Video: Yonta Hande Live in a Mauritanian School

Sahel Sounds sought out and shot this clip of Mauritian group Yonta Hande‘s (pulaar for “New Generation”) high energy jam in their Nouakchott suburb practice space, which also doubles as a school. Yonta Hande play with the minimal roster of guitar, voice, and djembe percussion at a crushing volume, launching into a distorted and clattering mbalax tune. Peep it above and make sure to read the full story.

Jeiche Chighaly: The Life Of A Mauritanian Griot

Okayafrica contributor M. Tinari works in Mauritania, producing local band Noura Mint Seymali and teaching at a recently opened conservatory in Nouakchott. Below, he writes about his travels with praise singer and wandering musician Jeiche Chighaly.

If you’re a griot in Nouakchott, Mauritania, this September was a really busy month. The time after Ramadan is prime marriage season, meaning gigs every night. It’s probably easier just to keep the tidinitt (lute) in the back of the miraculously maintained Mercedes you and everyone else drive so that when the calls come in you can high tail it over to the hyma (Moorish tent) where you’re being beckoned and start crowd-pleasing.

Unfortunately, your teubeul (bowl drum) has a broken skin that takes a few days to fix so you’ll have to track down the only teubeul rental lady’s place. She’s elderly and drives a hard bargain, so you’ll be returning the drum at the end of the night (6-7am) or be docked for another day’s charge. The guy throwing the wedding has asked you to hook up the PA system, so add that to your rounds and hope for a sound guy who going to be vigilant with crowd control, someone who’s not afraid to beat back frenzied dancers who threaten to kick out the cords running from the instruments out to an electric generator in the sand somewhere outside the tent.

You’re driving pretty damn fast now. The white boubous of you and your whole crew are flapping out the window like rooftop laundry. But you speed up because you’re an old pro at navigating the sandy alleyways of Nouakchott’s endless, urban desert sprawl. You know how to dodge children, sewage puddles, haphazardly parked vehicles, goats, and the occasional camel without even slowing down. The recent proliferation of police checkpoints shouldn’t slow you down too much either, since after all you’re carrying musical instruments in the car and have the right griot’s last name. Many of them have heard of you and this guy who’s pulling you over now, while his buddies stand around fingering their rifles, just realized you played his sister’s wedding last week. You flash a killer smile.

This was how Jeiche Ould Chighaly rolled in my recent trip to Mauritania. Having worked with Jeiche in another band for the past year and a half, I joined the wedding entourage as conspicuous foreign apprenti — carrying instruments, lighting cigarettes for performing musicians, making change so party goers could make it rain in smaller ougiya amounts, and soaking in the music in its traditional frenzy. This was not the first time I’d gotten to hear Jeiche’s guitar stretch out under the wedding hyma, but he was clearly on his griot-hustle like never before, sounding better than ever efficiently firing up the dancers until the sandals and money started flying.

The musical structure of a Moorish or Beydane wedding is codified; there is a progression of 5 modes or bhor, each of which corresponds to the emotional weight of a life stage —childhood (innocence), young adulthood (virility), middle age (maturity), old age (wisdom), and elderliness (serenity). Each mode is further divided into black (legato) and white (staccato) denominations.  Once the music leaves a mode, it may not return back to it for the rest of the performance. The bride and groom make their entrance to the 3rd mode – lekhal, which corresponds to the life stage they are entering.  This September Jeiche ran through the modal life cycle every night with an ecstatic agility, he might’ve gotten the extra work-strength thinking about the baby that would be born to him and his wife in a few days.

The music of Jeiche Ould Chighaly is featured alongside various other all-stars of Beydane guitar on a rigorously curated compilation- Wallahi Le Zein!! – Wezin, Jakwar and Guitar Boogie from the Islamic Republic of Mauritania – recently put out on Latitude. Weighing in at 28 tracks, Wallahi Le Zein!! is absolutely required listening for anyone drawn to so-called “desert blues” artists from the Sahel like Tinariwen or Ali Farka Touré. Culled entirely from live performances, the release is one of the most raw documents of a famously overlooked music culture in Mauritania.

Matthew LaVoie, who assembled the compilation from his own field recordings, provides an equally engaging companion text that goes a long-way to orient the listener to what may otherwise sound like mayhem. Compilations of this sort are often filled with mysterious characters whose only lasting remnants are the unrecognizable names cluttering artists menus on iTunes. But LaVoie, who spent years living and studying music in Mauritania (with Jeiche among his teachers), carefully fits each character into the evolution of Beydane music through a colorful and personal narrative.

-M. Tinari

Audio: Music From Saharan Cellphones Interview With DJ/Rupture

In the dense digital woods of contemporary world music, DJ/Rupture‘s radio show Mudd Up! on WFMU is a guiding light on global sounds. Recently, Chris Kirkley of Sahel Sounds graced the program to divulge his field recording secrets and strategies for exchanging music with West African locals, which ultimately lead to the creation of Music from Saharan Cell Phones.

Highlights include how Kirkley recorded Mauritanian wedding music, “I would wander around until I found weddings happening. I’d stop taxi drivers sometimes and say just drive me around until we find a wedding.” Tracking down the local artists that constructed the sounds was another feat all together. For the task, Kirkley utilized the modern social networks he’d used to obtain much of the music in the first place:

One of the biggest resources has been facebook, there is a  great feature where you can search for mutual friends and filter them based on cities if you know one of these bands lives in a particular city you can filter and just find who you know that lives in Tamanrasset. Then I just started sending messages to people that look  musicians and asking them, do you know this song?

Here the full interview below.

Audio + Video: Music From Saharan Cellphones Vol. 1

Chris Kirkley originally posted the track list for Music from Saharan Cellphones Vol. 1 in October 2010 at his final frontier blog, Sahel Sounds.  Later the audio for Vol. 2 was released via download and what you can find on these compilations is ground breaking work from bedroom producers from Abidjan to Bamako using synthesizers and autotune to make songs you would not hear otherwise.

This compilation is a must have, and we are not sure if it’s because of the sheer depth of the music, or that it was compiled when Chris took memory cards found in cell phones of the Sahara in order to discover new music. Why cell phones? As it turns out, cell phones are actually used more as mp3 players than phones, as well as a common p2p method for swapping files using Bluetooth wireless transfers.

Fast forward about a year and the project takes another giant DIY step- a vinyl release!  On October 4th Chris’s Kickstarter project will officially be abundantly funded and Music from Saharan Cellphones Vol. 1 will commence production on 2000 limited edition vinyls. If you are one of the lucky contributors to the project then you are about to receive a bunch of rad gifts ranging from the vinyl to personal mix of unreleased tracks and even a live DJ set from the man himself.

If you havent yet, there is still time to get a piece of history!  Check out the video above and keep your ears peeled more trailblazing.

DOWNLOAD: Music From Saharan Cellphones Vol. 1

Noura Mint Seymali – Diva of Mauritania

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Noura Mint Seymali is breaking ground. Heir to a Mauritanian Griot lineage stretching back for untold generations, Noura is blasting forward on the ancient spaceship of pentatonic desert blues and carving out a personality on her way as vanguard Diva of the Sahel.

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Mauritanian Idol – Reality TV sweeps Nouakchott

Call it official; no corner of the globe is safe from reality TV pageantry, not even the Islamic Republic of Mauritania.  On a recent trip there, I spent a week in Nouakchott, the capital, rehearsing with tradi-moderne diva Noura Mint Seymali in preparation for a domestic tour itinerary with stops deeper out in the Sahara desert, swaths of which comprise the majority of Mauritanian territory.  The rehearsal space—Le Bureau Mauritanien pour la Promotion de la Musique (BMPM)—turned out to double as a Moorish traditional musicians’ club and was simultaneously hosting a succession of young talents, each preparing selections with a house band for an ongoing Moorish singing competition. Aired live on TV Mauritanie and sponsored by the Ministry of Youth, the contest was like an official government version of American Idol, except, ya know, specific to an ethnic majority in a coup-run state sanctioned by the African Union. Read More »