A griot’s job
description is rather diverse. Musician, historian, town crier, the hereditary
bards or djeli of West Africa are revered for their skill.
Billed as the `new generation of griot soul’ Trio Da Kali from
Mali showcased this craft to The Junction Saturday night
leaving Cambridge in awe.
The
latest offering from world music promoters Making Tracks,Trio Da
Kali’s concert began with the clear vibrato voice of Hawa Kasse Mady Diabaté
singing an a capella welcome. Joined by Balafon (xylophone)
player Lassana Diabaté and Mamadou Kouyaté on three stringed N’goni lute,
the musicians wove regal melodies around Hawa’s haunting voice whilst she
provided percussion, tossing and catching a Yabara calabash
shaker.
Explaining
in French that the trio formed to `revive this music before it disappears’ the
first half consisted of songs of advice and responsibility sung in Bamanakan, typical
of the repertoire for which Hawa is in high demand at wedding parties in Mali’s
capital Bamako. Dressed in the stiff damask or bazin cotton
reserved for such occasions, the trio glowed in every sense.
As
Lassana played bright runs and arpeggios on his buzzing balafon, Mamadou
answered by expressively fretting his n’goni, whilst even Hawa’s humming was
magnificent, eliciting shouts of `namu!’ (indeed!) from serenely smiling
Lassana.
Speaking
before the show, musical director Lassana explained `before radio, internet or
telephone, the griot was all of these’ and stressed the djeli’s role as
messenger and mediator. Asked if life had returned to normal after the recent
crisis in Mali he replied positively but with the griot’s economic eloquence
`it’s easy to make war, but not easy to make peace.’
After
an interval in which many purchased the group’s eponymous EP released
by World Circuit Records, the group returned for a second half
consisting of celebratory danceable numbers such as` Yirimadjo’ a homage to the
Bamako neighbourhood where Lassana resides. Kicking of her heels, beaming Hawa
who in the first half had been as commanding as any teacher, proved the griot
know how to party as well as advise.
Closing
with `Eh Ya Ye’ a song by her famous father Kasse Mady Diabaté, Hawa, Lassana
and Mamadou (whose curled slippers were straight out of One Thousand
and One Nights) humbly received the audience’s overwhelmed ovation.