
16:30 - 17:30
Sean Rafferty presents a selection of music and guests from the arts world.
![]() 听 ![]() ETRAN FINATAWA听(NIGER) ![]() Many a music fan鈥檚 first glimpse of Etran Finatawa (鈥楾he stars of tradition鈥) will have been at a summer festival, where they could have been forgiven for thinking there had been a major mix-up backstage, resulting in two completely different bands appearing on the same bill. At the same time. And such a first impression isn鈥檛 so wide of the mark 鈥 鈥淥n va chantez ensemble! Ce n鈥檈st pas difficile,鈥 exhorts Ghalitane Khamidoune, perhaps addressing his colleagues as much as the audience. His electric guitar and shiny brown turban and robes identify him as a Touareg tribesman. He鈥檚 joined by two other similarly dressed performers, plus three very tall, androgynously dressed Wodaabe men with ostrich feathers billowing from white turbans, and long flowing dress-like garments, their faces strikingly divided by vertical yellow lines. Fusion isn鈥檛 always such a good idea, but this one seems particularly natural and inspired. The strange but wonderful group has its origins in the music scene of Niger鈥檚 capital Niamey, where a combination of war and drought has forced many nomadic people to settle in recent years. Historically, these two distinct ethnic groups have sometimes found themselves in conflict over competition for scarce resources, and racism. But in a blue-sky thinking move, Ghalitane鈥檚 group Etran N鈥橤uefan (鈥榯he Stars of the Dunes鈥) joined forces with the groundbreaking Wodaabe performance group Finatawa for a joint show at the legendary Festival in the Desert in neighbouring Mali in 2004. The gig was so well received they decided to merge their ensembles 鈥 hence the hybrid name. The cultural yin and yang of this combination also works its magic on their debut CD, Introducing Etran Finatawa (2006). The raggedly distorted 鈥榙esert blues鈥 guitar lines and loping camel rhythms of the Touareg musicians are given extra bounce by the Wodaabe drums and stiff-palmed clapping, and Touareg 鈥榗alls鈥 are met by wailing Wodaabe responses on each others鈥 folksongs. Even though they speak very different languages, the two musical traditions complement each other well. Etran Finatawa are the latest and best dressed exponents of a wave of sub-Saharan nomad bands, who, like Tinariwen and Tartit before them, are conquering new territories with music as their only weapon. Jon Lusk Read other people's comments then听
Ady, Witney
Tony Skipper Coventry UK
STEVE...HOUSTON
Sonia-Brazil
Nilc茅ia - Florian贸polis/Brasil
Sarah, London
Sarah, London
Tariq Khan, London
terry andrews, banbury uk
Kate, Bonn
Ron White
Eddie Punch, Freiburg, Germany
Manahuna, Berlin |
|
||||||||||||||
麻豆社 漏 2014 The 麻豆社 is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read more.
This page is best viewed in an up-to-date web browser with style sheets (CSS) enabled. While you will be able to view the content of this page in your current browser, you will not be able to get the full visual experience. Please consider upgrading your browser software or enabling style sheets (CSS) if you are able to do so.