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Press Reviews
Coup d’etat unites Malian musicians in a call for peace
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Cultural Diplomacy News
Khaira Arby is scheduled to tour North America beg...
Khaira Arby is scheduled to tour North America beginning April 26th in Dallas, Texas. Everyone is anxious about her ability to get out of the country, and Khaira is worried about leaving her family during these critical times, if the situation there is not clarified. When she arrives in the U.S., she will continue to call for a peaceful resolution to all conflicts around the world. She is keenly aware of the long-term suffering created by war falls most heavily on the shoulders of women. A strong advocate for women’s rights and for respect for women, she will continue to put this issue front and center. Timbuktu is a cosmopolitan city where people from all places meet. Khaira Arby hopes that the future holds a continued opening of the city to tourism, investment, and culture.
Khaira Arby, Timbuktu diva
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rfi music
In the United States, she left a mark with her imp...
In the United States, she left a mark with her impressive 2011 tour, her voice and style, to the point that the New York Times ranked her 2010 album, Timbuktu Tarab, among the best world music albums of the decade
Best Photos from SXSW
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Spin
A slide show of the best photos of SXSW Day 2...
A slide show of the best photos of SXSW Day 2
Malian Singer Khaira Arby Discusses Career, Politics
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PRI
Anchor Marco Werman talks to Malian singer and com...
Anchor Marco Werman talks to Malian singer and composer Khaira Arby about her career and political causes. Arby came to WGBH studios to perform.
Jon Pareles review of Khaira Arby's concert on 5 March 2011 at the Bell House Brooklyn NY
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New York Times
"one of Africa’s greatest singers", Jon Pareles, N...
"one of Africa’s greatest singers", Jon Pareles, New York Times, 6 March 2011
NPR reviews Khaira Arby at SXSW in Austin TX on 17 March 2011
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NPR
"One of the living legends of Malian music"...
"One of the living legends of Malian music"
Unreleased Ali Farka Toure and Khaira Arby
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Voice of America, Matthew LaVoie
In 1990, after working for a time in Bamako with H...
In 1990, after working for a time in Bamako with Harouna Barry and the 'Orchestre Badema Nationale', Khaira released her first cassette 'Moulaye'. Three years later, she released 'Hala', recorded with her own group, and then in 2002, released her masterpiece 'Ya Rassoul', which in my opinion is one of the best Malian cassettes of the last decade. Khaira, who still lives in Tomboctou, has been very busy over the last few months. In early February, she was invited to Bamako's Studio Bogolan to record three tracks with the American group 'Sway Machinery', and later in the month was back in the same studio, this time with her own group from Tomboctou, laying down the tracks for her upcoming international debut. And, according to her producer, Khaira's North American fans can look forward to the 'Nightingale of Tomboctou' making her US debut sometime in the fall of 2010.
Khaira Arby
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afropop.org
Haira (sometimes spelled Khaira) Arby has been giv...
Haira (sometimes spelled Khaira) Arby has been given the title 'The Nightingale of the North" and I can attest to that. I heard her sing while sitting on a bus in Mali - torn leather seats, the afternoon heat pressing against the windows and the beautiful brown crisp landscape of Mali in the dry season rolling past. I found her cassette 'Ya Rassoul' at a kiosk in Djenne and now as I listen to it back in the UK I realise what a perfect soundtrack it is to Mali. You can hear drums that sound like camels feet, percussion that evoke desert sand and the rustling dry heat and in every song Haira's voice, with its incredible range and pitch, sounding like a dream. But what is there out there on Haira? Very little on the net and the people I asked in Mali loved her music but didn't seem to know much about her. What I have gleaned is she has performed at the Festival au Desert in 2003 and 2005, with a couple of cassettes released domestically, and then some European dates in march 2005 in Brussels and Holland. Banning Eyre of Afropop rummaged around in the archives and found a transcription of an interview Afropop did with Haira from 2003 which has helped put the pieces together. She is from the desert- from Agouni, north of Timbuktu - born into a family of mixed ethnicity a Songhai Arab mother and an Arab Berber father. You can hear this in her music - she sings in Sonrai, Arabic, Tamashek, the instruments and rhythms just as varied with electric guitar and trickling beats, calabash, traditional violin and guitar, drumming that creates that abrupt squared sound of music from that part of the country. But with no relations who were musicians preceding her and a father who forbade her to sing or to play music, Haira has had to go out on her own and carve her own path as a musician. Starting out by working with Orchestre Badema in Bamako, then performing at biennales, the festivals and then some dates in Europe in 02 and now some in 05. It's been a slow journey since the 1980's when she started to focus all her energies on her music. Like Haira herself, her music travels on an audio journey the essence of Mali - a meeting of compass points, religion, culture, the past and present. She sings about marriage, love, peace, the lives of the people from the region she comes from, development and democracy. The tracks on the 'Ya Rassoul' album are lovely and long - some over 6 minutes. There is 'Amandiath' which showcases that unique round sound of the traditional guitar. The production is so good you can hear the player's fingers tugging the strings, accompanied by the harsh haunting sound of the violin. Then the funky electric sound of 'Ehe Youma' with its intricate guitar moves, the soft slow bass guitar and all the while the call and response of the vocals, with the 'response' of the chorus just managing to hold down Haira's soaring 'call'. The language is new too - soft rounded vowels, rolling r's, guttural sounds - words like 'biobini' pronounced 'bwaibini' , the curvaceous 'sourgou'. Timing is everything - the layering, pausing and meandering of the music and instruments that act as a backdrop and allow Haira's voice to run free. The Malians love her and I just hope an international album release is only a matter of time and then the rest of us can have a taste of her magic. 'Ya Rassoul' is produced by Samassa Records, Mali. As yet, it is not available internationally…
Khaira Arby, Voice of the sand dunes of Timbuktu
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JournalduMali.com
Khaira Arby, la voix des dunes de sable de Tombo...
Khaira Arby, la voix des dunes de sable de Tombouctou Par Assane Koné - 30/03/2010 Rare femme originaire du nord du Mali à pratiquer la musique, Khaïra Arby est aujourd'hui vue comme le "Rossignol du Nord"
© flickr.com Avec ses musiciens à Tombouctou
Et, pourtant, n'eut été sa témérité, cette artiste dont le père n'appréciait pas de la voir tenir un micro, allait comprimer son talent et passer inaperçue comme bon nombre de ses concitoyens. Le destin en a voulu autrement. Et Khaira Arby est aujourd'hui, le porte étendard de la musique du nord Mali. Mais quel fut son parcours ?
Prédestinée à chanter
Si elle tarde à récolter tous les fruits à la hauteur de son talent à l'international, Khaira Arby n'est plus à présenter au niveau national. Si au Mali, un artiste dément le dicton selon lequel nul n'est prophète chez soi, c'est bien Khaira Arby. Le cercle de ses fans à la façon d'ondes parties de Tombouctou à l'allure du son de sa musique, a fini par atteindre tous le pays, s'étend de plus en plus dans les pays limitrophes du nôtre et scrutent même des horizons plus éloignés. Et, pourtant, cette merveille de la musique malienne du nord du Mali, dont le talent s'est révélé très tôt, a dû batailler dur pour faire ce qu'elle avait envie de faire.
La première résistance fut paternelle et la seconde maritale, mais, rien n'y fit : Khaira Arby était prédestinée à chanter et à bien chanter pour faire danser des fans dans la cité mystérieuses de Tombouctou. Née dans le village d'Agouni à quelques encablures de Tombouctou dans le Sahara, d'une mère songhaï et d'un père berbère, Khaira Arby, malgré son talent n'a pas eu la tâche facile. C'est écolière que cette artiste a annoncé les couleurs. Son premier prix dans le domaine de la chanson a été remporté lorsqu'elle était encore écolière. Et ce prix l'a propulsé sur la scène régionale. Elle aura le privilège de représenter Tombouctou, à la phase régionale de la biennale à Gao, à l'époque où la cité des 333 saints faisait encore partie de la région de Gao.
© afropop.org Khaira Arby, le rossignol du Nord, ambassadrice de Tombouctou sa région
Résistance familiale
Pour convaincre son père afin qu'il accepte que sa fille fasse le déplacement de Gao, il a fallu une débauche d'énergie des responsables de la troupe de Tombouctou. Mais, cela n'a pas été peine perdue, parce que la jeune Khaira Arby allait s'arroger la première place du solo de chant à Gao. Et elle va confirmer son talent à la phase nationale, en s'offrant le luxe de revenir à Tombouctou avec le premier prix du solo de chant. A onze ans, ce prix devait lui donner la possibilité d'accompagner une délégation culturelle et artistique malienne en Tunisie.
Mais, son père hostile de voir sa fille faire la musique, s'oppose à l'idée de la voir partir si loin. Et trois ans après, elle se voit mariée à l'âge de 14 ans. Déjà piqué par le virus de la musique, elle va pendant huit ans subir l'interdiction formelle de son époux de la voir chanter. Mais, huit ans après, elle va recouvrer sa totale liberté suite à un divorce. Et, quelques temps après, elle met à contribution l'orchestre régional de Tombouctou pour son premier album. De Tombouctou, Khaira Arby va rallier Bamako où elle va rejoindre le «Badema», célèbre orchestre de la ville des trois caïmans. Ce fût une belle époque pour la chanteuse qui gagnera en confiance en se frottant à des talents comme Feu Ali Farka Touré et Fissa Maïga.
Et depuis, plus de repos. Même si l'artiste se balade un peu partout au Mali, en Afrique et de plus en plus en occident, elle a volontairement choisi de faire de Tombouctou sa base, comme pour dire que celui qui a besoin de voir Khaira Arby confondre sa voix avec le bruissement des vents du désert, doit se rendre dans la ville des 333 saints. Cette voix qui fait danser toute la région de Tombouctou et une bonne partie de celle de Gao, a vu son mérite récompensé en 2006 par la médaille de chevalier de l'ordre national du Mali.
Album Review of TIMBUKTU TARAB
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The Washington Post
"However dense the instrumental interplay, Arby's ...
"However dense the instrumental interplay, Arby's singing dominates. Her voice soars above the groove, establishing motifs that both the musicians and backing singers embroider."
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