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In Griot Time (Paperback)
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In Griot Time (Paperback)
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\u0022Djelimady Tounkara has powerful hands. His muscled fingers
and palms seem almost brutish to the eye, but when he grasps the
neck of the guitar and brushes the nail of his right index finger
across the strings, the sound lifts effortlessly, like dust in a
wind. In Bamako, Mali, where musicians struggle, Djelimady is a big
man, and all of his family's good fortunes flow from those
hands.\u0022 Djelimady Tounkara is only one of the memorable people
you will meet in this dramatic narrative of life among the griot
musicians of Mali. Born into families where music and the tradition
of griot story-telling is a heritage and a privilege, Djelimady and
his fellow griots -- both men and women -- live their lives at the
intersection of ancient traditions and the modern entertainment
industry. During the seven months he spent living and studying with
Djelimady, Banning Eyre immersed himself in a world that will
fascinate you as it did him. Eyre creates a range of unforgettable
portraits. Some of the people who stride through his pages are
internationally known, musicians like Salif Keita, Oumou Sangare,
and Grammy winner Ali Farka Toure. But the lesser-known characters
are equally fascinating: Adama Kouyate, Djelimady's dynamic wife;
Moussa Kouyate, the Tounkara family's own griot; Yayi Kanoute, the
flamboyant jelimuso (female griot) who failed to take America by
storm; Foutanga Babani Sissoko, the mysterious millionaire who
rebuilt an entire town and whose patronage is much sought after by
the griots of Bamako. But the picture Eyre draws is not just a
series of portraits. Out of their interactions comes a perceptive
panorama of life in Mali in the late twentieth century. The
narrative gives us a street-level view of the transformation of
musical taste and social customs, the impact of technology and the
pressures of poverty, at a crucial time in Mali's history. In
individual after individual, family after family, we see the subtle
conflicts of heritage and change. Even the complications of
democracy -- with democracy, mango vendors think they can charge
anything they want, Djelimady points out -- are woven into an
unforgettable saga of one man, his family, his profession, and the
world of Malian music.
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