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Salif Keita

 
Artist: Salif Keita
Salif Keita

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Followers:

Worked With:

Djene Doumbouya, Souleymanne Doumbia

Formal Connection With:

Soriba Kouyate, Les Ambassadeurs

Relationship With:

  • Born: 1949, Djoliba, Mali
  • Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: World
  • Instrument: Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "Soro", "Amen", "The Mansa of Mali...A Retrospective
  • Representative Songs: "Nyanafin", "Cono", "Mandjou

Biography

Salif Keita gave up a lot to pursue his dreams of a career in music. Born to royal lineage, with ancestral roots going back to Soundjata Keita, the founder of the Malian Empire in 1240, Keita was disowned by his father after announcing his plans to play music. Keita's dreams, however, were too strong to be shattered. Moving to the capitol city of Bamako in 1967, he was soon playing in nightclubs with one of his brothers. Within two years, he was invited to join the Rail Band. A popular, government-sponsored group that played regularly at the Buffet Hotel de la Gare, the Rail Band featured influential Malian guitar player Kante Manfila. Keita's soulful singing soon brought the band to a much higher plateau. In 1973, Keita and several members of the Rail Band relocated to Abidjian, the capitol of Cote d'Ivoire (The Ivory Coast). Renamed Les Ambassadeurs Internationaux, the group continued to attract attention with their lively fusion of Cuban, Zairean, and Malian influences.

In 1977, Keita received the prestigious National Order of Guinea from President Ahmed Sekou Toure. Encouraged to pursue a solo career, Keita moved to Paris in 1984. Settling in the city's Montreuil section, he found a thriving community of more than 15,000 transplanted Malians. Predictions of success proved true with the release of Keita's debut solo album, Soro, in 1987. Produced by Ibrahim Sylla, the album combined African, jazz, funk, Europop, and R&B influences. Keita continued his recording career with several releases for Mango throughout the '90s, including the Mansa of Mali anthology, before moving to Blue Note for Papa in 1999 and then Decca, where he debuted with Moffou in 2002. Moffou was considered some of Keita's finest work to date, and he received a Grammy nomination for the album. Keita then returned to Bamako, Mali, in order to record his next full-length effort, M'Bemba, which came out in 2006. ~ Craig Harris, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Salif Keita
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Salif Keita, center, in Washington, DC. June 28, 2006. Members of his band behind him.

Salif Keita (born August 25, 1949) is an internationally recognized afro-pop singer-songwriter from Mali. He is unique not only because of his reputation as the Golden Voice of Africa, but because he has albinism and is a direct descendant of the founder of the Mali Empire, Sundiata Keita. This royal heritage meant that under the Malian caste system, he should never have become a singer, which was deemed to be a griot’s role.

Keita was born in the city of Djoliba. He was cast out by his family and ostracized by the community because of his albinism, a sign of bad luck in Mandinka culture.[1] He left Djoliba for Bamako in 1967, where he joined the government sponsored Super Rail Band de Bamako. In 1973 Keita joined the group, Les Ambassadeurs. Keita and Les Ambassadeurs fled political unrest in Mali during the mid-1970s for Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire and subsequently changed the group's name to Les Ambassadeurs Internationales. The reputation of Les Ambassadeurs Internationales rose to the international level in the 1970s and in 1977 Keita received a National Order award from the president of Guinea, Sékou Touré.

Keita moved to Paris in 1984 to reach a larger audience. His music combines traditional West African music styles with influences from both Europe and the Americas, while maintaining an overall Islamic style. Musical instruments that are commonly featured in Keita's work include balafons, djembes, guitars, koras, organs, saxophones, and synthesizers.

Keita found success in Europe as one of the African stars of world music, but his work was sometimes criticised for the gloss of its production and for the occasional haphazard quality. However, shortly after the turn of the Millennium he returned to Bamako in Mali to live and record. His first work after going home, 2002's Moffou, was hailed as his best album in many years, and Keita was inspired to build a recording studio in Bamako, which he used for his latest album, M'Bemba, released in October 2005.

Discography

  • Seydou Bathili - 1982
  • Soro - 1987 - Mango
  • Ko-Yan - 1989 - Mango
  • Amen - 1991 - Mango
  • Destiny of a Noble Outcast - 1991 - PolyGram
  • 69-80 - 1994 - Sonodisc
  • Folon - 1995 - Mango
  • Rail Band - 1996 - Melodie
  • Seydou Bathili - 1997 - Sonodisc
  • Papa - 1999 - Blue Note
  • Mama - 2000 - Capitol
  • The Best of Salif Keita - 2001 - Wrasse Records
  • Sosie - 2001 - Mellemfolkeligt
  • Moffou - 2002 - Universal Jazz France
  • The Best of the Early Years - 2002 - Wrasse Records
  • Remixes from Moffou - 2004 - Universal Jazz France
  • M'Bemba - 2005 - Universal Jazz France
  • The Lost Album - 2006 - Cantos

A lot of compilations are available as well [2]

Compiled by Graeme Counsel

, Radio Africa, retrieved 2009-04-20</ref>

References

  1. ^ Artist Profile - Salif Keita
  2. ^ Salif Keita Discography

External links


 
 
Learn More
Africa on Mango (1988 Album by Various Artists)
African Moves, Vol. 2 (1987 Album by Various Artists)
Electro Bamako (2003 Album by Mamani Keita/Marc Minelli)

How did Keita Sundiata die? Read answer...
What does the name keita mean? Read answer...

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Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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