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Mamadou Diabaté

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Birth name
  
Mamadou Diabate

Website
  
www.mamadoukora.com

Occupation(s)
  
Musician

Name
  
Mamadou Diabate


Instruments
  
Kora

Role
  
Musician

Years active
  
1990s–present

Music director
  
Madame Brouette

Mamadou Diabate Mamadou Diabat musicvirginiaedu

Albums
  
Griot Classique, Sumu Basikina Sylla, Tunga, Behmanka

Awards
  
Grammy Award for Best Traditional World Music Album

Similar People
  
Bobby Singh, Jeff Lang, Eric Bibb, Moussa Sene Absa, Serge Fiori

Profiles

Mamadou diabat laban djoro


Mamadou Diabaté (born 1975) is a kora player. He began playing quite early in his life, became known as a musician in the area of Mali in which he lived, and has since moved to the United States, recording five albums

Contents

Mamadou Diabaté Mamadou Diabate Tunga Amazoncom Music

Mamadou diabat tunga


Life and career

Diabaté was born in Kita, Mali, a town relatively near to Mali's capital of Bamako, known for its artistic and cultural prominence within the Manding community of West Africa. He was born into a family of griots, with his father, Djelimory n'fa Diabaté, also a kora musician and a member of the Instrumental Ensemble of Mali. He began playing the kora, a 21-string harp at a very young age, performing at various public events in his country and was becoming somewhat of a regional celebrity by that time as well.

Mamadou Diabaté httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons44

In 1996, he went on to travel with a group of the Instrumental Ensemble of Mali, and eventually settled in the United States. Since his move to the US, Diabaté has performed with several musicians from the country, including jazz players Randy Weston, Guy Davis, and Donald Byrd, as well as with a griot ensemble composed of musicians from Mali and the United States.

His 2000 debut album Tunga mixed West African music with blues and jazz influences. A review in CMJ New Music Report commented on Diabate's "faster, nimbler style of kora playing". The album featured bassists Cheick Barry and Ira Coleman.

Mamadou Diabaté Blog de MamadouDiabateGriot Toubabou Djeli k Skyrockcom

In 2005, Diabaté was nominated for a Grammy Award in the Traditional World Music Album category for Behmanka, but lost to the collaboration between his cousin Toumani Diabate and Ali Farka Toure. The album was described as a "dazzling duet for one" by The Washington Post, while Philip Van Vleck, reviewing it for Billboard, described it as "a feat of remarkable virtuosity".

Mamadou Diabaté Blog Music de MamadouDIABATE DJELI MAMADOU DIABATE Skyrockcom

His third album, Heritage, was totally instrumental, again showing jazz influences. His group at this time included Djkorya Mory Kante (guitar), Noah Barrett (bass), Baye Kouyati (callabash, talking drum), and Balia Kouyate (balafon). A Billboard review by Philip Van Vleck described it as "a gorgeous album loaded with music that evokes Mali's soul".

Mamadou Diabaté Mamadou Diabate Listen and Stream Free Music Albums New Releases

His fourth his solo album Douga Mansa, a tribute to his father and grandfather, won the 2010 Grammy for Best Traditional World Music Album. Also in 2010, he was part of the world music trio Djan Djan which included Bobby Singh, an Australian tabla player, and Jeff Lang, an Australian slide guitarist.

Mamadou Diabaté Mamadou Diabate Tour Dates 2017 Upcoming Mamadou Diabate Concert

His fifth album, Courage, was recorded in Mali and released in 2011. A review in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer described it as "a truly remarkable disc of music and deserves to be considered equal to anything written or recorded by any composer or symphony orchestra in the rest of the world".

Discography

  • Tunga (2000), Alula
  • Behmanka (June 14, 2005), World Village Music
  • Heritage (November 14, 2006), World Village Music
  • Douga Mansa (2008), World Music Village
  • Courage (2011), World Village Music
  • Griot Classique (2014)
  • Songs

    DjelimoryTunga · 2000
    BehmankaBehmanka · 2005
    TungaTunga · 2000

    References

    Mamadou Diabaté Wikipedia