| Everyone
knows the majesty of Africa's traditional folk music. But few in the West would
have connected Africa with 'folk' in the guitar-toting, protest-singing sense
- not until two dudes with guitars slipped on stage between sets at last year's
Dakar night at the London Barbican Centre's Urban Beats Festival. Few recognised
Pape and Cheikh, whose powerful melodic songwriting had already set their native
Senegal alight. But they immediately began strumming up a storm, their poignant
airs and driving acoustic energy sending a wave of excitement through the packed
house.
Steeped in the traditions of their Serer region of central Senegal,
but citing Bob Dylan, Cat Stevens and Joan Armatrading among their prime influences,
Pape and Cheikh brilliantly encompass both concepts of folk music. And they're
the latest in a line of Senegalese singing sensations that includes Youssou N'Dour,
Baaba Maal and Cheikh Lo. Back home in Senegal they've already had a political
impact beyond what the likes of Dylan and Baez could ever imagine, and their first
international release, 'Mariama', is destined to be one of the albums of the year.
Papa
Amadou Fall and Cheikhou Coulibaly, born in 1965 and 1961 respectively, grew up
in the central Senegalese town of Kaolack and have been close friends since the
age of eight. Pape, lead singer and principle lyricist, is the poet and romantic
extrovert; Cheikh is the more introspective, yet practical of the two. While Cheikh
stayed on at school, eventually progressing to studies in law, Pape moved to the
capital Dakar, becoming apprenticed to a tailor at age thirteen. Later, at the
suggestion of a foreign aid organisation, he moved back to the Kaolack region
to take part in a batik-printing project, spending seven years in a village in
what was once the Serer kingdom of Sine.
The unchanging savannah landscape,
bleached by remorseless sunlight and dotted with immense baobab trees in whose
hollow trunks griots - traditional praise singers - were buried in times gone
by, had a profound effect on Pape as did the spirit of the Serer people and their
music. Disillusioned with his academic studies, Cheikh joined him, and the pair
began researching traditional Serer music, whose elemental polyphonic singing
has influenced other modern Senegalese musicians, most notably Youssou N'Dour.
It
was all a world away from the youth revolution that was sweeping the West as they
grew up - powered by folk-protest songs such as 'The Times They Are Changing'
and 'Blowing In The Wind'. Yet as well as absorbing a wide variety of traditional
music and the dynamic sounds of modern Senegalese pop, Pape and Cheikh were also
exposed, through the radio, to sounds from much further afield: Bob Marley, Pink
Floyd, Deep Purple, and - most importantly for them - the reflective acoustic
sounds of Dylan and other singer-songwriters.
After continuing their musical
research at Dakar's Conservatoire during 1992 and 1993, Cheikh went on to play
bass with the veteran Senegalese bandleader Ouza, while Pape joined a Serer acoustic
group, Santamuma, on the hotel circuit, singing everything from traditional songs
to Maxi Priest's version of Cat Stevens' 'Wild World' and Elton John's 'Sacrifice'
- and it was to prove excellent experience.
In 1997 the pair established
themselves as a performing act, consciously modelled on Western duos from the
Everly Brothers to Simon and Garfunkel. Signing to Youssou N'Dour's 'Jololi' label
in 1999, they recorded an album with some of Senegal's top musicians, including
Oumar Sow, the brilliant guitarist of Cheikh Lo and Super Diamono fame, and guitarist
Jimi Mbaye and percussionists Mbaye Dieye Faye and Assane Thiam all from N'Dour's
Super Etoile de Dakar. Canadian musician Mac Fallows' production gave their earthy
rhythms a sleek modern feel, with the powerful and magnificently soulful larynx
of teenage singer Mamy adding a devastating touch to the song 'Mariama'.
The
duo were initially frustrated that the album, 'Yakaar', was not given immediate
release in Senegal, but the eventual timing proved fortuitous. Appearing at the
beginning of the 2001 election campaign, their song 'Yatal Gueew' ('Widening the
Circle'), a plea for tolerance and co-operation between Senegal's many different
ethnic, social and religious groups, so caught the public imagination that opposition
leader Abdoulaye Wade adopted it as his official theme - and all but one of the
other 25 parties followed suit! Upon winning, Wade acknowledged that the song
had had a powerful effect on the running of the election in which the party that
had ruled Senegal since independence were removed from power in a completely peaceful
and democratic manner.
Pape and Cheikh's brief appearance at London's
Barbican drew them to the attention of Real World, and in Spring 2002 they re-paired
to Real World's Wiltshire studios with producer Ben Findlay, to work on the original
'Yakaar' tapes and record new songs.
The resulting album, 'Mariama', is
a powerful and extraordinarily coherent slice of Africa traditional and modern,
full of driving, funky rhythm and poignant, yearning melody. It combines a deep
feeling for the enduring themes of African culture, with an understanding of all
the elements necessary to create a truly universal modern song.
"MARIAMA"'
- THE ALBUM
'Mariama', the opener is just such a contemporary classic -
the tragic tale of a Mandinka king who made a pact with the devil to ensure a
male heir. A son was born, but on the condition that the boy would die if he ever
slept with a woman. An aunt, eaten up by jealousy, brought two girls to the palace,
Sere and the beautiful Mariama
All were killed in the fire that followed!
Pape's vocal brings tremendous urgency to this tale of fatal passion, with accordion
from the Afro Celts' James McNally fleshing out Mac Fallows' haunting synth groove.
Oumar
Sow's wah-wah guitar powers the driving semi-acoustic funk of 'Yaay', Pape's homage
to his mother and to mothers everywhere. 'Forgive me mother,' he sings. 'You carried
me on your back and fed me at your breast. If we appreciated all our parents had
done for us, we would treat them with kindness and respect.' 'Kokoliko' is left
completely acoustic - a plaintive tale of rustic life, in which a cock is asked
by a hyena why he crows for his chicks, only to find that it is the hyena himself
who has eaten them. In the animal kingdom, as in so many other spheres, he who
is strongest wins.
'Kamalemba', is a prayer for peace in the Casamance,
Senegal's forested southern region where a brutal civil war raged for much of
the last decade. Clapping, to the rhythms of the region's Jola people, lends a
festive, flamenco feel, muscular guitar picking meshing with Lath Mbaye's needling
talking drum beats. 'Pelipeng' takes a swipe at that bane of manhood, the grasping
woman! Pape draws on his experience as a tailor in this account of an avaricious
woman, whose demands for credit ruin local traders. 'Your beauty and charm have
betrayed you! Now the tables are turned!'
'Jello' is an exquisite acoustic
love song, the ancient echo in its pared down guitar riff evoking an Africa of
vast open spaces and timeless emotions. 'Jello
I will do everything I can
to ensure your happiness, for marriage is sacred before God.' 'Yatal Gueew' is
the song that rocked the Senegalese elections, Pape and Cheikh's political credo
set to a rocking mbalax beat with a trace of Simon and Garfunkel in the ascending
guitar riff. 'Let us widen the circle,' they sing. 'Our differences are our strength.'
There
is an anthemic feel to the mystical 'Soni' (The Call), with its beautifully moody
blend of piano and accordion - the snapping sabar percussion still present in
the background. 'Youth for all its joy has an end. Power will inevitably leave
you. Forget all earthly things and follow God's laws.' 'Ma Ansou', addressed to
an aged marabout or holy man, continues the spiritual theme in a more light-hearted
vein. Over urgent acoustic picking, Pape tells us that fishermen spirited the
sage away in their motorboat!
'Kekilo' (Jealousy), about a man scared of
losing the youngest and most beautiful of his three wives, builds around Laye
Babou's gloriously sunny kora groove. 'Lonkotina' brings the theme of love right
up to date, the easy-flowing guitar riff creating a catchy, radio-friendly summer
vibe. 'I swore that I would never love another girl,' wails Pape. 'But I have
fallen into the same trap!' 'Fanick' (The Elephant), closes the album with a tribute
to two great Serer Musicians - Sombel Faye and Mbissane Diagne - homage both to
the mighty animal and to the indefatigable spirit of the artist, set to the booming
clatter of typically Senegalese sabar drums.
And that's the unbeatable
duo that is Pape and Cheikh: twelve strong, beautifully crafted songs full of
African instrumental subtlety, with all the hooks and big anthemic choruses you
could want. Songs that explore universal themes - of love, ambition and the struggle
for freedom and dignity - while remaining imbued with the respect for tradition
and the mystical spirituality that are still everywhere in modern Africa.
Contact
: Realworld Records Amanda Jones E mail : Amanda.Jones@realworld.co.uk Web
site : www.realworldrecords.com
|