Product Details
Segu Blue

Segu Blue
Bassekou Kouyate & Ngoni ba

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Track Listing

  1. Tabli Te
  2. Bassekou
  3. Jonkoloni
  4. Juru Nani - Kouyate, Bassekou & Ngoni Ba/Kasse Mady Diabate
  5. Mbowdi - Kouyate, Bassekou & Ngoni Ba/Zoumana Tereta
  6. River Tune
  7. Andra's Song
  8. Ngoni Fola
  9. Banani - Kouyate, Bassekou & Ngoni Ba/Lobi Traore
  10. Bala - Kouyate, Bassekou & Ngoni Ba/Kasse Mady Diabate
  11. Lament For Ali Farka
  12. Segu Blue (Poyi)

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #5015 in Music
  • Released on: 2007-03-26
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .27 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Observer Music Monthly (Charlie Gillett)
There's a delicious sound to this record, whose warm, cohesive textures linger in the mind long after it finishes, luring the listener to go and play it again ... Remarkable.

Jazzwise
A delight from start to finish, both modernising and exploring the traditions of the ancient traditional lute. International recognition for the ngoni is long overdue. Glorious.

The Guardian
Both ancient and utterly contemporary .... like some African answer to Hendrix.


Customer Reviews

high quality unique African sound5
This album provides over an hour of high-quality African music which would be a good way in for someone wanting to hear some traditionally-flavoured African music, or for those like me building a collection of the increasingly excellent stuff coming out of Africa these days.

The album centres on the ngoni, a four-stringed banjo/guitar type instrument, which originated in one particular part of Africa.

The tracks are a mixture of slower and more upbeat tempos, and the musicians use a variety of vocalists on the album, including some excellent female vocalists, but whether the tracks are instrumental or full songs, each one is an experience.

Nearly as good as seeing them live5
I was fortunate enough to see Bassekou and his Ngoni Ba live and I spent the entire concert with a big grin on my face (I couldn't help it). The exuberance, style and sheer fun of them playing together also comes across on the album. If,like me, you don't know much about African music but want a great place to start you may just have found it. The problem will be finding something as good to follow it

If you only buy one Malian album ever... buy this!5
I bought this CD on the day of release thanks to a fantastic review I read in the Observer Music Monthly magazine a few months before (it's so unfair that these critics get their promos so early - not so much a review as simply just showing off!).

I have bought many Malian music recordings prior to this one and have to say that this is the jewel in the crown and the icing on the proverbial cake! The malian diva Oumou Sangare often used these Ngoni instruments in the background to her songs and it's really refreshing to hear that the Ngoni has now taken centre stage at last.

The highlights on this recording has to be "Jonkoloni" or the title track at the end ("Segu Blue"). Jonkoloni is a fast-ish skit like song with intricate polyrhythmic looped riffing from the Ngoni of varying sizes - listen out for the largest, lowest sounding one and hear how the player seems to be in a world of his own. The rhythms he plays doesn't seem to adhere to that of the rest of the group - comparable almost to Steve Reich!

The last track Segu Blue pays hommage to the link between Mailian music and it's offspring, the Blues. It's an instrumental tune with some great improvising in it with an obvious 12-bar Blues type riff right at the end to fade. It has to be heard to be believed! Hearing this had the same affect on me as when I heard the Pink Panther theme during the infamous Friday Night in San Francisco concert - I had to rewind it to double-check that I wasn't going mad!

If you're someone wondering where to start with regards to buying Malian music, then please look no further. You shall no be disappointed.

N.B. I use the term Malian music instead of the popular 'African' music term, as it is like using the term European music. It simply doesn't exist. Africa is a huge continent, and the music types vary from country to country massively.