Sahara Soul will present in London some of the most exciting artists from the Sahara, including Aziza Brahim (Western Sahara), Noura Mint Seymali (Mauritania), Tartit (Mali), Nabil Baly Othmani (Algeria) and more. The concerts will take place Saturday, September 27, 2014 at 19:30.
Mali’s contribution to the Desert Blues music of North Africa has been well documented in recent times with artists such as Bassekou Kouyate & Ngoni ba, Tamikrest and Sidi Toure (who all featured on the first edition of Sahara Soul at the Barbican in 2013), joining fellow countrymen Tinariwen and the late Ali Farke Toure on the international stage. Now the world is noticing the wider context in which this music was made: the vast and mystical territory known as the Sahara. Spanning the length and breadth of North Africa, the Saharan region encompasses a multitude of nomadic communities spread over a dozen of African countries. Home to these people for millennia, this beautiful, remote and inhospitable land has captured the imagination of travelers for centuries. However, recently it has also become an area known as much for conflict and human suffering as it is for its artistry.
Sahara Soul celebrates the creative vitality of this boundless expanse of desert, home to so many talented artists and diverse musical styles. This is the new sound of the Sahara: beguiling and sad, hypnotic and ethereal, serene yet defiant – the sound of the greatest desert on Earth.
This second installment of Sahara Soul brings together a young generation of Saharawi, Tuareg, Berber and Mauritanian artists whose music embodies their ancient heritage and struggle for survival in the modern world. Women serve as the backbone of these ancestral cultures and the evening’s program emphasizes this by focusing on powerful young female singers, as well emerging male talent. The show will feature performances from.
Barbican Hall, Barbican, Silk Street, London EC2Y 8DS
Tickets: £15 – 25 (plus booking fee)
For more info & tickets: www.barbican.org.uk
Author: World Music Central News Room
World music news from the editors at World Music Central