Thu
Apr 13, 2023
Split Bill
Main Stage

Bassekou Kouyate & N'goni Ba

No reservations
With opening act:  
Dining 5-9pm. Music 7:30pm.

Bassekou Kouyate is a true master of the ngoni, a traditional lute found across West Africa. He is a virtuoso, innovator, stronghold of tradition all at the same time.

Bassekou Kouyate & N'goni Ba
Apr 13, 2023
  •  
Main Stage
  •  
Dining 5-9pm. Music 7:30pm.

Bassekou Kouyatewas born in Garana, a small and multi-ethnic village 60 km from Segou located at the banks of the Niger river. He is descended from a long line of griots on both sides.

Bassekou's virtuosic skills, coupled with his creative sense of innovation, have put him in great demand both for his work with his own ensemble Ngoni Ba, but also in collaborative practices with the likes of Youssou N'Dour, Ali Farka Toure, Toumani Diabate, Bela Fleck, The Kronos Quartet, Taj Mahal, Damon Albarn, and Michael League, among others.

Bassekou rejoices in an unusual band formation, featuring 3 ngoni players,  2 percussionists, and his wife Amy Sacko taking the lead on vocals. They have performed around the world at festivals such as Roskilde, WOMAD, Glastonbury, Fuji Rock, and North Sea Jazz, among others.

In the mid eighties Bassekou started playing the traditional sumu circuit, which soon puthim in touch with another extraordinary musician such as the kora player Toumani Diabate. At the end of the 1980s, Bassekou became a founding member of Toumani Diabate’s Symmetric Orchestra, which then included among others a young Habib Koiteas lead singer. It was the Symmetric Trio that brought Bassekou to Europe for the first time to play at the festival in Dranouter in Belgium in 1990.

Later that same year, Bassekou made his first trip to the USA, where he met the AfricanAmerican blues musician, Taj Mahal.

In the mid 1990s Bassekou married Amy Sacko, a fine griot singer originally from northwest Mali. As a couple, they produced a number of popular cassettes and were inconstant demand on the wedding circuit and on Mali television, where Amy wasnicknamed “the Tina Turner of Mali”.

In 2005 Bassekou was invited by Mali’s “desert bluesman” Ali Farka Touré to play on hisalbum ‘Savane’ and to join Ali on stage for his final tour in the summer of 2005. In the same year Bassekou decided to create his band Ngoni ba. a quartet of different sizedngonis. It was a novel idea, but it was also very old–the rulers of precolonial Segu sometimes had bands of up to 30 or 40 ngoni players, all playing together. Since than Bassekou Kouyate & Ngoni ba have toured the world playing 100rds of shows from NY Central Park to the Royal Albert Hall in London, from Roskilde to Glastonbury.

Lately he performed with Africa Express and charged stages with musicians like Sir PaulMcCartney, John Paul Jones, Damon Albarn and many more