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More than any other artist,
Toumani Diabaté is responsible for introducing the kora—a
21-string harp unique to West Africa—to audiences around the
world. But aside from being a player of exceptional virtuosity
and creativity, Diabaté plays a vital role as bandleader,
teacher, musical conservationist and composer in the capital
city of Bamako, Mali, where he was born and has lived all
his life.
Diabaté is at the vanguard of a new
generation of Malian griots who are constantly looking for
ways of modernizing and still honoring their traditional music.
He founded and directs a music school in Bamako where Malian
children from different social backgrounds learn to play traditional
instruments and dance. Many argue that music is Mali’s greatest
resource; Diabaté amply demonstrates it.
Diabaté was born in the 1960s into
a family of griots: 71 generations of kora players. His father,
Sidiki Diabaté (c. 1922-96), was a kora player of legendary
fame in West Africa. Sidiki was named “King of the Kora” at
the prestigious international Black Arts Festival Festac in
1977, and he continues to inspire countless kora players to
this day. Born in the Gambia to Malian parents, Sidiki settled
in Mali after World War II and became famous for his virtuosic
and idiosyncratic style of playing. After Mali became independent
in 1960, Sidiki was invited to join the Ensemble National
Instrumental, along with his first wife (Diabaté’s mother),
the singer Nene Koita. Sidiki and Nene were beloved by the
first president of Mali, Modibo Keita, who gave them the land
on which the family house still stands, underneath the presidential
palace in Bamako. This was the musical environment in which
Diabaté was raised, although he was selftaught, never learning
directly from his father except by listening.
A childhood illness left Diabaté with
one leg paralyzed, so he has always had to walk with crutches.
In a country like Mali, where there is little if any formal-sector
help for the disabled, Diabaté has had to struggle twice as
hard as other musicians to establish a place for himself.
Diabaté began playing kora at the
age of five and was quickly recognized as a prodigy. At that
time, the Malian government actively supported regional ensembles
to represent local folklore, and Diabaté was recruited to
the ensemble from Koulikoro (approximately 60 kilometers east
of Bamako), with whom he made his public debut at the age
of 13 to great local acclaim.
In 1984, at the age of 19, Diabaté
joined the group of young musicians who accompanied the great
diva Kandia Kouyate, the best-known female griot singer in
Mali, and toured Africa extensively with her. Since this first
tour outside of Mali, Diabaté has consistently toured the
world, having played over 2000 concerts and participated in
over 170 festivals.
Diabaté first traveled to the United
Kingdom in 1986, when he accompanied another Malian singer,
Ousmane Sacko, and ended up staying in London for seven months.
During this period, at the age of 21, he recorded his first
solo album, Kaira. The groundbreaking, critically lauded album
was the first-ever solo kora record. It was recorded without
retakes in a single afternoon.
While in the U.K. he worked informally
with musicians from many different fields of music and encountered
traditions that he had not previously known, such as Indian
classical music, from which he derived the jugalbandi idea—a
musical dialogue between two instruments—that has since become
one of his hallmarks.
His first major collaboration, with
the Spanish flamenco group Ketama, came about largely by coincidence.
Diabaté had been invited to play at a party in London in 1988,
and Ketama, signed to the same label, were also there. As
Diabaté performed, members of Ketama began doing palmas (interlocked
flamenco clapping) to accompany him. Diabaté was amazed at
the Spanish group’s intuitive understanding of the rhythmic
complexities of his music. The next day they all went to journalist
and broadcaster Lucy Duran’s house and created what would
become Songhai 1.
This spirit of collaboration continued
with Diabaté’s elaborate 1992 project with The Symmetric Orchestra,
Shake The Whole World. Released only in Japan and Mali, the
album confirmed his reputation as a maverick impressive even
to purists. Diabaté explains, “The griot’s role is making
communication between people, but not just historical communication.
In Mali I can work in the traditional way; elsewhere I can
work in a different way. Why not?”
Back in Bamako in the early and mid-1990s,
Diabaté began to gather a number of exceptionally talented
young musicians—such as Ba Sekou Kouyate on the ngoni—into
with an instrumental ensemble that can be heard on his album
Djelika. Although this was a period in Mali when synthesizers,
electric guitars and drum machines were prevalent, Diabaté
steadfastly held out for an all-acoustic sound, finding other
ways of modernizing the music. In this period, Diabaté went
to Madrid to record Songhai 2, which he believes to be even
better than the first album.
Over the last decade, Diabaté has
participated in many other recording projects, including Ali
Farka Touré’s eponymous debut album for World Circuit, Salif
Keita’s GRAMMY-winning album Papa, and Kasse Mady Diabaté’s
GRAMMY-nominated 2004 album, Kassi Kasse. In 1998, Diabaté
recorded a kora duets album with Ballake Sissoko: New Ancient
Strings, named after the 1970s classic made by their fathers,
Cordes Anciennes (Ancient Strings).
1999 saw the release Kulanjan, Diabaté’s
duo album with Taj Mahal, whom Diabaté nicknamed “Daddy Kouyate.”
Taj, Diabaté and six other Malian musicians—including the
singers Kasse Mady and Ramata Diakite—explored the common
ground between the blues and the great musical traditions
of Western Mali. Taj Mahal had listened to and played with
many great kora players, and had always been struck what most
struck by the resemblance to the blues he heard in the plucking
techniques of the kora and other Malian string instruments.
To Taj, the traditional Malian piece “Kulanjan”—which he had
first heard on the Cordes Anciennes album—had epitomized the
connection.
In 2001 came Jarabi, The Best Of Toumani
Diabaté, the first internationally released compilation of
music by individual kora player, a testament to Diabaté’s
status as the world’s premier korist. His next album was MALIcool,
a collaboration with the American free jazz trombonist Roswell
Rudd that featured an interpretation of Thelonius Monk’s “Hank,”
a swinging version of a Welsh folk song, and a version of
Beethoven’s “Ode to Joy.”
In recent years, Diabaté has received
numerous accolades for his contribution to the development
of the kora, and as a key figure in African music overall.
In 2003, he received the Tamani d’or, a prize awarded to the
best kora player in the world. In 2004, he garnered the Zyriab
des Virtuoses, a UNESCO prize awarded at the Mawazine Festival
organized by King Mohammed VI of Morocco. Diabaté is the first
black African ever to receive that prize.
Toumani Diabaté has been taking steps
to help preserve the legacy of traditional kora music in Mali,
and to educate future generations of their rich musical heritage
while encouraging them to explore the creative possibilities
within music. He is President/Director of Mandinka Kora Productions,
which actively promotes the kora through workshops, festivals,
and various cultural events. Diabaté
is also a teacher of the kora and of modern and traditional
music at the Balla Fasseke Conservatoire of Arts, Culture
and Multimedia.
Diabaté has entered into another creatively
fruitful period. He reunited with Ballake Sissoko for a track
on Sissoko’s new album, Tomora, and also appears on the title
track of Salif Keita’s latest recording, Mbemba. Diabaté started
working with World Circuit/Nonesuch in 2004 on the Hotel Mandé
Sessions trilogy of album recorded by Nick Gold at the Mandé
Hotel in Bamako. The first release from these sessions, the
duets album with Ali Farka Touré called In the Heart of the
Moon, was released to worldwide critical acclaim in 2005 and
won the GRAMMY for Best Traditional World Music Album. The
second release in the series is Boulevard de l'Indépendance.
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