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Worotan
 
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Worotan

Oumou Sangare Audio CD


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Buy the MP3 album for £6.49 at the Amazon MP3 Downloads store.

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Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         

Samples
Song Title Time Price
Listen  1. Kun Fè Ko 4:05£0.69
Listen  2. N'Guatu 5:18£0.69
Listen  3. Baba 5:14£0.69
Listen  4. Worotan 6:26£0.69
Listen  5. Denw 5:10£0.69
Listen  6. N'Diya Ni 4:45£0.69
Listen  7. Tièbaw 5:48£0.69
Listen  8. Sabu 4:51£0.69
Listen  9. Fantan Ni Mônè 9:31£0.69
Listen10. Djôrôlen 8:18£0.69


Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

On Worotan, Oumou Sangare took her spectacularly expressive voice and the more traditional instrumentation of her previous albums and introduced musicians and influences from across the world. The acclaimed session players include former James Brown horn arranger and sax man Pee Wee Ellis, London-based bass player Michael Mondesir and Nitin Sawhney who brings some beautiful guitar work to the profound and moving tune "Djorolen" ["Anguish"). The lyrics look at the African woman and African society in its specifics and all its complications. The material transcends mere protest singing, though: we're talking swooning and passionate celebration and praise, even when the subject matter and the tone would seem to be dark. There's even a bit of super-tight organic funk going on on Worotan at times, recalling the likes of the Ethopian star Aster Aweke, who is perhaps the closest comparison anyone can draw to Oumou Sangare: powerful, passionate and utterly unforgettable. --Neil Bennun

From Amazon.com

The 1996 recording of this powerful singer from Mali is both her most fully produced recording to date, but in a strange twist also one of her most grounded, essentially "folk" albums as well. The core African band is mostly voices, with kamalngoni (a thick stringed lute), guitars, flute, and percussion in more or less traditional settings for these powerful and persuasive original songs about the social order and the place of women in the culture. The nontraditional elements are sparse and a little startling. Precise, synchronized violin and bass lines puncture the air; R&B horns (a trio led by Pee Wee Ellis) add an unexpected funk; an African guitar line suddenly takes on an electric urgency. These never detract from the rootsy feel, but rather add enhancements at once surprising and obvious. It's all in service of the songs and the voice of Oumou Sangare, whose sliding soulfulness and chilling wail are positively captivating. --Louis Gibson

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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  4 reviews
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful
Precious kola nuts indeed! 31 Mar 2001
By Friederike Knabe - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Audio CD
Oumou Sangare's WOROTAN follows the rich tradition of Malian `griot', story-teller, music. She sings mainly about social issues, addressing traditional values as well as injustices in a very personal way. The griots have been famous throughout West African cultures as the entertainers at festivals and major family occasions, as well as the recorders of family history and the social conscience of a whole ethnic group. The griots are a special `caste' and only people from selected families are allowed to assume the role. Griots move outside the mainstream of the class society. There are any number of famous griots in the Malian music scene.

Some of the songs might seem somewhat monotonous or repetitive and it is worth reading the text of the songs to understand what she is conveying to her audience. Oumou's beautiful voice is not in the forefront in all songs; she is accompanied by a women's chorus that is typical for Malian music but not necessarily the most melodious for the non-accustomed ear. Her voice though, is powerful, varying with the theme she addresses. It is particularly beautiful in the last track, a haunting song about her anguish about the world around her.

A mix of traditional instruments, such as the ngoni, a one-string guitar-like instrument, the Peul flute and, of course, the essential djembe, the Malian drum, are combined with modern instruments resulting in a good variety of accompaniments.

WOROTAN means `10 kola nuts', a traditional bride price. Kola nuts are in general regarded as a precious gift that is offered on many occasions. Likewise, this CD is a treasure that can be offered and enjoyed by many. For newcomers to Malian music it should be listened to a few times so that the increasing familiarity with the music allows an increase in listening pleasure.

9 of 9 people found the following review helpful
awesome singing and playing 26 Feb 1999
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Audio CD
Oumou Sangare is one of the planet's superstars. She is wildly popular in West Africa. Worotan is an excellent and innovative collection of her work. It may not be as raw and immediate as her first collection "Mousoulou," but it is still essential. Recorded with session musicians (James Brown's horn amongst others) and her regular band, Oumou explores new musical ground. While the collection is experimental it does not suffer from synthesizers and get bogged down looking for a crossover hit (ala Baaba Maal's Nomad Soul). THe cd is Oumou. If you haven't fallen in love with Oumou Sangare I urge you to, her work is wonderful!
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful
Five stars, but one hundred are few 27 April 2000
By Giulio Mario Rampelli - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Audio CD
I love Oumou Sangare. Every time her Wassoulou music come out from my CD player I begin a travel inside the African universe, across the Mali region. Everything is beautiful: the sharp sound of kamelngoni, the soft support to melodie of violin, the counterpoint of the choir, the delicate strenght of percussions. But nothing can be compared to the Oumou's voice. To listen her is to love her. In that voice there is all the deep charm, the fresh sensuality, the strong soul of african women.

This CD is a miracle, born from the encounter between Oumou and the genius of Nick Gold's World Circuit label (who of you knows Nick only for Buena Vista Social Club?). Is the third Oumou's CD, the same intensity of others with some news: the horns of Pee Wee Ellis, the flute of Yacouba Mamouni (Mamar Kassey), the spanish guitar of Nitin Sawhney (hear the sweet ballad Djorolen). Five stars, but one hundred are few.


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