New Sounds

#4741, With Sona Jobarteh, From Big Ears Festival 2023

Episode Summary

The Gambian kora virtuoso, vocalist, educator, composer, and activist Sona Jobarteh is a modern pioneer of the kora - the 21-stringed harp-lute of the Manding peoples of West Africa. The mainly male tradition dates back over seven centuries was passed on from father to son, until Sona, who is the first professional female Kora virtuoso to come from any of the five principal West African Griot dynasties. She has recorded with her brother, fellow kora master, cellist, and composer Tunde Jegede, is the cousin of Toumani Diabaté, and was invited by Ballake Sissoko to play a duet for his 2021 record, Djourou. Sona Jobarteh is classically trained (Afropop interview) having studied cello, harpsichord, and piano at the Royal College of Music, and subsequently pursued composition at the Purcell School of Music, (Big Ears Festival); her music both embraces tradition and stretches it. She’s performed with British jazz singer Cleveland Watkiss, works in her brother’s group the African Classical Music Ensemble, and scored the documentary film Motherland, where she used the kora in non-traditional ways, as a bass instrument and tuned it to an Arabic scale and invented a new instrument called the Nkoni - a cross between the Kora and the Donso Ngoni. In 2015, she founded the Gambia Academy, which teaches new curriculum designed to take on the colonial influence and teaching about history, traditions, culture, and languages of the Gambia, including music. More recently she worked on the soundtrack of the Idris Elba film Beast, co-wrote a track on LL Cool J’s latest with Q Tip, and in 2022, released her latest record, Badinyaa Kumoo.  In this interview, recorded in Knoxville, TN, where she performed recently at the Big Ears Festival 2023, Sona Jobarteh describes her career journey, her instrument, the kora, and growing up in one of the great griot families. Sona Jobarteh, as a role model, admits that she has carried a resentful burden of being the first (and only) female professional kora player. Well, first she was working to achieve that in football (soccer), then, later, in music. She has just mainly wanted to be a player, like any other, and yet is quite aware of the power of being seen and inspiring future players who are women and girls. Jobarteh, as the educator, further says that what inspires her is creating the opportunity of neutralized spaces, at the academy, and on stages for students who are women, and may not necessarily come from a griot family. Listen to music by Sona Jobarteh and the whole conversation for this New Sounds. - Caryn Havlik Program #4741, with Sona Jobarteh from Big Ears (First aired 4/18/23) ARTIST: Toumani DiabateWORK: Elyne Road [1:30]RECORDING: The Mande VariationsSOURCE: Nonesuch #433724INFO: nonesuch.com ARTIST: Maya Jobarteh & Tunde JegedeWORK: Maya Jobarteh: Song of the Waterfall [7:40]RECORDING: LamentationSOURCE/INFO: tundejegede.com ARTIST: Sona Jobarteh WORK: Mali Ni Ce [4:57]RECORDING: FasiyaSOURCE: African Guild RecordsINFO: https://sonajobarteh.com/fasiya or Spotify, YouTube Music, Amazon.com, AppleMusic  ARTIST: Sona JobartehWORK: Ubuntu [5:12]RECORDING: Badinyaa KumooSOURCE: African Guild RecordsINFO: sonajobarteh.band ARTIST: Ballake Sissoko and Sona JobartehWORK: Djourou [4:50]RECORDING: DjourouSOURCE: No FormatINFO: https://ballake.bandcamp.com/album/djourou ARTIST: Sona JobartehWORK: Gambia [5:11]RECORDING: GambiaSOURCE/INFO: sonajobarteh.com ARTIST: Ali Farka Touré / Toumani DiabatéWORK: Hawa Dolo [5:01]RECORDING: In the Heart of the MoonSOURCE: Nonesuch World Circuit #79920INFO: www.nonesuch.com

Episode Notes

The Gambian kora virtuoso, vocalist, educator, composer, and activist Sona Jobarteh is a modern pioneer of the kora - the 21-stringed harp-lute of the Manding peoples of West Africa. The mainly male tradition dates back over seven centuries was passed on from father to son, until Sona, who is the first professional female Kora virtuoso to come from any of the five principal West African Griot dynasties. She has recorded with her brother, fellow kora master, cellist, and composer Tunde Jegede, is the cousin of Toumani Diabaté, and was invited by Ballake Sissoko to play a duet for his 2021 record, Djourou.

Sona Jobarteh is classically trained (Afropop interview) having studied cello, harpsichord, and piano at the Royal College of Music, and subsequently pursued composition at the Purcell School of Music, (Big Ears Festival); her music both embraces tradition and stretches it. She’s performed with British jazz singer Cleveland Watkiss, works in her brother’s group the African Classical Music Ensemble, and scored the documentary film Motherland, where she used the kora in non-traditional ways, as a bass instrument and tuned it to an Arabic scale and invented a new instrument called the Nkoni - a cross between the Kora and the Donso Ngoni. In 2015, she founded the Gambia Academy, which teaches new curriculum designed to take on the colonial influence and teaching about history, traditions, culture, and languages of the Gambia, including music. More recently she worked on the soundtrack of the Idris Elba film Beast, co-wrote a track on LL Cool J’s latest with Q Tip, and in 2022, released her latest record, Badinyaa Kumoo

In this interview, recorded in Knoxville, TN, where she performed recently at the Big Ears Festival 2023, Sona Jobarteh describes her career journey, her instrument, the kora, and growing up in one of the great griot families. Sona Jobarteh, as a role model, admits that she has carried a resentful burden of being the first (and only) female professional kora player. Well, first she was working to achieve that in football (soccer), then, later, in music. She has just mainly wanted to be a player, like any other, and yet is quite aware of the power of being seen and inspiring future players who are women and girls. Jobarteh, as the educator, further says that what inspires her is creating the opportunity of neutralized spaces, at the academy, and on stages for students who are women, and may not necessarily come from a griot family. Listen to music by Sona Jobarteh and the whole conversation for this New Sounds. - Caryn Havlik

Program #4741, with Sona Jobarteh from Big Ears (First aired 4/18/23)

ARTIST: Toumani DiabateWORK: Elyne Road [1:30]RECORDING: The Mande VariationsSOURCE: Nonesuch #433724INFO: nonesuch.com

ARTIST: Maya Jobarteh & Tunde JegedeWORK: Maya Jobarteh: Song of the Waterfall [7:40]RECORDING: LamentationSOURCE/INFO: tundejegede.com

ARTIST: Sona Jobarteh WORK: Mali Ni Ce [4:57]RECORDING: FasiyaSOURCE: African Guild RecordsINFO: https://sonajobarteh.com/fasiya or Spotify, YouTube Music, Amazon.com, AppleMusic 

ARTIST: Sona JobartehWORK: Ubuntu [5:12]RECORDING: Badinyaa KumooSOURCE: African Guild RecordsINFO: sonajobarteh.band

ARTIST: Ballake Sissoko and Sona JobartehWORK: Djourou [4:50]RECORDING: DjourouSOURCE: No FormatINFO: https://ballake.bandcamp.com/album/djourou

ARTIST: Sona JobartehWORK: Gambia [5:11]RECORDING: GambiaSOURCE/INFO: sonajobarteh.com

ARTIST: Ali Farka Touré / Toumani DiabatéWORK: Hawa Dolo [5:01]RECORDING: In the Heart of the MoonSOURCE: Nonesuch World Circuit #79920INFO: www.nonesuch.com