Toumani Diabaté
@ the Barbican Centre
2 June 2010
Click an image to enlarge.
Toumani Diabaté Biography
Toumani Diabate was born on August 10, 1965, in
Mali, West Africa. He is of the griot or djeli caste, a lineage
of musicians which can be traced over 70 generations, according
to family oral tradition. Toumani Diabate plays the kora, a 21-stringed
harp made from a calabash gourd, an instrument which has changed
little over centuries. He was a child prodigy, who began playing
at age 5 and performing by age 13.
Toumani Diabate made his international debut with
1988’s “kaira”, an album often acknowledged as
the finest solo kora work ever recorded. acknowledged as the finest
20 years that followed, Diabate focused mainly on collaborative
work, recording with both his fellow Malians (including Ali Farka
Toure, Ballake Sissoko, and Vieux Farka Toure) as well as musicians
of international renown (including Taj Mahal, Bjork, and flamenco
group Ketama). Diabate also recorded with The Symmetric Orchestra,
a group of griots that he hand-selected from across West Africa.
In 2008, he released The Mande Variations, his first solo kora record
in 20 years.
Toumani Diabate has been honoured and feted around
the globe for his accomplishments. Most notably, in 2004, he was
the first black African to receive the Zyriab des Virtuoses, a UNESCO
prize, He also won the Grammy Award in the Best Traditional World
Music Album category for “In the Heart of the Moon”,
a collaboration with Ali Farka Toure, who unfortunately passed away
shortly before the record was released.
|