TOUMANI & SIDIKI DIABATÉ EMBARK ON FALL 2014 U.S. TOUR IN SUPPORT OF NEW ALBUM TOUMANI & SIDIKI, OUT MAY 19

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TOUMANI & SIDIKI DIABATÉ EMBARK ON FALL 2014 U.S. TOUR IN SUPPORT OF NEW ALBUM TOUMANI & SIDIKI, OUT MAY 19

The Guardian Calls Father-And-Son Recording “The Finest Toumani Collaboration Since His Classic Work With Ali Farka Touré.”

Mali’s Toumani Diabaté is widely recognized as the greatest living kora player. The Observer has deemed him “one of the world’s pre-eminent musicians in any genre.” Since recording the first solo kora album, in 1988, he has brought the instrument, a 21-string African harp, to the world with albums, tours, GRAMMY Awards and collaborations with the likes of Ali Farka Touré, Herbie Hancock, Damon Albarn and Bjork, among others. President Barack Obama has cited Toumani’s collaboration with Taj Mahal as his all-time favorite album, and The Guardian has already called the father-and-son recording Toumani & Sidiki “the finest Toumani collaboration since his classic work with Ali Farka Touré.” In support of the album, out May 19 via World Circuit, Toumani & Sidiki will embark on a U.S. tour, September 24-October 3, 2014. A preliminary tour schedule is below. More dates will be announced soon.

The ties binding Toumani and Sidiki Diabaté are profound and evocative. Toumani & Sidiki continues a staggeringly long line of Diabaté family musicians. Toumani and his son were born into a 71-generation, 700-year dynasty of griots, custodians of the ancient oral traditions of West Africa’s Mandé people. Indeed, the very names “Toumani” and “Sidiki” are significant in the annals of African music. Toumani’s father, Sidiki senior, recorded the first-ever kora album, the classic Mali: Ancient Strings, in 1970, unwrapping the instrument’s potential as a virtuosic lead instrument. Toumani has taken it further, weaving together bass lines, ancient melodies and astonishing improvisations to create a kaleidoscope of musical colors.

Sidiki, Toumani’s eldest son, moves things forward again. In Bamako, the 23-year-old is a star. Voted Mali’s best beat maker in 2013, Sidiki runs his own recording and programming studio and, with rapper Iba One, comprises the country’s premier hip-hop duo, which fills the 20,000-seat Modibo Keita stadium. At the same time, he has a deep knowledge of Mandé culture and a formidable technique on the kora. “It’s a dream to play with my father,” Sidiki says. “Yes, I’m a hip-hop artist, but I love and respect my roots as a kora player, I want to know more. It’s my chance to learn directly from my father. It’s extra special because my father is my idol.”

World Circuit’s Nick Gold produced Toumani & Sidiki with engineer Jerry Boys (Ali Farka Touré, Buena Vista Social Club, Orchestra Baobab), a longtime collaborator, and with Lucy Duran, producer of Toumani’s previous albums, as co-producer. The album is a set of unaccompanied kora duets, recorded live at London’s RAK studios with little rehearsal (for some tunes, no rehearsal) and no overdubs. The album was captured in stereo, so Toumani is heard in the left speaker and Sidiki in the right.  

The repertoire is based on a combination of obscure, almost forgotten kora pieces and a new look at some Mandé classics from Mali. “We’re not going backwards, trying to play just how my father and grandfather did these songs,” says Toumani. “We have to do it our way. We’re modern griots, we live in the city, we’re connected to the world. Speaking of his desire to transmit ancestral repertoire in a contemporary manner, Toumani describes the album as “the past meets the present for the future.”

The album arrives in the wake of the recent hardline Islamic insurgency that threatened a ban on music in the north of Mali. With this album, Toumani aims “to show the positive side of Mali,” to reassert the legacy of a country with access to untold musical riches. The songs are named, in griot tradition, to honor various people, places or events.

The playing is dazzling. Toumani and Sidiki communicate telepathically, finishing of each other’s musical sentences. The kora, often the quietest of instruments, is here played with verve, attack, groove, wit, swing, bounce, ecstatic excitement and exquisite intimacy—and always with a flowing pulse and groove.

Toumani & Sidiki Fall 2014 U.S. Tour Dates

September 24
Brooklyn, NY
Brooklyn Academy of Music
Howard Gilman Opera House

September 26
Los Angeles, CA
UCLA Center For The Arts

Royce Hall

September 27
San Francisco, CA
Miner Auditorium

September 28
Stanford, CA
Bing Concert Hall

October 1
Durham, NC
Duke University

Reynolds Theater

October 3
Arlington, VA
Spectrum

For more information, please visit www.worldcircuit.co.uk or www.toumaniandsidiki.com.

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