Mali Music

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Toumani Diabate, Damon Albarn, bunch of other people - anyone bought it? What do they think of it? What do the people who aren't going to buy it think of it?

Tom, Monday, 15 April 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

New Paul Simon answers.

Tom, Monday, 15 April 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

Oh, I have bought it by the way. So far I like it more than any given Blur album but less than Best Of Blur OR my Best of Mali compilation. Not unpredictably. Mind you this is on one listen.

Tom, Monday, 15 April 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

I liked parklife and modern life is rubbish but I think the tour circuit has killed his apetite for guitar pop. He's jaded so I think that's why he's doing this.

Tom- I haven't heard the record so clarify this: Does he write songs with these musicians?

Julio Desouza, Monday, 15 April 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

I haven't heard it and I'm not going to buy it, but I think it's good. I like the pictures.

PM, Monday, 15 April 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

Julio - yes, it seems so. The pre-publicity for the album seemed to take pains to minimise Albarn's role, presenting him as a field recorder who joined in the occasional jam. But almost all the tracks with a credited writer credit him, sometimes on his own. It's not actually that noticeable, except when he's singing (rarely) - I suspect his writing credit is really a post-production credit on unpublished 'found' music, which is a bit naughty if so. On the other hand maybe he did do a lot of writing for the record but decided to play his role down to avoid embarrassing 'tourist' takes on the finished product.

Tom, Monday, 15 April 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

VITAL FACT for would-be purchasers of this album - the packaging on my copy smells HORRIBLE.

Tom, Monday, 15 April 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

Meanwhile, on the other side of the universe, Keith rowe, guitarist with AMM, collaborated with african percussionists (he was amongst a few other musicians and he wrote abt it for the wire).

''I suspect his writing credit is really a post-production credit on unpublished 'found' music, which is a bit naughty if so. On the other hand maybe he did do a lot of writing for the record but decided to play his role down to avoid embarrassing 'tourist' takes on the finished product. ''

I just hate this: why doesn't he come out and be honest abt it. it's amazing these people care abt being labelled as 'tourists'.

Julio Desouza, Monday, 15 April 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

Wow, Tom...as in sour cardboard smell? Or something else?

Is this an untapped new potential in music packaging?

Andy, Monday, 15 April 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

Saw the programme last week on BBC4 about this project. Most of it seems to be he goes to Mali (by request from Oxfam) and jams with the local musicians, mainly adding bits on his melodica while looking sheepish in a wooly hat. (Christ it's Mali, do you you need a wooly hat there?)

Presumably the writing credits arise from the jam sessions.

The music from the sessions were some of the most enjoyable and easy going things he's done in a long time, and would fit in well with the more woozy tracks on parklife. Finally achieving that hazy, narcoleptic vibe he'd been trying to achieve for quite some time.

Billy Dods, Monday, 15 April 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

In that case, he should go the full hog and finally fall asleep...PERMANENTLY.

Ned Raggett, Monday, 15 April 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

the tour circuit has killed his apetite for guitar pop. He's jaded so I think that's why he's doing this.

Life begins at 'jaded'.

Momus, Monday, 15 April 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

i just hope aerosmith's career ends with 'jaded'

willem, Tuesday, 16 April 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

i want this rekkid so bad after seeing that programme but will forget about it by the time im mobile again

a-33, Tuesday, 16 April 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

three years pass...
I just downloaded this after 2 years of wanting it, and it's really good...that's all i have to say.

That One Guy (MichaelCostello1), Sunday, 24 July 2005 00:51 (twenty years ago)

five years pass...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WgUbtVhnTRI&feature=related

bamcquern, Monday, 4 April 2011 17:28 (fourteen years ago)

this is really great
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iLMlRD5HeA4&feature=related

bamcquern, Monday, 4 April 2011 17:36 (fourteen years ago)

Ah, that "it's just Sting/Peter Gabriel! etc" thing required a lot of imagination way back near the turn of the century

OH RICHEY, WHY. (PaulTMA), Monday, 4 April 2011 17:42 (fourteen years ago)

what sting/peter gabriel thing?

bamcquern, Monday, 4 April 2011 17:50 (fourteen years ago)

Albarn, Sting, Peter Gabriel...PaulTMA apparently believes they're all the same and all collaborated together with African musicians.

curmudgeon, Monday, 4 April 2011 18:43 (fourteen years ago)

two years pass...

The Day the Music Died in Mali
By SUJATHA FERNANDES
Published: May 19, 2013

EVERYONE has heard of censored songs, like Billie Holiday’s “Love for Sale,” which was banned from ABC radio in 1956 because of its prostitution theme. Most are familiar with the censorship of artists, like the Dixie Chicks, who had their music blacklisted from country music stations across the country after they criticized President George W. Bush. But banning music in its entirety?

It has been almost nine months since Islamic militants in northern Mali announced that they were effectively banning all music. It’s hard to imagine, in a country that produced such internationally renowned music as Ali Farka Touré’s blues, Rokia Traoré’s soulful vocals and the Afro-pop traditions of Salif Keita.

The armed militants sent death threats to local musicians; many were forced into exile. Live music venues were shut down, and militants set fire to guitars and drum kits. The world famous Festival in the Desert was moved to Burkina Faso, and then postponed because of the security risk.

While French and Malian forces largely swept the militants from Timbuktu and other northern towns early this year, the region is still a battleground. Cultural venues remain shuttered. Even more musicians in the north are now leaving the country because they fear vengeful acts by the Malian Army, whom they accuse of discriminating against northern peoples. The music has not returned to what it once was.

There are many theories for the reasons behind the music ban. Some point to religious fanaticism that sees music as a distraction from single-minded devotion. Others suggest that the ban was an attempt to sabotage the economy by gutting one of Mali’s primary export industries. Perhaps the militants, who cut off the hands of thieves and whip those who drink alcohol, just wanted to terrorize people.

Regardless, the ban — like banning the air we breathe, some Malians have said — can tell us something about the nature of music itself as the essence of our social bonds and a bulwark against unfettered use of power.

Musicians are present in many of the rituals of daily life in Mali. The traditional praise singers known as griots sing and play at weddings, birth ceremonies and funerals. But their role is not just to provide background entertainment. Yacouba Sissoko, a Malian griot known for his mastery of the ngoni, a stringed instrument, and the “talking drum,” which mimics human speech, told me that the griot is a “person who creates cohesion between people, a kind of cement in Malian society.” Music is a language that communicates what we cannot always say in words; it assures us of our interconnection.

A world without music is also a world without stories. The griots have functioned as storytellers and truth-tellers within West African society for centuries. In addition to mediating disputes and acting as advisers to early rulers, griots were oral historians. They knew regional legends and family histories, and through their music those stories were passed down from one generation to the next. Like the ancient manuscripts that militants tried to burn in a Timbuktu library in January, today’s griots are repositories of history. If they lose their social function as storytellers, society loses a critical link to its past.

This is especially true in Mali, where high rates of illiteracy mean that music — rather than newspapers or books — is a prime means of sharing information. Malian hip-hop artists in particular have tried to use their music to raise awareness about social issues. The Malian rapper Amkoullel addresses education in his song “Teaching, Studies,” rapping in both French and his local dialect, Bamanan. He rails against corruption in the school system: “A place to teach should not to be confused with a place to do business,” and inequality: “Private schools, so well equipped/Public education, neglected/The poor have no choice.”

Even before the militant takeover of the north last year, Amkoullel warned of the dire situation in the country in a song called S.O.S.: “The people rage /Their dreams are being killed /They no longer know in what to believe.” He formed an association called Plus Jamais Ça, or Never Again. Other musicians have also been coming together to call for an end to the conflict. In January, the singer Fatoumata Diawara brought together more than 40 musicians in Bamako, the capital, to record a peace song that showcased the extraordinary diversity and artistry of Malian music. Addressing themselves to military leaders and politicians, the musicians sing: “We must take care now, or our children will never know the real story of our country. We might lose it.”

One thing that the events in Mali have taught us is that music matters. And the potential loss of music as a means of social bonding, as a voice of conscience and as a mode of storytelling is not just a threat in an African country where Islamic militants made music a punishable offense. We would do well to appreciate music’s power, wherever we live.

Sujatha Fernandes is an associate professor of sociology at Queens College and the Graduate Center, City University of New York, and the author of “Close to the Edge: In Search of the Global Hip Hop Generation.”

Josh in Chicago, Friday, 24 May 2013 03:40 (twelve years ago)

Jesus, that's insane.

I really like this album, BTW.

Walter Galt, Friday, 24 May 2013 10:36 (twelve years ago)

There's another article about the current situation in Mali posted on the Rolling World 2013 thread.

curmudgeon, Friday, 24 May 2013 15:33 (twelve years ago)


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