Ablaye Cissoko is a kora musician from Senegal. His show is called "Le Gri… Read Full Bio ↴Ablaye Cissoko is a kora musician from Senegal. His show is called "Le Griot Rouge" (named after his second album) sounds about the legend of the man who has created the kora. During this performance, Ablaye Cissoko transmits with smoothness, grace and intelligence the values of a generous tradition and sings with sincerity the peace and the respect of the other. He usually plays all around the world. His tours passed through Portugal, France, Belgium, Senegal, Mali, Canada, Germany, Norway, Russia.
His newest album "SIRA"[2] is a duo with trumpeter Volker Goetze [3] and has received raving reviews and peaked in January 2009 on CMJ's world music radio charts. The album is now #5[4] on CMJ and still rising.
A feature-length documentary about Ablaye Cissoko is in post-production.[5]
His newest album "SIRA"[2] is a duo with trumpeter Volker Goetze [3] and has received raving reviews and peaked in January 2009 on CMJ's world music radio charts. The album is now #5[4] on CMJ and still rising.
A feature-length documentary about Ablaye Cissoko is in post-production.[5]
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Amanké Dionti
Ablaye Cissoko Lyrics
No lyrics text found for this track.
The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
@anastasiaanastasia1209
Amanke Dionti can be translated to “She is Not Your Slave.” It addresses one of the least known but still very troubling societal issues facing the Senegalese people. Cissoko’s lyrics urge respect for the thousands of young women who are sent by their impoverished families in the remote areas to serve as maids for more affluent urban families. These young women hope to work in exchange for food, shelter, education and more money, but instead many are exploited and treated as nothing more than slaves.
Amanke Dionti was recorded in Bon Secours, a historic all wooden church in Paris that dates back to the mid-nineteenth century.
But you really don’t need to understand the lyrics to feel the beauty and soulfulness of the song.
@ProfessorPesca
Nice, thank you for that summary, been looking for that for a while
@sdeal709
Thank you for sharing the meaning
@brynnk2518
Wow thank you so much for the summary .
@hawkice5140
Peace, love, and prosperity ✌
@aminasamira11
Thanks
@EubulusKane3259
God this might be one of the best songs I've ever listened to
@nicolasgrangeonhandpanandd514
True
@tordidriksen7036
Same here 🙂
@ginanotafan1039
Same💯