Iba Diabaté – Mouna

Iba Diabaté – Mouna

Ibrahim Bah Karamoto Diabaté, better known as Iba Diabaté, was born in the “white gold” cotton country of Miniankala, Mali. His father, Abdoulaye Diabaté, is a famed griot with an established international career, while his mother, an actress who performed at local cultural and artistic festivals, descends from a line of blacksmiths.

Iba‘s parents trace their ancestry directly from the Bambara Kingdom of Segu, and from the line of griots, messengers who communicate the sacred customs and traditions of the “Diabatela“.

Iba was encouraged to learn traditional Malian music at a very young age, and showed promising talent early on. Although Iba‘s father sent him to pursue a formal education, first in Yorosso, then in Bamako, Iba‘s calling for music never stopped. In Yorosso Iba learned to play the guitar, balafon and kora; in Bamako he took lessons throughout his college years, but his career fully blossomed when Iba decided to relocate to Montreal in 2001.

Insipred by great singers such as his father Abdoulaye Diabaté, Salif Keïta, Habib Koïté, Youssou N’Dour or Marvin Gaye, Iba decided to live his dream of a career, crafting his own blend of music, fusing the traditional rhythms of Malian music with the influences of modern musical instruments, weaving the beauty and intensity of his voice within the framework of Western arrangements.

Iba refers to his style of music as being “the black blues” and throughout his songs you will find him singing about peace, unity, love, respect, and social injustice. While the majority of his lyrics are sung in his native Bambara, Iba also expresses himself in French, Spanish and English on this first album entitled Mouna.

Today Iba spends most of his time in Mali, playing shows across the country and spending time with his father Abdoulaye. He’s established a strong following at home at an early age, a symbol of achievement for the people of Mali. Iba, heir to the griot tradition, has also become the leader of a contemporary Malian sound. The world is next…

 

 

Download:

One sheet pdf (180kb)

1500 x 1500 album cover (300kb)

500 x 500 web album cover (70kb)

Album:

“Mouna” – 128 mp3 (50mb zip file)

“Mouna” – 320 mp3 (115mb zip file)

Stream album – Fairtilizer

 

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Iba Diabaté – Mouna

Ibrahim Bah Karamoto Diabaté, better known as Iba Diabaté, was born in the “white gold” cotton country of Miniankala, Mali. His father, Abdoulaye Diabaté, is a famed griot with an established international career, while his mother, an actress who performed at local cultural and artistic festivals, descends from a line of blacksmiths.

Iba‘s parents trace their ancestry directly from the Bambara Kingdom of Segu, and from the line of griots, messengers who communicate the sacred customs and traditions of the “Diabatela“.

Iba was encouraged to learn traditional Malian music at a very young age, and showed promising talent early on. Although Iba‘s father sent him to pursue a formal education, first in Yorosso, then in Bamako, Iba‘s calling for music never stopped. In Yorosso Iba learned to play the guitar, balafon and kora; in Bamako he took lessons throughout his college years, but his career fully blossomed when Iba decided to relocate to Montreal in 2001.

Insipred by great singers such as his father Abdoulaye Diabaté, Salif Keïta, Habib Koïté, Youssou N’Dour or Marvin Gaye, Iba decided to live his dream of a career, crafting his own blend of music, fusing the traditional rhythms of Malian music with the influences of modern musical instruments, weaving the beauty and intensity of his voice within the framework of Western arrangements.

Iba refers to his style of music as being “the black blues” and throughout his songs you will find him singing about peace, unity, love, respect, and social injustice. While the majority of his lyrics are sung in his native Bambara, Iba also expresses himself in French, Spanish and English on this first album entitled Mouna.

Today Iba spends most of his time in Mali, playing shows across the country and spending time with his father Abdoulaye. He’s established a strong following at home at an early age, a symbol of achievement for the people of Mali. Iba, heir to the griot tradition, has also become the leader of a contemporary Malian sound. The world is next…

Download:

One sheet pdf (180kb)

1500 x 1500 album cover (300kb)

500 x 500 web album cover (70kb)

Album:

“Mouna” – 128 mp3 (50mb zip file)

“Mouna” – 320 mp3 (115mb zip file)

Stream album – Fairtilizer

 

RELATED

Batida – Bazuka (hint at Carlos Lamartine)

(Approximate BBRAVE vs Google translation from www.radiofazuma.com):

Dive into the archives of the RTP [national Portuguese TV]. The idea was to select images that illustrate the hidden story behind “Bazuka”. We [DJ Mpula & Radio Fazuma team] hand-picked historic archival footage, added some contemporary images we collected, and footage from our documentary “E Dreda Ser Angolano”.

Lots more to say, but our Portuguese isn’t quite cutting it… and Google translate is very, very little help on this one. But more importantly, dig the video!!