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| Wychwood
Festival (Cheltenham, UK) - 4 June 2005 |
The
Independent, UK
‘Mory
Kanté’s band have been thoroughly road-tested,
and their seamless, superbly performed set drew largely
on his spectacular acoustic album, Sabou, along
with reworkings of a handful of his Afropop hits from
the Eighties. Their sound ranges from Kanté’s
intricately delicate guitar picking to dense, multilayered
soundscapes flowing across the inventive work of his
two balafon players.’
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| GlobalFEST
(New York City) – 8 January 2005 |
New
York Press, USA January
‘Griot, kora player and singer Kanté
is to Guinean dance-folk what Caetano Veloso is to
Brazilian Tropicalia: an untouchable master of form,
funk and subtlety whose oral histories should be as
historical as any holy text. After not having performed
in New York City for 14 years, Kanté comes
representing the acoustic funk of Sabou, a CD filled
with ancient traditionalism kept sacred while being
pushed into modernity – a cool rootsy groove
whose dusted nastiness makes the Dirty South seem
as spotlessly gleaming as Kraftwerk’s Dusseldorf
studio in comparison. Like singer Salif Keita only
chattier, Kanté’s richly textured voice
lives each portrait he paints – even if you
can’t tell what he’s singing.’
Time
Out New York, USA January
‘…perhaps the most surprising change of
heart came last year when international star Mory
Kanté dropped Sabou. The slickness
dominating his recent albums is gone, replaced with
the ancient sounds that nurtured Kanté’s
riveting, acrid voice before the world came calling…
That means Kanté’s first appearance in
the States in 14 years (as part of the Public Theatre’s
second annual globalFEST) will be markedly different
from the last two, when he rocked Central Park and
the Apollo Theatre within months of each other. Like
Maal and Keita, however, Kanté hasn't given
up all the tricks he’s learned over the years:
A few tracks on Sabou, most notably the subtle boogie
track ‘Mama’, are evidence that Kanté
is still adept at making his native traditions work
in da’ club. Bet his touring band is prepared
to field praise songs or Afrodisco.’
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| S.O.B.'s
(New York City) – 7 January 2005 |
New
York Times, USA January 12
‘Mory Kanté performed his first
New York City concert in 14 years on Friday night
at S.O.B.’s with a band of acoustic instruments.
It wasn’t traditional music; it was Mr. Kanté’s
latest, and best, pop hybrid… The songs, like
griot songs, are full of conscientious advice: consider
consequences, share kindness and compassion, cherish
love and knowledge. They often used the long, asymmetrical
melodies of griot songs, circling through a few chords
with Mr. Kanté’s kora and a pair of balafons
sharing trickling, meshing patterns at the centre
of the songs. A wooden flute and two female singers
joined Mr. Kanté or responded to him. But the
songs had brisk unison hooks too. And along with West
Africa, the music held glimmers of the Caribbean and
the Americas: a hint of a reggae backbeat, a rumba
lilt, a steady 4/4 thump connecting the Mandeng rhythm
of "Biriya" to dance clubs. From the music's
transparent patterns, flurries of activity leaped
out: Mr. Kanté plucking his kora in brusque,
insistent off-beats and then dissolving them into
swirling arpeggios, or the poker-faced virtuoso Adama
Condi on balafon, suddenly skittering through the
music at triple speed. Just before 3 a.m., Mr. Kanté
got around to "Yeke Yeke," proclaiming it
"acoustique" and "traditionelle."
It was all dance music, and it brought a world of
experience back home.'
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| Jazz
Festival (Queen Elizabeth Hall, London) – 17 November
2004 |
The
Guardian, UK - 3***stars
‘His new album Sabou was one of the
best African releases of the year, with its mixture
of subtlety and energy… He came on in white
robes, surrounded by a band that included ancient
instruments like the bolon, which acts like
a bass, and the balafon, the African xylophone,
along with an array of percussion and an electric
guitarist… He started full-tilt and stayed that
way, so by the fourth song he had the audience on
their feet and joining in the massed percussion. There
was little variety, but there were some great moments,
thanks to his powerful vocals, the rousing work from
his three matronly backing singers on new songs like
Mama, and some virtuoso balafon solos from
the laconic Adama Conde.’
The
Independent, UK
‘Once
the purveyor of Afro-Western dancefloor hits, with
Sabou, he has returned to his West African
roots, and as live experiences go, it is hard to beat.
By the start of the irrepressibly buoyant ‘Loninya’
(‘Knowledge’), the audience is on its
feet and streaming down the aisles to dance, and that
kinetic energy is sustained by the rousing encore
of his Eighties hit ‘Yeke Yeke’…
The music tonight is a sea of multi-layered sound
patterns, endlessly permutating from balafon
to kora to guitar and a panoply of percussion
that builds up like the musical equivalent of perpetual
motion, both extraordinary physical and powerfully
hypnotic. You hear phrases and lines repeated time
and again, bubbling and metamorphosing in the mix,
around which flow seemingly effortless instrumental
and vocal improvisations. Kanté’s famous
voice is as emotionally powerful as ever, and with
the new music from Sabou, he is at the pinnacle
of his career.’
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| Big
Big World Festival in The Arches, Glasgow - 25 October
2004 |
The
Herald, Glasgow concert in The Arches - Four****stars
‘Orchestra is no overstatement here and an orchestrator
is what Kante proved to be, conducting his charges
through the stop-start intricacies and densely textured
accompaniments, and using his three backing singers
variously as a horn section, massed surrogate synthesisers
and a ululating choir responding with high-pitched,
shapely phrasing to his insistent, singing calls…
although he didn’t play it [the kora] himself
last night – preferring acoustic guitar and
kora – he had a master exponent by his side,
hammering out patterns that flew over the beat with
an air of nonchalance that belied the effort and imagination
involved… there was much perspiring as the drum
section created a fervent clamour behind Kante’s
songs… His song Sabou speaks of the many problems
Africa faces, but it’s an optimistic message
and one thing’s for certain: when they do overcome
them, if Kante’s band is involved, there’s
going to be on helluva party.’
Sunday
Herald (Glasgow) 31 October – 4****stars
‘Another of this year’s star attractions
was the Guinean griot Mory Kanté,
one of the original pioneers of the world music movement…
Kanté recently returned to his roots with his
acoustic-based album Sabou, the format of
which was echoed by his 10-strong accompanying entourage,
featuring balafon, African flute, traditional
percussion and three backing singers as well as his
own kora and acoustic guitar. The charismatic
centrepiece of a thrilling performance was Kanté’s
searingly urgent, resonantly forceful singing, but
further highlights were provided by the brilliantly
tight-knit interplay between balafon and
kora and some splendidly ferocious djembe
solos.’
The
Scotsman, Glasgow concert in The Arches - Five*****stars
‘He may look like a cheeky youthful chap, but
there’s a wealth of experience behind Mory Kante’s
big brown eyes and infectious smile… as a result,
last night’s Arches performance was something
of a cultural-lesson-cum-concert, as the West African
singer introduced us to a whole array of gorgeous
instruments and music from his latest acoustic release,
Sabou. We boogied to the balafon and the bolon, clapped
along with the kora and tapped our feet to the talking
drums, as Kante, resplendent in white, sat centre-stage
leading his colourful nine-piece band… each
member played an invaluable part in producing a warm
and intoxicating sound with standout displays from
the three female singers with golden vocals who shook
their hair and swung their bright costumes in time
to the music while grinning from ear to ear. The wide-eyed
drummer dished out super speed rhythmic tricks. The
multi-layered and intricate sound was so huge it was
hard to take in at times, but, if you let the soaring
melodies wash over you and the percussion sweep you
off your feet, this was magical stuff.’
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| Queen
Elizabeth Hall, London – May 2004 |
Evening
Standard
‘Triumph of the kora king…
the traditional instruments behind him – wooden
balafon xylophone, ngoni lute, kora
harp; tama, doundoun and djembe
drums – hinted at a return to rhythmic roots.
Kante’s waterfall of percussion, swirled towards
the high-pitched harmonies of his backing vocalists,
found counterpoints in poignant wooden flute and the
balafon’s enchanted plinking. It was like peering
under the lid of a West African music box, with Kante
and his soaring tenor at the centre.’
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