$8.99

Sold by music on Tradebit
The world's largest download marketplace
3,247,664 satisfied buyers
Shopper Award

MP3 Kakande - Dununya

The balafon (xylophone) has electrified popular music in West Africa since the court of Emperor Sundiata Keita back in 1235. Lush vocals, flutes, sinewy guitars, cellos and countless textures.

11 MP3 Songs
WORLD: African- West, WORLD: Afro-Beat

Show all album songs: Dununya Songs


Details:
Here is a review written by Banning Eyre for https://www.tradebit.com
Published Feb. 2008 at
https://www.tradebit.com


New York City is home to a rich community of splendid musicians from West Africa’s old Mande Empire—Mali, Guinea, Gambia and beyond. Griot vocalist and balafon player extraordinaire, Famoro Dioubate is the latest star talent to emerge from the New York Mande milieu. The balafon (wooden xylophone) goes back to the touchstone period of Mande history, the rise of Sunjata Keita in 1235. The instrument seized from Sunjata’s Susu nemesis went on to acquire iconic status. To this day in Famoro’s native Guinea, Mande balafon features prominently in traditional and modern music alike. That history also weaves through the eleven tracks on this CD, even as Famoro intersperses memories of his childhood village (“Kakande”) and praise for old friends (“Bouba Sylla”) and new (“Nina Kaba” a young girl in Michigan). So while the music here takes liberties in keeping with the band’s international makeup, the underlying music and themes are classic griot fare—an intertwining of the past and the present with an eye to charting the good road in life.

Kakande takes a unique approach to Mande music—acoustic, kinetic, textured and grooving. Dioubate’s virtuosic balafon riffing is rightly front and center, backed harmonically by a sweet blend of electric guitar (Mamady Kouyate), cello (Raoul Rothblatt), flute (Sylvain Leroux) and sax (Avram Fefer). These players step out occasionally, but mostly hang with the crisp rhythm section, creating textures that work as well in a dark, roiling jam like “Paya Paya,” as on a slow, mellifluous praise song like “Mariama Traoré.” Kakande bassist Peter Fand—a veteran of numerous Mande music projects—produced the album, skillfully balancing these elements to create a unified sound that keeps Famoro in the spotlight. “Dununya” opens with cello and flute then kicks into a majestic balafon canter over which Dioubate sings opposite a male-female chorus. The piece ends with just those voices, singing largely in 4ths—more cool jazz than strident griot backing vocal—and fading, finger style acoustic guitar. This sort of organic arranging sets Kakande’s work apart from conventional griot pop.

Famoro’s balafon work is a reliable treat. He’s overdubbed additional parts on a number of these tracks to create thick, gnarly grooves of pure rhythm and melody. The final piece, “Temedi Kote,” a balafon instrumental, is a tour de force in this regard. Famoro’s singing is spirited—cool and plaintive on “Bani,” august, if a tad strained, on the modal, jazz-tinged “So Si Sa.” The fact is, Famoro can’t match the spectacular voices of Guinea’s top singers—like Sekou “Bambino” Diabate or Mory Kante—but as it turns out, Kante is a friend and admirer, and he will accompany Kakande’s CD release tour as a special guest (See dates below). The real vocal fireworks on Dununya come from Missia Saran Dioubate, a bona fide griot diva who has also spent considerable time in New York in recent years. Whether topping vocal choruses, or stepping out solo—in praise of African leaders on “Souaresi,” or of Famoro’s New York “mother” on “Mariama Traoré—Missia has the sort of thrilling delivery that instantly communicates why griot singers wield such emotional power among the Mande.

What comes through most on Dununya is the freshness and esprit de corps of this band. Kakande performed plenty before going into the studio, so the arrangements feel organic and natural. This cross-cultural collaboration sets a new bar for the New York Mande scene, and speaks well for the ever rising sophistication and quality of U.S. based Afropop projects in general.
File Data

This file is sold by music, an independent seller on Tradebit.

Our Reviews
© Tradebit 2004-2024
All files are property of their respective owners
Questions about this file? Contact music
DMCA/Copyright or marketplace issues? Contact Tradebit