The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 

Griot act

Malian performer Rokia Traoré breaks through with Tchamantché
By TED DROZDOWSKI  |  February 12, 2009

092013_rokia_main
SOFT FOCUS: "It's not a question of lacking power. I can sing with power. What I'm interested in is depth."

Some albums are extraordinary because they capture their time. Others are great because they transcend it.

Malian performer Rokia Traoré's arresting new Tchamantché (Lamá/Nonesuch) is one of the latter. With its mix of ancient tradition and modernism, soft, pleasing sounds, and a precision in tone, taste, and timing that extends even to the sigh of her breath as her vocal phrases resolve, Tchamantché arrives as a classic whose influence may ultimately extend beyond the realm of African recordings.

"I'm not trying to do anything unusual with my music," Traoré, whom World Music is bringing to the Somerville Theatre this Friday, modestly insists by phone from Paris. "My music is me."

Yet this latest album's innovations are obvious. Foremost, the disc is propelled by the butterfly flights of her vocal melodies, not rhythms. Drums make only cameo appearances. And the blend of her guitar playing — angular, dry, and unpredictable as American avant-roots hot-shot Marc Ribot's — with the distinctly African balafon and ngoni is striking.

Like Miles Davis's epochal Kind of Blue, which debuted 50 years ago, Tchamantché is elegant and graceful in an almost elemental way. And like Davis's trumpet, Traoré's voice speaks a beautiful universal language. So it doesn't matter that she sings nine of the album's 10 songs of desire, acceptance, longing, and protest in French and Bambara.

Another parallel with Kind of Blue–era Miles is that Traoré already had achieved artistic acclaim for playing a more traditional style of music before making this entrancing album. The 35-year-old diplomat's daughter won the prestigious Radio France Internationale African Discovery prize in 1997 for an approach closer to that of her guitar mentor, Ali Farka Touré. That was a year before her debut, Mouneïssa (Indigo France), was released.

After that, her music blossomed. By 2003 and Bowmboï (Nonesuch), she was collaborating with the Kronos Quartet. Then she was working with Western rhythm sections. In 2006 she wrote a work for Vienna's New Crowned Hope Festival under the artistic direction of the auteur Peter Sellars that cast Mozart as a 13th-century griot.

"Blues, classical, rock and roll, jazz, funk, pop — all these are part of me," she relates. "I started listening to all kinds of music in my father's collection when I was five. He played albums for me because I was his child who was instantly interested in music."

Yet her father later opposed her decision to become a musician, fearing she'd be doomed to poverty in a profession dominated by arrogant males. "I never felt I would fail. I told him if I needed money I could always be a housekeeper, but if I hadn't decided to become a musician, I might have been an architect or a teacher. As things have occurred, now my father is very proud."

Certainly she is an exceptional student. It's not surprising that Traoré considers Miles Davis an important influence, along with Billie Holiday, whose "The Man I Love" she sings in English on Tchamantché. Salif Keita, Ella Fitzgerald, and Louis Armstrong are on her short list, as well as female Malian singers like Oumou Sangaré. She even performed in an American-style hip-hop band before launching her solo career.

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Photos: Dirty Projectors and Vieux Farka Touré live at Somerville Theatre, Slideshow: The Slutcracker, St. Vincent's Actor gets a run-through, More more >
  Topics: Music Features , Entertainment, Music, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart,  More more >
  • Share:
  • Share this entry with Facebook
  • Share this entry with Digg
  • Share this entry with Delicious
  • RSS feed
  • Email this article to a friend
  • Print this article
Comments

Today's Event Picks
ARTICLES BY TED DROZDOWSKI
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   MYSTIC MUSO  |  November 04, 2009
    “America’s Pre-eminent Music Writer Dead at 52” was the headline on Robert Palmer’s obituary in Rolling Stone after his liver failed in 1997.
  •   BRENDAN HOGAN | LONG NIGHT COMING  |  October 21, 2009
    Self-released (2009)
  •   DARRELL NULISCH | JUST FOR YOU  |  October 22, 2009
    This Boston-based blues and soul singer’s seventh album might seem an update of the elegantly funky Stax sound, with its deep grooves and smartly harmonized horns.
  •   REVIEW: TOM RUSSELL | BLOOD AND CANDLE SMOKE  |  September 22, 2009
    This LA-born troubadour with a Dustbowl voice works voodoo on his 24th studio album, conjuring ghosts of the ’60s and ’70s along with apocalyptic visions as he relates tales of gun-toting madmen and dark rifts of the heart.
  •   TAKING CARE OF BUSINESS  |  September 14, 2009
    Boston is one of the healthiest markets for live roots music in the country. Here are the 10 roots shows we don't want to miss this fall.

 See all articles by: TED DROZDOWSKI

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed 



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2009 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group