Hanana Soko" (track 9) features a searing njarka fiddle spinning delirious circles around its throaty accompanying percussion. Pee Wee Ellis (sax) and Little George Sueref (harmonica) each manage to make strong impressions while adhering to the groove at hand. Afel Boucoum, a talented younger musician who has been mentioned as Touré's most likely successor (as if such a thing were possible!), graces "Njarou," the last tune. The other players are also at the top of their game, as fluttering ngoni (a West African spike lute) riffs weave in and out and airy female vocals float like a breeze off the river Niger. There are reports that Touré senior sat in on his son's upcoming album and scads of archival material will undoubtedly materialize. But his unsentimental, voluptuously masculine, spirit-guided magic is captured at its best, for all time, in this magnificent farewell.
By Christina Roden.
**
One immediate response, when presented with these two albums—the first posthumous release by the extraordinary Malian guitarist and singer Ali Farka Toure, and the first ever release by his son, Vieux Farka Toure—might be to see in the albums the passing of the "desert blues" flame from one generation to the next. In a sense, of course, that is indeed what Savane and Vieux Farka Toure represent, for the transmission of tradition from father to son is established practice amongst West African musicians—and Ali duly anoints his son's debut with two cameo appearances, one of which is amongst the album's highlights.
But such a perspective would be an oversimplification. While Vieux is demonstrably well versed in his father's music, what we are actually hearing is the emergence of a rather different aesthetic, one that seeks to include music from beyond Africa—notably reggae, rock and funk—at its core. Just how successful Vieux will be in this endeavour remains to be seen. He will need to harness not only invention but also strength of character, for many of his father's fans will be hoping for a more or less unbroken continuation of Ali's style, and the pressures on young Vieux to deliver will be considerable. One thinks of Ravi Coltrane, Femi Kuti and Jeff Buckley, for instance.
There is, however, already much to enjoy in Vieux's tentative first steps towards singularity. The majestic Savane, meanwhile, is indisputably his father's late-period masterpiece...
Although enthusiastically embraced by world music fans since the late 1980s, first as a shape-shifting Delta blues guitarist—for the resonances with Robert Johnson and John Lee Hooker were indeed spookily powerful—and later as a stylist in his own right, Ali's attitude towards Western acceptance was always ambivalent. On the very cusp of major international breakthrough, following the release of collaborations with Taj Mahal (The Source, World Circuit, 1993) and Ry Cooder (Talking Timbuktu, World Circuit, 1994), Toure seemed deliberately to shoot his chances of international stardom in the foot—by retiring from the recording studio for almost five years, before returning with the profoundly Mali-centric album Niafunke (World Circuit) in 1999. All he seemed to want from the West were sufficient funds to acquire some high-grade recording equipment and improve the quality of life in Niafunke, his home village. Once he had them, his career priority became managing their effective expenditure on the ground.
So to hail the intensely traditional Savane as a return to the roots, as some have done, is nonsensical, for Ali never left them. From his earliest albums, made in the mid 1970s and featuring just voice, acoustic guitar and ngoni (Malian lute), through the Mahal and Cooder projects and on to Savane, Toure played in exactly the same way. His adoption of electric guitar was to enable a sonically enriched reading of traditional ngoni music, not a conscious attempt at overseas breakthrough. Toure's music got deeper and better over the years, but it never fundamentally changed.
Savane is, however, his most perfectly realised celebration of Malian deep roots music. Sung almost exclusively in regional languages, at its core are Toure's rough diamond guitar and the throbbingly percussive ngonis of Mama Sissoko and Bassekou Kouyate. Everything else, and there's plenty of magic going on in the percussion section, is supporting cast, except perhaps Ali's voice. The rolling, tumbling riffs that the three players create together, and the solo variations they take turns contributing—Sissoko on bass ngoni, Kouyate on alto—are at the heart of practically every piece. Fanga Diawara's abrasive njarka violin adds to the atmosphere on three tracks.
Guest appearances from the London-based harmonica player Little George Sueref and tenor saxophonist Pee Wee Ellis, who are each briefly featured on three tunes, probably at the suggestion of producer Nick Gold, are enjoyable, but decorative features only. Ellis' playing is nicely sensitive to the setting, while Sueref tends to charge ahead in a generic, Little Walter-ish fashion.
Savane almost certainly won't be Ali Farka Toure's last album—other sessions are in the can for future release—but it may well prove to be his most enduring.
By Chris May.
**
Toure recorded Savane in the Malian capital of Bamako, as part of a three-disc project dubbed the Hotel Mande Sessions, after the studio in which the albums were cut. Savane is the last, perhaps most eloquent, installment. In concept and execution, the sessions recall teh magical combination of spontaneity and virtuosity that marked the debut releases from the Buena Vista Social Club. Toure offers reverberating, incantatory vocals to accompany his lean, hypnotically repetitive guitar lines.
**
Ali Farka Toure- Guitar, vocals, Bass Drum, Bongos, Percussion;
Mama Sissoko, Dassy Sarre, Bassekou Kouyate- Ngoni;
Fanga Diawara- Njarka;
Little George Sueref- Harmonica;
Pee Wee Ellis- Tenor Sax;
Yves Wernert, Etienne Mbappe, Sonny- Bass;
Massambou Wele Diallo- Bolon;
Fain Duenas- Percussion;
Alou Coulibaly- Water Calabash;
Ali Magassa- Guitar, Backing Vocals;
Souleye Kane- Calabash, Backing Vocals;
Oumar Toure- Congas, Backing vocals;
Hammer Sankare, Ali Magassa, Afel Bocoum, Brehima Toure, Ramata Diakite- Backing Vocals.
**
01.Erdi
02.Inchana Massina
03.Beto
04.Savane
05.Soya
06.Penda Yoro
07.Machengoidi
08.Ledi Coumbe
09.Hanana
10.Soko Yhinka
11.Gambari Didi
13.N'Jarou
**
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Sunday, September 27, 2009
Ali Farka TOURÉ - Talking Timbuktu 1994
Ali Farka TOURE - Talking Timbuktu 1994
Label: WCD (LP)
Recorded at Ocean Way Recording Studios, Los Angeles, California in September, 1993
Blues
(((TALKING TIMBUKTU won the 1995 Grammy Award for Best World Music Album.)))
Talking Timbuktu is a groundbreaking record that vividly illustrates the Africa-Blues connection in real time. Ali Farka Toure, one of Mali's leading singer-guitarists, has a trance-like, bluesy style that, although deeply rooted in Malian tradition, bears astonishing similarity to that of John Lee Hooker or even Canned Heat. It's a mono-chordal vamp, with repetitive song lines cut with shards of blistering solo runs that shimmer like a desert mirage. Toure may be conversant with some blues artists, but it is unlikely that artists like Hooker or Robert Pete Williams ever heard these Malian roots, which makes the connection so uncanny. Ry Cooder, well versed in domestic and world guitar styles, is the perfect counterpoint in these extended songs/jams, his sinewy slide guitar intertwining with his partner's in a super world summit without barriers or borders.
By Derek Rath.
**
On the surface, this is a very simple album, simple in that it is accessible, unpretentious and easy to listen to. On repeated helpings, however, Talking Tmbuktu becomes an extraordinarily beautiful ensemble of the rock-pop (Ry Cooder) and the trad and bluesy (Toure). Take Gomni, the heart rendering tune about "hard work". The rich rhythmic tapistry and haunting melody that shifts back and forth among variations with amazing fluidity touches any soul.
On the other hand, Lasidan, a song about happyness is groovy and multi-layered. Blues aficiandos attempt to catalogue Toure as the "West African John Lee Hooker" due to the similarity in the low-pitched vocals and mid-tempo, foot-stomping rhythms found in so many of his songs (like Ai Du). But I found his music richer; technically its combo of instruments ranging from the emblematic accoustic guitar to the calabash drums to the najarka lute create an inimitable style. Culturally Toure's songs draw from several sources. This is universal music, capable of reaching any heart despite the obvious language barrier.
For a mere mortal like me who picked this album on word of mouth, it also opened a whole new doors into music from Mali.
By Yohannes Dimberu.
**
By the time your average listeners get around to the slow, elemental backbeat of "Ai Du," all of their preconceptions about chickens and eggs, roots and fruits or bluesmen and griots have been blurred and obscured by the enchanting music that makes up TALKING TIMBUKTU.
That's because TALKING TIMBUKTU is an epic cross-cultural super-session that captures the deepest spirit of music and transports it across ethnic and stylistic boundaries without demeaning the gift-giver or the gift. Ali Farka Toure's blissful melodic lines do not adhere to traditional blues form, but rather suggest a kind of pre-blues music of African origins. On a tune such as "Soukora" Toure pours out his heart to his lover, as he and Cooder playfully circle each other with bell-like chords and ornaments that sound like a curtain of electric pearls, while Toure's more vivid attack on "Amandral" echoes phrases evocative of John Lee Hooker. In truth, TALKING TIMBUKTU resists easy description. It is exquisite, mysterious music.
It's all in there: the droning traditional timbres of Mali in Ali Farka Toure's guitar; the deep, mysterious incantations of the Mississippi delta blues in Ry Cooder's slide work; the soulful backwoods moan of "Gatemouth" Brown's viola; the percolating rhythms of Hamma Sankare and Oumar Toure; and the earthy resonant dance of drummer Jim Keltner and bassist John Patitucci. "Ai Du" sums out to something not unlike the blues or West African music...but it's something else again--like some pan-ethnic folk music for the 21st century.
From CD Universe.
**
Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown- Guitar (Electric), Viola
Ry Cooder- Guitar, Mandolin, Guitar (Bass), Guitar (Electric), Guitar (Steel), Marimba, Vocals, Tamboura, Cumbus
Jim Keltner- Drums
John Patitucci- Bass, Guitar (Bass), Bass (Acoustic)
Hamma Sankare- Percussion, Vocals, Choir, Chorus, Calabash
Ali Farka Touré- Guitar (Acoustic), Banjo, Percussion, Arranger, Guitar (Electric), Vocals, Six String Banjo
Oumar Toure- Bongos, Conga, Vocals, Choir, Chorus
**
A1. Bonde 5:27
A2. Soukora 6:05
A3. Gomni 7:00
A4. Sega 3.10
A5. Amandrai 9:23
*
B1. Lasidan 6:06
B2. Keito 5:42
B3. Banga 2:32
B4. Ai Du 7:09
B5. Diaraby 7:21
**
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Label: WCD (LP)
Recorded at Ocean Way Recording Studios, Los Angeles, California in September, 1993
Blues
(((TALKING TIMBUKTU won the 1995 Grammy Award for Best World Music Album.)))
Talking Timbuktu is a groundbreaking record that vividly illustrates the Africa-Blues connection in real time. Ali Farka Toure, one of Mali's leading singer-guitarists, has a trance-like, bluesy style that, although deeply rooted in Malian tradition, bears astonishing similarity to that of John Lee Hooker or even Canned Heat. It's a mono-chordal vamp, with repetitive song lines cut with shards of blistering solo runs that shimmer like a desert mirage. Toure may be conversant with some blues artists, but it is unlikely that artists like Hooker or Robert Pete Williams ever heard these Malian roots, which makes the connection so uncanny. Ry Cooder, well versed in domestic and world guitar styles, is the perfect counterpoint in these extended songs/jams, his sinewy slide guitar intertwining with his partner's in a super world summit without barriers or borders.
By Derek Rath.
**
On the surface, this is a very simple album, simple in that it is accessible, unpretentious and easy to listen to. On repeated helpings, however, Talking Tmbuktu becomes an extraordinarily beautiful ensemble of the rock-pop (Ry Cooder) and the trad and bluesy (Toure). Take Gomni, the heart rendering tune about "hard work". The rich rhythmic tapistry and haunting melody that shifts back and forth among variations with amazing fluidity touches any soul.
On the other hand, Lasidan, a song about happyness is groovy and multi-layered. Blues aficiandos attempt to catalogue Toure as the "West African John Lee Hooker" due to the similarity in the low-pitched vocals and mid-tempo, foot-stomping rhythms found in so many of his songs (like Ai Du). But I found his music richer; technically its combo of instruments ranging from the emblematic accoustic guitar to the calabash drums to the najarka lute create an inimitable style. Culturally Toure's songs draw from several sources. This is universal music, capable of reaching any heart despite the obvious language barrier.
For a mere mortal like me who picked this album on word of mouth, it also opened a whole new doors into music from Mali.
By Yohannes Dimberu.
**
By the time your average listeners get around to the slow, elemental backbeat of "Ai Du," all of their preconceptions about chickens and eggs, roots and fruits or bluesmen and griots have been blurred and obscured by the enchanting music that makes up TALKING TIMBUKTU.
That's because TALKING TIMBUKTU is an epic cross-cultural super-session that captures the deepest spirit of music and transports it across ethnic and stylistic boundaries without demeaning the gift-giver or the gift. Ali Farka Toure's blissful melodic lines do not adhere to traditional blues form, but rather suggest a kind of pre-blues music of African origins. On a tune such as "Soukora" Toure pours out his heart to his lover, as he and Cooder playfully circle each other with bell-like chords and ornaments that sound like a curtain of electric pearls, while Toure's more vivid attack on "Amandral" echoes phrases evocative of John Lee Hooker. In truth, TALKING TIMBUKTU resists easy description. It is exquisite, mysterious music.
It's all in there: the droning traditional timbres of Mali in Ali Farka Toure's guitar; the deep, mysterious incantations of the Mississippi delta blues in Ry Cooder's slide work; the soulful backwoods moan of "Gatemouth" Brown's viola; the percolating rhythms of Hamma Sankare and Oumar Toure; and the earthy resonant dance of drummer Jim Keltner and bassist John Patitucci. "Ai Du" sums out to something not unlike the blues or West African music...but it's something else again--like some pan-ethnic folk music for the 21st century.
From CD Universe.
**
Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown- Guitar (Electric), Viola
Ry Cooder- Guitar, Mandolin, Guitar (Bass), Guitar (Electric), Guitar (Steel), Marimba, Vocals, Tamboura, Cumbus
Jim Keltner- Drums
John Patitucci- Bass, Guitar (Bass), Bass (Acoustic)
Hamma Sankare- Percussion, Vocals, Choir, Chorus, Calabash
Ali Farka Touré- Guitar (Acoustic), Banjo, Percussion, Arranger, Guitar (Electric), Vocals, Six String Banjo
Oumar Toure- Bongos, Conga, Vocals, Choir, Chorus
**
A1. Bonde 5:27
A2. Soukora 6:05
A3. Gomni 7:00
A4. Sega 3.10
A5. Amandrai 9:23
*
B1. Lasidan 6:06
B2. Keito 5:42
B3. Banga 2:32
B4. Ai Du 7:09
B5. Diaraby 7:21
**
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