Member Since: 03/09/2007
Band Website: www.kanemathis.com
Sounds Like: Kane Mathis has developed a remarkable mastery of Mande music. Whether playing solo kora or with his tight, trio of balafon, kora and djembe drum, he is a pleasure to hear. It is not only that Mathis is comfortable and well versed in the Mande repertoire; it's that when he plays, he swings in exactly the right way, probably the hardest thing for an outsider to grasp in this rich, West African tradition. Kora music features improvisation, but like writing poetry in a foreign language, you have to follow the rules. Mathis manages this, with phrasing, accents, tone and riffs-even the fast ones-that feel just right. His sound is both authentic and spontaneous, good enough to sound like an insider, but relaxed and personal enough to be far more than polished mimicry. It is rare indeed for a non-African to reach this level in any African tradition, particularly such a subtle and demanding one.
Banning Eyre, Senior Editor: Afropop Worldwide
www.afropop.org
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-----A master musician on the West African Kora and Turkish Oud, Kane Mathis combines superb
technical sophistication with rich cultural insight. His graceful performances are outstanding examples of the music of West African Mandinka tradition.Münir Nurettin Beken Ph D (Siena College, artist in residence University of Washington Ethnomusicology, Middle East and African music specialist)-------------------------------------------------
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----------------"If World Fusion Jazz brings to mind a watered down element of the East merging with New Age-infected smooth jazz, then you're in for a real treat. A true meeting of West African traditional music with Jazz, Etienne Cakpo & Joselito Atchade cultivate a garden of musical colors, titillating the ears with the sounds of Benin. Did you ever think that the kora and the saxophone could share the same stage? They do on this album, and with surprising beauty and ease. This is true Afro-Jazz, respectful of both traditions it fuses while remaining innovative, daring, and danceable."-Derek Sivers, President of CD Baby--------------------------------------------------------
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---------The shores of the Chesapeake Bay aren't among the first places you'd look for adepts in the art of the kora , the harplike, 21-stringed West African instrument. Maryland probably wouldn't even be in your top 100. But Baltimorean Kane Mathis has made an intense study of the instrument, making annual trips to Gambia to study with Mandinka masters and earning honors never before accorded a non-African. Bantam Ba Kouyate (Kaira) offers Mathis performing 16 traditional Mandinka tunes with fellow kora player Mora Ba Kouyate and occasional vocals from Sefai Jobarteh. The album offers a real treat: wonderful African folk melodies rendered in crystalline, rippling counterpoint
by Lee Gardner – Baltimore City Paper
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-----The kora is finding its way into experimental compositions in jazz,funk, concert music, and the theater. But not all the new performers play these new styles. Kane Mathis, in his first kora release,collaborates with Gambian Mandinka colleagues Moriba Kouyate and Sefai Jobarteh to create a new but pure sound for the classic kora repertoire. The playing is brilliant, the voice pleasant and soulful.
Oberlin College Conservatory of Music-Roderic Knight, PhD, Professor of Ethnomusicology Oberlin College Conservatory of Music, Mandinka music specialist)-------------------------------------------------
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----------------Kane is a dedicated kora player, who takes his craft seriously.
Prince Diabate (Master kora player and vocalist)
Record Label: Various
Type of Label: Indie