Kandia Kouyaté (also known as Kandja Kouyaté, born in 1959[1] in Kita, Mali) is a Malian jelimuso (a female griot) and kora player; she has earned the prestigious title of ngara, and is sometimes called La dangereuse and La grande vedette malienne. Kouyaté's dense, emotional, hypnotic manner of singing and her lyrical talents have earned huge acclaim in Mali, though she remained relatively little known outside Africa, due to extremely limited availability of her recordings. Her home town of Kita is known for love songs, which form a large part of Kouyaté's repertoire. She also sings praise songs.

Kandia Kouyaté
Kouyaté in concert.
Background information
Also known asKandja Kouyaté
Born1959 (age 64–65)
Kita, Mali
Instrument(s)Kora

Kouyaté's career began in the early 1980s, when she started using female choral vocals accompanying her. This practice was later picked up by stars like Mory Kante and Salif Keita, and is now an integral part of Malian music. In 1983, she recorded[2] two vinyl discs, Amary Daou présente Kandia Kouyaté and Kandja Kouyaté et L’Ensemble Instrumental National du Mali. Her debut solo album is Kita Kan.

Kandia Kouyaté toured Europe in 1999 alongside Guinean singers Sekouba Bambino & Oumou Diabate and with a 12 piece West African ensemble that included kora, djembe, ngoni, balafon, bass, keyboards, backing vocals and percussion. The tour named as 'The Griot Groove Tour' included concerts in Germany, Austria, Norway, Sweden and the United Kingdom.

Kandia Kouyaté suffered a stroke in late 2004.[3] In 2015, she recorded again.

Discography edit

  • Mayomba (1980, local cassette release)
  • Balassama / Sarama (1983, LP, produced by Amary Daou)
  • Kandja Kouyaté et L’Ensemble Instrumental National du Mali (1983, LP)
  • OUA 84 (1984, local cassette release)
  • Projet Dabia (1987, local cassette release)
  • Sa Kunu Sa (1994, local cassette release)
  • Kita Kan (1999, CD, Stern's STCD 1088)
  • Biriko (2002, CD, Stern's STCD 1095)
  • Ngara (2009, compilation tracks 1999/1984/1981)
  • Symphonie Mandingue au Daniel Sorano a Dakar (2011, CD, Elite Production, BP2143)
  • Renaissance, (2015)

References edit

  1. ^ Lucy Durán (2007). "Ngaraya: Women and Musical Mastery in Mali" (PDF). Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies. 70 (3). Cambridge University Press: 574. doi:10.1017/S0041977X07000845.
  2. ^ Malian LP discs at Radio Africa
  3. ^ Eyre, Banning . World Music Productions; Afropop Worldwide, Kandia Kouyaté Archived 2007-03-10 at the Wayback Machine, cited 31 July 2006.

External links edit