About Me
SANGARE KONO OUMOU SANGARE, THE SONGBIRD OF WASSOULOU -
Sangare kono Sangare the songbird this is how Oumou Sangare, Malis great diva, champion of womens rights, and one of the worlds most astounding female voices, describes herself when she sings her powerful songs that strike deep in the heart.
In Mali, to call oneself a songbird is a special privilege of musicians who come from the southern region known as Wasulu*. A songbird (kono) uses music to challenge and comment on life as it really is. And no one does this quite like Sangare the songbird.
Oumou Sangare draws deep from the wealth of musical traditions of southern Mali. She comments on all aspects of life in her country, especially the problems that women face on a daily basis because of polygamy, but also on the sensuality of young love, on the pain of exile, on the need to cultivate the land, and on the frailty of human life.
Oumou on French TV with American R&B star Alicia Keys.
Some of her songs use metaphor and irony; others are more direct. They are spirited expressions of her own philosophy and wisdom, born from her experience growing up in a poor family in Bamako and being catapulted to stardom aged only 21. And her idiom is the hauntingly beautiful home-grown music that has become her trademark: wassoulou.
Since its independence in 1960, Mali has been at the forefront of Africas most dynamic musical trends. Malis dance bands led the way with their blend of local griot songs mixed with Cuban, Congolese and other international styles. But in the late 1980s a new music came along to challenge these styles and this was wassoulou.
Wassoulou music is based on the fabulous song and dance traditions of Wasulu, a remote and densely wooded region in southern Mali. In the 1950s, in the villages, the youth created this style out of the songs of the ancient hunters societies, and made it their own. At first, the elders opposed it furiously as bordello music, comparing the main instrument, the six string harp, to a bed-bug because of its nervous rhythms that made young people dance frenetically as if bitten.
By the late 1970s wassoulou had begun to emerge as a new popular style in Bamako among migrant communities from the region. It received the stamp of approval when the government-sponsored Ensemble National Instrumental recruited two singers from the region, Coumba Sidibe and Sali Sidibe, into the group.
Wassoulou was very different from the prevailing griot-based music of the dance bands. It had strong, hypnotic dance rhythms and the lyrics talked about general aspects of life in contemporary Mali. But Sangare the songbird took all this much further than anyone else when she broke onto the scene in 1990 with her debut album, Moussolou (women).
With this album not only was there a new bold rhythm and musical colour that took dance floors by storm, but it launched the voice of a gifted young woman with immense charisma. And in her music she had a personal mission - to improve the subservient position of women in Mali. Realising that she could not change the mind-set of the elders, Sangare addressed Malis unmarried youth. In a country where traditionally the young have no say, her songs were radical, passionate, and electrifying .
Born and raised in Bamako, Sangare had a natural gift for singing. Her musical inspiration was her mother, a singer from Wasulu who was steeped in the age-old regional styles such as the profound and sacred hunters music, and the frenetic djembe rhythms of acrobatic masquerades such as the sigi (buffalo) and the sogoninkun (little antelopes head).
But when Oumou was only two years old, her father took a second wife and emigrated to Côte dIvoire, abandoning Oumous mother, who was pregnant at the time, and their three small children. Oumous earliest memories are of her mother weeping. The struggle to keep the family afloat was the backdrop to Oumous childhood. As a singer her mothers main source of income was the sumu (wedding and baptism celebrations organised by women that take place in the courtyards and streets), but she was often too exhausted or depressed to accept engagements. Oumou accompanied her mother to the sumus from the age of five, and very soon was in demand in her own right. She thrilled in the atmosphere of these parties (as she puts it, singing in the streets), fired in equal measure by her passion for wassoulou music and by her desire to help her mother out by earning a little extra cash. Oumou soon became the family breadwinner.
Heard at one of these parties, she was recruited aged 16 to the short-lived but important group called Djoliba Percussions with whom she toured Europe in her first trip out of Mali. Following her acclaim as their lead soloist, she decided to form her own group and for two years rehearsed under the tutelage of bass player and arranger Amadou Ba Guindo (leader of Malis legendary dance band National Badema).
In 1989, after some persuasion wary of the pitfalls that could await her if the album was not successful -, she recorded her first album Moussolou (women). She was 21 years old. It was recorded in Abidjan and released on the 4th of January 1990, and it took West Africa by storm.
Her songs talked openly about subjects that had never before been expressed in public in this fundamentally conservative society such as female sensuality, in her stunning hit song Diaraby Nene (the shivers of love). All the more remarkable because of her chosen idiom that of hunters music.
For hundreds of years, until the beginning of the 20th century with French colonial rule, it was Malis hunters who were the protectors of the villages, the providers of food, and the healers. Still today they occupy a special place deep in the Malian psyche. They spend long periods in the bush and they know the healing properties of plants and trees. They are healers and philosophers. Their music, played on a special six string harp, is believed to have magic powers that can protect hunters and tame even the most dangerous of animals.
Oumous vision from the outset was to bring the power and charm of this music into her own songs. The kamalengoni - a youth version of the hunters harp - is the instrument that she chose as the key sound in her group. Its nervous jittery rhythms and groove, underpinned by the compulsive iron scraper of the hunters - resonate with all kinds of popular styles, such as funk, rhythm and blues, and afrobeat. In addition, she used a violin, emulating the mournful sound of the one-string fiddle of Wasulu. But most important of all, her songs talked from the perspective of a young unmarried woman, in ways that no other Malian artist had ever dared to do before.
The album Moussolou was an unprecedented success throughout West Africa and catapulted Sangare to stardom. It also attracted the attention of Nick Gold of World Circuit who signed her to the label. Two international albums followed: Ko Sira and Worotan, and extensive touring around the world, winning her a reputation as one of Africas most original and striking female singers, faithful to her tradition but with a modern outlook.
6 foot tall, beautiful, gutsy, stylish, playful on stage, charismatic, compassionate, soulful, with a smile that lights up your heart, and a soaring, piercing voice, Oumou has become an icon in Mali and around the world.
In the five years following the making of Worotan, Oumou has concentrated on spending more time with her family, on building a hotel in Bamako (Hotel Wasulu), performing concerts throughout Africa, and on producing music for her home market, with a number of best selling cassettes that continue to explore Malis diverse traditions, especially her own wassoulou. As Oumou says: Why bother to play other peoples music, when our own is so rich?
2003 saw the return of Oumou to the world stage with a series of summer festival dates including an incredible performance at WOMAD that was hailed by critics as one of the best in the festivals history. This was followed by the release of the 2CD collection simply titled Oumou, an album that features 12 of the best tracks from her first three World Circuit albums, plus 8 tracks previously unreleased on CD (including 6 tracks from the best-selling Mali cassette Laban). The album was a timely reminder as to why Oumou is widely believed to be one of the worlds great singers, and the perfect introduction to those new to her music.
Throughout her career Oumou has always maintained her commitment to campaigning for womens rights and for those of the underprivileged around the globe. In October 2003 she was appointed as Ambassadress of the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO), a role that forms part of the FAOs struggle against famine. With the official backing of the FAO, Oumou is now in a position to tackle a wider range of issues on a global scale.
Oumous touring continued into 2004, culminating in a show at the famous Hollywood Bowl in the USA. Appropriately titled Global Divas, the show also featured Tracy Chapman, with Oumou receiving much critical acclaim for her mesmeric performance. The year was rounded off with an amazing live duet on French TV with the multi-Grammy winning R&B superstar Alicia Keys. Oumou began working on new material at the beginning of 2006, and in spring 2006 she took part in the African Voices series of concerts in Belgium with artists of the calibre of Baba Sissoko, AKA Moon, Magic Malik, MeShell Ndégéocello, and Pink Floyd guitarist Dave Gilmour. Fresh from playing with global superstars Oumou looks set to return with a bang, and the world eagerly awaits what will come next from the Songbird of Wassoulou.
Original text by Lucy Dúran, updated by Dave McGuire
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