Oumou Sangaré

Biography


Oumou Sangaré is widely considered to be Africa’s most dynamic female voice. Her music is ebullient and thrilling, with powerful and groundbreaking messages about women’s rights, tradition and poverty  

Oumou Sangaré was born in Bamako, Mali, in 1969. When she was two years old, her father took a second wife and emigrated to Côte d’Ivoire leaving Oumou’s mother, pregnant at the time, with three small children. Her mother was a singer at wedding and baptism celebrations. Oumou joined her, fired by her passion for the music and her desire to help her mother out by earning a little extra cash. By the age of thirteen Oumou had become the family breadwinner.

Oumou’s mother came from Wassoulou, the remote forest region in the south of Mali with a rich musical culture with a pentatonic flavour. The Wassoulou hunters’ music, played on the donsongoni is believed to have magic powers. It was updated into the kamelengoni (youth’s harp) and Oumou’s vision was to bring the power and charm of this music into her own songs. In Bamako, with the help of arranger Ahmadou Ba Guindo, leader of the legendary National Badema dance band, she played with musicians including kamelengoni player ‘Benego’ Brehima Diakite who has remained Oumou’s main musical collaborator to this day.

In 1989, aged 21, she recorded her first album Moussoulou (Women) with arrangements by Ahmadou Ba Guindo, and it took West Africa by storm.The messages were powerful – encouraging women to be themselves and warning against the wrongs of polygamy and forced marriage. The hit song ‘Diaraby Nene’ (The Thrill of Love) was about the taboo subject of women enjoying passion. It was also remarkable for being a slightly modernised version of the traditional rural music of the enigmatic Wassoulou hunters, delivered with an urban funk-driven pulse.

The Moussoulou cassette was given to World Circuit’s Nick Gold by Ali Farka Touré, and Gold witnessed its success during a trip to Bamako in 1991. “You couldn’t escape that music. And you didn’t want to. It was everywhere. I spent that week in Bamako hearing Oumou wherever I went.” 

World Circuit released Moussoulou internationally in 1991 and since then have  released four albums from Oumou. On Ko Sira (Modern Marriage), 1993, ‘Saa Magni’ pays tribute to Ahmadou Ba Guindo, arranger and co-producer of Moussoulou, who died in a car accident in 1991. On Worotan (10 Kola Nuts – the price given by a groom’s parents in exchange for a bride), 1996, Oumou continued to sing about the issues close to her heart. After becoming a mother herself, she also focused on children in difficult circumstances.

Oumou fights fiercely against female circumcision (FGM), which is still prevalent in Mali. “I think the country has made progress regarding female circumcision [although there’s still no law in place]. And I opened the way, to a certain extent. The women of Mali and other African countries still continue the fight.”

In 2003 World Circuit released Oumou, a 2CD retrospective of her career to date. The album features 12 tracks from her first three World Circuit albums, plus 8 tracks previously unreleased on CD. 

Of Seya (Joy), 2009, she says “when I sing it’s joyful but amongst that joy I always take the opportunity to slip in messages that educate my nation.” She encourages family unity, sings against forced marriage and praises Mali’s textile makers. The song ‘Donso’ is both a tribute to Alatta Brouleye, the Wassoulou musician who in the 1960s created the kamelengoni out of the donsongoni hunters’ harp (which ‘Benego’ Brehima Diakite plays on the track) and to her father, Bari Sangaré. with whom she was reconciled before his death.

After an eight year break from recording, Oumou returned with a more modernised sound on Mogoya (on the No Format label) in 2017. This was followed by extensive touring around the world. Acoustic, a stripped-down version of Mogoya was released in 2020, with no amplification, retakes or overdubs. It adds two important songs from her earlier career – ‘Saa Magni’, her tribute to Amadou Ba Guindo, and ‘Diaraby Nene’ her first big hit.

BIOGRAPHY

Oumou Sangaré is widely considered to be Africa’s most dynamic female voice. Her music is ebullient and thrilling, with powerful and groundbreaking messages about women’s rights, tradition and poverty  

Oumou Sangaré was born in Bamako, Mali, in 1969. When she was two years old, her father took a second wife and emigrated to Côte d’Ivoire leaving Oumou’s mother, pregnant at the time, with three small children. Her mother was a singer at wedding and baptism celebrations. Oumou joined her, fired by her passion for the music and her desire to help her mother out by earning a little extra cash. By the age of thirteen Oumou had become the family breadwinner.

Oumou’s mother came from Wassoulou, the remote forest region in the south of Mali with a rich musical culture with a pentatonic flavour. The Wassoulou hunters’ music, played on the donsongoni is believed to have magic powers. It was updated into the kamelengoni (youth’s harp) and Oumou’s vision was to bring the power and charm of this music into her own songs. In Bamako, with the help of arranger Ahmadou Ba Guindo, leader of the legendary National Badema dance band, she played with musicians including kamelengoni player ‘Benego’ Brehima Diakite who has remained Oumou’s main musical collaborator to this day.

In 1989, aged 21, she recorded her first album Moussoulou (Women) with arrangements by Ahmadou Ba Guindo, and it took West Africa by storm.The messages were powerful – encouraging women to be themselves and warning against the wrongs of polygamy and forced marriage. The hit song ‘Diaraby Nene’ (The Thrill of Love) was about the taboo subject of women enjoying passion. It was also remarkable for being a slightly modernised version of the traditional rural music of the enigmatic Wassoulou hunters, delivered with an urban funk-driven pulse.

The Moussoulou cassette was given to World Circuit’s Nick Gold by Ali Farka Touré, and Gold witnessed its success during a trip to Bamako in 1991. “You couldn’t escape that music. And you didn’t want to. It was everywhere. I spent that week in Bamako hearing Oumou wherever I went.” 

World Circuit released Moussoulou internationally in 1991 and since then have  released four albums from Oumou. On Ko Sira (Modern Marriage), 1993, ‘Saa Magni’ pays tribute to Ahmadou Ba Guindo, arranger and co-producer of Moussoulou, who died in a car accident in 1991. On Worotan (10 Kola Nuts – the price given by a groom’s parents in exchange for a bride), 1996, Oumou continued to sing about the issues close to her heart. After becoming a mother herself, she also focused on children in difficult circumstances.

Oumou fights fiercely against female circumcision (FGM), which is still prevalent in Mali. “I think the country has made progress regarding female circumcision [although there’s still no law in place]. And I opened the way, to a certain extent. The women of Mali and other African countries still continue the fight.”

In 2003 World Circuit released Oumou, a 2CD retrospective of her career to date. The album features 12 tracks from her first three World Circuit albums, plus 8 tracks previously unreleased on CD. 

Of Seya (Joy), 2009, she says “when I sing it’s joyful but amongst that joy I always take the opportunity to slip in messages that educate my nation.” She encourages family unity, sings against forced marriage and praises Mali’s textile makers. The song ‘Donso’ is both a tribute to Alatta Brouleye, the Wassoulou musician who in the 1960s created the kamelengoni out of the donsongoni hunters’ harp (which ‘Benego’ Brehima Diakite plays on the track) and to her father, Bari Sangaré. with whom she was reconciled before his death.

After an eight year break from recording, Oumou returned with a more modernised sound on Mogoya (on the No Format label) in 2017. This was followed by extensive touring around the world. Acoustic, a stripped-down version of Mogoya was released in 2020, with no amplification, retakes or overdubs. It adds two important songs from her earlier career – ‘Saa Magni’, her tribute to Amadou Ba Guindo, and ‘Diaraby Nene’ her first big hit.

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