Music / verdensmusik - world music

Kiriké


Reviews (2)


Gaffa [online]

d. 25. Oct. 2014

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By

Torben Holleufer

d. 25. Oct. 2014

"At pladen er så god, skyldes ikke mindst den franske klassiske cellist Vincent Segal, som dels har produceret og dels lægger udsøgte og diskrete cellolinjer ind i musikkens fintvævede net. Segal har tidligere arbejdet med koraspilleren Ballaké Sissoko - Toumani Diabatés berømte fætter - og det er i det hele taget et superhold med de klassiske instrumenter ngoni, balafon og kora, som er inde og lægge den autentiske mandé-lyd over hvilken jeli'en eller grioten Kasse Mady Diabaté kan lade sin stemmepragt tage os med tilbage til den bardetradition, som er hans dåbsgave og bestemmelse. Og resultatet er på en gang underspillet og monumentalt".


fRoots

2014 November

By

By

Rick Sanders

2014 November

"Salif Keita says [Kassé Mady Diabaté] is the greatest singer in Mali. What higher accolade? You quickly spot Kassé's similarity to Salif in terms of phrasing, the end-of-line cadences, the sudden rush to cram more into a line than good measure would permit, contrasting preceding contemplation and repose with sudden heart-stopping intensity. One area where they differ is the volume knob. Mady doesn't have - or chooses not to use - Salif's extreme blowlamp technique. He's more contemplative and close-quarters, especially as heard on this CD. But his baritone doesn't lack intensity. Absolutely the reverse. It just is not so loud. Cellist Vincent Segal and kora player Ballake Sissokho had already released two albums when they asked Kassé Mady to join them [adding] Lansine Kouyaté on balafon and Makan Tounkara on ngoni. What a tight ship, what complexity from a small acoustic orchestra, what a voice. All-star indeed".