Savane

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Savane
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  1. Audio CD: 2 items: Release Date 2006-07-25
  2. Publisher: Nonesuch
  3. Artist: Ali Farka Toure
  4. Sales Rank in Music: #37550

Product Review

Toure recorded Savane in the Malian capital of Bamako, as part of a three-disc project dubbed the Hotel Mande Sessions, after the studio in which the albums were cut. Savane is the last, perhaps most eloquent, installment. In concept and execution, the sessions recall teh magical combination of spontaneity and virtuosity that marked the debut releases from the Buena Vista Social Club. Toure offers reverberating, incantatory vocals to accompany his lean, hypnotically repetitive guitar lines.

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Savane, the great African guitarist and bluesman Ali Farka Touré's final solo studio album, was recorded in his native Mali toward the end of his life, when the artist knew his days were numbered. He spent his last years in his home village of Niafunké, concentrating on farming and family matters, jamming with local musicians of an evening. This impassioned, roots-drenched, mostly acoustic valedictory finds the Maestro's stalking rhythms and high-noon-at-the-crossroads, dusty desert-to-delta vocals in no less than life-summing form. "Soya" (track 5) seems to stand still in a million directions, while "Hanana Soko" (track 9) features a searing njarka fiddle spinning delirious circles around its throaty accompanying percussion. Pee Wee Ellis (sax) and Little George Sueref (harmonica) each manage to make strong impressions while adhering to the groove at hand. Afel Boucoum, a talented younger musician who has been mentioned as Touré's most likely successor (as if such a thing were possible!), graces "Njarou," the last tune. The other players are also at the top of their game, as fluttering ngoni (a West African spike lute) riffs weave in and out and airy female vocals float like a breeze off the river Niger. There are reports that Touré senior sat in on his son's upcoming album and scads of archival material will undoubtedly materialize. But his unsentimental, voluptuously masculine, spirit-guided magic is captured at its best, for all time, in this magnificent farewell. --Christina Roden
Title Tracks for Savane

Customer Reviews

Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (15 customer reviews)

44 of 50 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Farewell, Brave Friend, August 15, 2006
o dubhthaigh (north rustico, pei, canada) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: Savane (Audio CD)
One of the incredible tragedies in Music this year is the passing of Ali Farka Toure. It is impossible to exagerate his importance to African, Malian, Blues, World musics. He is as seminal figure as anyone in any discipline. Last year he recorded the mystically beautiful IN THE HEART OF THE MOON with Toumani Diabete, and this record as well as Diabete's magical SYMMETRY ORCHESTRA recording just out were recorded nearly simultaneously in the same hotel as the MOON sessions.

Toure's hypnotic guiatr work is set to haunting effect alongside ngoni players like Mama Sissoko, American sax player and Van Morrison collaborator Pee Wee Ellis, calabash virtuouso Souleye Kane, and percussionists like Oumar Toure. This is the cream of Mali's traditional music set, and some of the best international sidemen you can have. For Ellis, it must have been a career highpoint to join in such august company and he plays as though this may never happen again.

And sadly, it will not...Read more


26 of 30 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A Monster Album from Farka, July 28, 2006
Christopher O. Tollefsen "Chris Tollefsen" (Columbia, SC USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Savane (Audio CD)
Ali Farka Toure called this album his best "ever" and, amazingly, it is. While Talking Timbuktu and Niafunke were mostly great, they had a bit of filler, and didn't always hold together in the way The Source, for example, did. Savane, on the other hand, is a complete, and completely excellent record from start to finish. Toure's blues stomp is in full force, and the desert sounds of the ngoni and njarka give Toure the perfect accompaniment to his snaky guitar and keeing voice. The album has the hypnotic feel of some of the recent gnawa inspired music to have come out of West Africa. The final track is one of the most beautiful in the Toure collection -- a fitting end to an album, a career, a musical life.


11 of 11 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars "It's my best album ever. It has the most power and it is the most different"., March 6, 2007
latejazzlover (San Francisco , CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Savane (Audio CD)
If ever an artist embodied the struggle between staying true to his roots and musical exploration, it was the late, great Ali Farka Touré. It would have been easy for him to become a fixture on the international stage playing with anyone he chose and the financial rewards would have been considerable. Instead, he turned his attention to expressing his own culture and exploring the links between it and the surrounding cultures. In doing so he became a local hero and a powerful symbol of national unity.

Although we usually think of `fusion' as a mix between something traditional and something Western, one could argue that Ali was permanently engaged in the twin processes of fusing and distillation most of his life -- although his attention rarely wandered far from West Africa.

"Savane" was a work in progress for several years, but it was mainly recorded at the now legendary Hotel Mande sessions in Bamako, which saw the recording of his sensational...Read more

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