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The Ultimate Blues: Leni Stern and Friends Find the Strength of African Strings on the Intimate Sabani

http://www.worldmusicwire.com

Leni1

Wildly creative guitarist meets musical soulmates and engaging new instruments in Mali—and records a stark yet warm dialogue as part of a close-knit, cross-cultural trio

In a warm Malian hotel room, the ngoni smiled.

SabaniA seemingly simple instrument with an evocative sound and deep past, it was both delighting and baffling the intrepid jazz and blues guitar maven from New York. Its tuning was open to interpretation, to the player’s feeling in the moment. The tonic sat square on the middle string, not at the bottom like most Western stringed instruments.

But as Leni Stern played this great-grandfather to the banjo, she knew she was in touch with something big. “I kept feeling I had the ultimate blues instrument in my hand,” Stern explains.

This ultimate blues buoys Sabani, a beautifully stripped down collection of graceful and dynamic instrumental lines, thoughtful songs, and catchy dialogue across traditions. Inspired by easygoing jam sessions with two Malian musician friends and recorded at Salif Keita’s Mouffou Studios in Bamako, Sabani brings the sound of every string, every pulse
of the calabash and bounce of the talking drum to vivid life, to honor the intense and intimate connection Stern has developed with West African music over the last half-decade.

Stern and a trio of African master musicians—Kofo (talking drum, vocals), Alioune Faye (percussion), and Mamadou Ba (bass)—will share this sound with audiences on the West Coast and Midwest as part of their Spring 2012 tour. Cities include Chicago, Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco, Cleveland, Albuquerque, and Phoenix.

“I don’t know why I waited so long to record this way,” Stern re?ects. Stern—whose life has taken her from Munich to New York, from the Peruvian rainforests to the music school in Benin she helped found—was a veteran of the American and European avant rock, jazz, and singer-songwriter circuit.

Brought by UNESCO to mentor studio engineers in Mali, Stern was hooked. She began performing at seminal venues like the Festival in the Desert, touring with musicians from Keita to Baaba Maal, and, perhaps most importantly, making close friends with her newfound teachers and companions. She spent nearly two years living, learning, and making music across Africa.

Bassekou Kouyate, masterful player of the ngoni, and other members of his highly respected family showed Stern the instrumental ropes. Ami Sacko, a popular Malian singer often compared to Tina Turner, taught Stern songs and vocal approaches, while her brother Buba also helped Stern work on her ngoni chops. Stern became a member of the family, earning a new name (Oumou) and sharing the many adventures and trials the musicians encountered as they played for presidents or ?ed collapsing festival stages.

It was playing alongside Kouyate at a celebration of the 50th anniversary of Malian independence, as one of 50 ngoni players honoring the occasion, that Stern was ?rst wowed by the deep and resonant ngoni ba, an encounter that sparked Stern’s ?rst ngoni-powered, blues-rich song, “Still Bleeding.”

Yet the most powerful moment that became Sabani, the spare follow up to Stern’s more lavishly arranged Africa-inspired work, was the feeling Stern savored as she jammed with friends from Keita’s band, string whiz Haruna Samake and artful percussionist Mamadou “Prince” Kone, who brings some of Mali’s lesser-known rhythms to the album.

Hanging around bus stations and airports, waiting for Keita, or meeting up in the evenings, the three friends often drank sugar-laden tea and made music together, blending their instruments and voices simply and organically.

This vibe bursts through on tracks like “Sorcerer,” which pairs Stern’s sharp, gritty, often eerie guitar with Samake’s round and percussive string work, and Stern’s Ricky Lee Jones-esque vocals with a warm, serpentine chorus in bambara Instrumentals like “An Saba” and “The Cat Who Stole the Moon” show both the virtuosity of crack players and the close listening of good friends, as contrasting yet harmonious melodies and timbres dance in dynamic interplay.

As the project came together in the relaxed atmosphere of Mouffou’s riverside studio, Stern also invited Sacko to sing (the bittersweet “Papillon”), and learned a thing or two from veteran sokou (folk ?ddle) player and singer Zoumana Tareta. Tareta regaled the three friends with both wisdom earned from his life as a sought-after musician (by stars like Oumou Sangare, for example) and with the gripping vocal performance that graces “Djanfa.”

These experiences have transformed and deeply moved the seasoned Stern, filling her with a quiet, unexpected sense of coming home, a moody warmth that pervades Sabani.

“After all my time in Africa, all the musicians I’ve gotten to work with, I feel like a different guitarist, a different person, like I belong to the red earth and the warm winds and the people I love there,” Stern muses. ”I don’t think anyone can go and live there without changing profoundly. And we have a lot to learn from Africa.”

Monday's mp3: Wilkommen in GerMali

A lot of my global music friends seemed to take delight in shunning yesterday's Super Bowl. Me, I didn't ignore it entirely, although it wasn't until Wednesday or Thursday last week that I realized it was imminent. No, I pulled the TV over near the kitchen so I could bake bread and cook other delectables while keeping an ear on the game.

I'm a regular viewer (and player) of the other kind of football, the kind the rest of the world plays. And my view of American football isn't far removed from that of George Will, who quipped: "Football combines the two worst things about America: it is violence punctuated by committee meetings." 


But as some sort of cultural commentator, I find value in keeping at least a tenuous connection with the popular happenings in my own country as well as seeking out the sounds of faraway lands. And it wasn't such a bad game, even for those of us with no horse in the race. On the music front, I have to admire the logistics of squeezing a major stage show onto a grass field with just a few minutes for setup and teardown, and I'll admit that Madonna is a consummate entertainer, if not particularly engaging or original. 

All of which brings us around to music I'm much more excited about. I haven't stopped listening to The Rough Guide to the Music of Morocco since posting about it last week, so be sure to check that out. 

This week, we head a bit farther south, to where German-born Leni Stern is collaborating with some Malians in a project that reminds me a bit of the work of Markus James. On her new album Sabani, Stern not only plays her guitars but also the n'goni ba, her love of which goes back to a visit to West Africa in 2006:



I have been playing the n’goni since I first came to Mali in 2006 to
perform at The Festival in the Desert. I met Bassekou Kouyate there, Mali’s
most famous n’goni player. He and his whole family have been teaching
me ever since. Last September we performed together at the presidential
palace to celebrate the 50th anniversary of independence. 50 years - 50
n’goni's. In the 50 n’goni orchestra, I sat next to the n’goni ba, the
instrument of Basskou’s father, played by his bother Fousseni. I fell in
love with its warm, soft sound.


Along with her primary collaborators -- Haruna Samake and Mamadou Kone -- Stern has crafted eight engaging, lyrical songs. With lyrics in both English and unspecified African languages (Mande, I presume), the songs are more examples of the increasing tendency toward borderless music. The blending of Western and Jali instruments feels natural, a modern sound with deep roots in African tradition that support but don't constrain.

The album is too short at 34 minutes, but they are a rich 34 minutes. Just check out the bluesy blend on "I Was Born (Ibe Keneya)" and you'll get a feel for their sound.



Stern is currently on tour in the USA.

Tour dates:
02|07|2012 Yoshi's - San Francisco - CA
02|12|2012 Nighttown - Cleveland - OH
02|14|2012 Blue Whale - Los Angeles - CA
02|15|2012 Compound Grill - Phoenix - AZ
02|16|2012 The Outpost - Albuquerque - NM
02|17|2012 Alvas Showroom - San Pedro - CA
02|18|2012 Old Town School of Folk - Chicago - IL


More Leni Stern:
Listen/buy CD
website
facebook
Bandcamp
video 

Diego Garcia “You Were Never There” (Pacha Massive Remix)

Fellow Nuevayorquinos (and Nacional labelmates) Diego Garcia and Pacha Massive are offering a free download of this new remix to “You Were Never There”.

 

“You Were Never There” is one of the most popular songs from Diego Garcia’s critically-acclaimed debut ‘Laura‘.  On this remix, Pacha Massive brings a sensual, ambient feel to Diego Garcia’s haunting and melodic original.

 

Diego Garcia‘s unplugged album “Live From SoHo’ – a 6 song EP recorded live at the Apple store in NYC - is now available exclusively on iTunes, featuring 5 songs from ‘Laura’ plus a classic Kinks cover.

 

Pacha Massive is a creative collaboration between Dominican-born Nova (keys/guitar /writer/producer) and Colombian-born Maya (writer/bass). The band was Nacional Records’ first U.S.-based signing. Their music is a funky bilingual fusion of traditional Latin rhythms like Colombian cumbia, Dominican palo, reggae, dancehall, dub and electronica. Get their 2009 album ‘If You Want It” from iTunes.

 

 

Also check out Gnotes’ remix of Diego Garcia’s “Stay” for more free downloads.

 

 

DJ Raff – Video Premiere of “Digital Rain”

 

An experimental turntablist from Chile-by-way-of Spain,t DJ Raff just dropped this new video for his latest single “Digital Rain” from his debut album Latino & Proud.

 

 

The video officially debuted at XLR8R, with Prefix following up with support.

 

Having shared the stage with Beastie Boys, A-Trak amd Prefuse 73, DJ Raff has been  called “the best DJ/turntablist in Latin America” by Remezcla.

 

Plus get your FREE DOWNLOAD of “Digital Rain” below.

 

 

Follow DJ Raff on Facebook and Twitter

Lord Cry Cry

Been meaning to post this one for a little while, came out at the end of last year on Generation Bass. Lord Cry Cry is a mix of a little Tom Waits, a little Dick Dale thrown in the post-dubstep world. Truly unique, maybe a Captain Beefheart for our generation. Check the video below and more info after the jump.


Myanmar's All-Girl Band Me N Ma Girls

Me N Ma Girls is an all-girl group from Myanmar (Burma). The girls conjure up images of the Spice Girls and other female pop singers like Britney Spears with their colorful wigs and dance tunes.

Spotlight: Super Hi-Fi - "Single Payer"


If you read the Afropop Blog on the regular then you know we got some mad love for Electric Cowbell Records. Somehow these guys just keep on digging out some great music from bands that really present creatively tight, sonically-rich, organic sounds that blend various styles into some goodness for your ears. On top of that they still got love for vinyl and good looking album covers. Always a plus.

This time we just got a track from the Brooklyn-based Super Hi-Fi who just dropped a new seven-inch via Electric Cowbell. Side A features a dubby Afrobeat offering called "Single Payer." The first half slowly unwinds like a Skatalites track co-opted by King Tubby before the second half picks up the pace as the brass comes in for a gorgeous conclusion.

Hear for yourself:



You can pick up the seven-inch now via their website.

Finally, if you are in New York be sure to check them out at Zebulon in Williamsburg on February 16th with Spanglish Fly. Show is free and starts at 9pm.

-Saxon Baird

Sierra Nevada World Music Festival 2012 Program Announced

The 19th annual Sierra Nevada World Music Festival will take place on June 22, 23 & 24, 2012 at the Mendocino County Fairgrounds located in the heart of the Anderson Valley in Boonville, California.

The reggae festival announced the list of initial artists confirmed to appear in Boonville this June. Artist scheduled include Luciano, Third World, The Twinkle Brothers, Lutan Fyah, Johnny Osbourne, Romain Virgo, David Rodigan, Perfect, Locos Por Juana, Zion Train, and Dub Nation

More at: www.snwmf.com




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Leading World Fusion Band Zoobazar Announces Spanish Tour

Zoobazar

Zoobazar, one of the best world fusion bands in the international scene will be touring Spain. This is part of the Girando por Salas (Gira GPS) series, whicvh brings several bands of various genres to Spanish music clubs.

Zoobazar hails from Madrid, Spain’s multicultural city, and features renowned musicians such as the former Radio Tarifa oud player, La Musgaña’s fiddler, La Shica and Eliseo Parra’s drummer, and the bass player for rock band GN3.

The current line-up includes Amir-John Haddad on oud, bouzouki, saz; Diego Galaz on fiddle, strohviol, mandolin, saw; Pablo Martín Jones on drums and percussion; and Hector Tellini on bass.

Zoobazar’s music straddles various Mediterranean genres (Iberian folk music, Turkish, Balkan, Greek, Middle Eastern, North African) fusing it with western elements such as funk, rock and jazz.

RNE3 Concert Broadcast by TVE2 on January 11, 2012

The band’s debut álbum, titled “Uno” came ourt in 2011

Concert dates:

9 February

Santiago de Compostela

Borriquita de Belén

21.30h.

10 February

Caldas del Rey (Pontevedra)

Punto 87

21:30h.

18 February

Cáceres

El Corral de las Cigueñas

21:30h.

1 March

Madrid

Sala Moe

22:30h.

31 March

Santander

Café de las Artes

22:00h.




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Meet the Songlines Team

Continuing our ‘Meet the Songlines Team’, we’d like to introduce you to one of our team members, intern Louise Ungless.

How long have you been working at Songlines?

For one month only. It’s flown by!

What is your middle name?

Helen.

What do you want to be when you grow up? 

I wanted to be a pilot, but soon realised I wasn’t a major fan of flying.

What is your all-time favourite album?

Bjork’s Greatest Hits. Always a winner for when I’m in the mood for some of her classics.

What are you listening to at this very second? 

An interesting office debate on world music…

First musical memory?

Watching a Michael Jackson concert on TV with my Dad. I’ve been obsessed ever since.

What is your claim to fame?

Being in a Bollywood movie. I thought I’d be dressed in a glamorous sari, but instead they put me in an orange wig and matching feather bower.

What’s your hidden talent?

I can play ‘For He’s a Jolly Good Fellow’ on the accordion.

What drink best describes you?

Rum and Coke. Laidback, happy and bubbly.

If you were a festival which one would you be?

Sziget Festival, Hungary. It offers every kind of music, which suits my broad taste.

Find out more about Lousie by checking her out online:

Website: www.musika.uk.com (coming very soon) A website for underground and contemporary music

Linked In: http://uk.linkedin.com/pub/louise-ungless/40/6ab/275

Tumblr: http://louiseungless.tumblr.com/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/#!/LouiseUngless