| Malian  singer, songwriter, and guitarist Rokia Traoré is no stranger to  European audiences. Her three previous offerings and her numerous tours  and high-level showcases -- at WOMAD and Africa Live, and as part of Youssou N'Dour & Friends  in Geneva, to name a few -- have garnered her a large and devoted fan  base. Her music is not so well known in the United States, but with the  release of Tchamantché on Tama/Nonesuch, this should change.  Traoré has always been a tradition breaker. She is from a family of  nobles of the Bamana ethic heritage, a group with a strong griot  tradition, though its nobility are discouraged from being musicians.  Also, Malian women who are musicians usually accompany themselves on  acoustic rather than electric instruments. Traoré, who has appeared on  stages and recordings with her great influence, the late Ali Farka Touré, plays an electric Gretsch.
 On Tchamantché,  Traoré goes a step further: most Malian vocalists of the feminine  gender tend to sing stridently, in over the top voices about elements  of pride and heritage. She does neither. Her voice is intimate and  almost understated, and her songs are filled with the plight of  Africans who struggle for the most basic of human amenities: clean  water, food, clothing, and shelter. Her politics are not rooted in  rage, but in compassion. But even this isn't enough for Traoré. She has  fashioned a new sound from the tenets of Malian folk forms with her  unique blend of guitars (electric and acoustic), n'gouni, classical  harp, and kora, all layered in staggered rhythms with snares, a full  drum kit, and percussion instruments. This is beautifully evident on  the album's fifth cut, "Kounandi," the taut weave of instruments above  the rhythms creating an intoxicating tapestry of root sounds that  somehow transcend their basic tonalities and become something new. This  is followed with the gorgeous "Koronoko," where these instruments,  along with a popping bassline and staggered web of harmony vocals, act  as another layer of instruments and tonalities. But then, there isn't a  weak moment on Tchamantché. Its lyrics (all translated into  English for Amerikanskis) -- full of pain, celebration, spirituality,  steely pointed notions of justice, and critique -- are only underscored  by this heady, complex mix of stylistic forms and styles that has  become a sound unique to Rokia Traoré. Highly recommended.
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