| Name | Artist | Time | Price | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
1 |
Erdi | Ali Farka Touré | 4:42 | £0.79 | View In iTunes |
|
2 |
Yer Bounda Fara | Ali Farka Touré | 4:18 | £0.79 | View In iTunes |
|
3 |
Beto | Ali Farka Touré | 4:49 | £0.79 | View In iTunes |
|
4 |
Savane | Ali Farka Touré | 7:43 | £0.79 | View In iTunes |
|
5 |
Soya | Ali Farka Touré | 4:38 | £0.79 | View In iTunes |
|
6 |
Penda Yoro | Ali Farka Touré | 5:25 | £0.79 | View In iTunes |
|
7 |
Machengoidi | Ali Farka Touré | 3:35 | £0.79 | View In iTunes |
|
8 |
Ledi Coumbe | Ali Farka Touré | 3:16 | £0.79 | View In iTunes |
|
9 |
Hanana | Ali Farka Touré | 2:34 | £0.79 | View In iTunes |
|
10 |
Soko Yhinka | Ali Farka Touré | 5:05 | £0.79 | View In iTunes |
|
11 |
Gambari Didi | Ali Farka Touré | 3:49 | £0.79 | View In iTunes |
|
12 |
Banga | Ali Farka Touré | 3:48 | £0.79 | View In iTunes |
|
13 |
Njarou | Ali Farka Touré | 4:55 | £0.79 | View In iTunes |
| Total: 13 Songs |
iTunes Review
Like the Delta Blues mesmerists to whom he is perhaps too often compared, the late Malian guitar maestro Ali Farka Toure was a master of transforming the notion of the “just noticeable difference” into a hypnotic musical principle. It's a principle Junior Kimbrough, John Lee Hooker and James Brown also knew, and like the work of those artists, Ali Farka Toure’s music gains much of its power from his ability to extract minute, just noticeable variations from the prolonged repetition of a seemingly simple musical phrase. With the aid of local Malian musicians and former James Brown saxophonist Pee Wee Ellis, Toure works the loping pentatonic grooves of Savane into extended meditations of matchless grace and fluidity. The guitar work on Savane is positively incandescent; Toure's serpentine lead imbues tracks like “Banga” and “Hanana” with a seething improvisational tension that builds as his accompanists strain to adapt themselves to his tricky phrasing. Recorded shortly before Toure’s death in March of 2006, Savane stands as the final musical testament of a true original.
Customer Reviews
Ali's farewell is practically music's Rosetta Stone
So often albums released shortly after the death of an artist aren’t very good, getting by on sentiment rather than content, and cobbled together from incomplete recordings that would otherwise never have seen the light of day. No such problems with Ali Farka Touré’s swansong. Once he knew he was dying, he was determined to leave a fitting final testament. When he finished, just a few weeks before he died, he knew that he had recorded his magnum opus. In many ways Savane is the most traditional record he ever made; at the same time it’s also his most different. That’s apparent from the first track – ‘Erdi’ – which opens with the scratchy sound of a couple of ngonis (plucked lute) and the one-string njarka (fiddle) before the wailing blues harp of Little George Surreff takes up the theme. Ali then picks out a hypnotic guitar riff and begins to rap a deep-throated vocal of defiant power and conviction. Savane is as pure and deep an expression of the blues as you will ever hear – up there with the unearthly recordings of Robert Johnson or early Muddy Waters. Yet it is also an album of wonderfully contrasting sounds and textures. ‘Beto’ features the smouldering tenor sax of Pee Wee Ellis to devastating effect. Listen to the reggae lilt of the title-track and you’ll be convinced that the rhythms of Jamaica also originated in Africa. The rustic-sounding ‘Penda Yoro’ finds the ngoni pickers to the fore again, and you can hear where the Appalachian banjo has its roots. And that’s the most extraordinary thing about this remarkable recording. It seems to tap into some rich, deep and unfathomable spiritual source from which, in the distant mists of time, all music must originally have flowed. Right now, Savane genuinely does sound like the best album I’ve ever heard. © Nigel Williamson, Songlines magazine (July/August 2006 issue)
Perfect
Simply marvelous. You must listen to this before you die. Almost hypnotic in its beauty. Buy it NOW.
Genius....
Not a single bad track on the album. Its just brilliant all the way through. Another review says 'hypnotic,' which is very fitting. £8. Bargain!
Biography
Born: 1939 in Timbuktu
Genre: World
Years Active: '70s, '80s, '90s, '00s
Top Albums and Songs By Ali Farka Touré
| Name | Album | Time | Price | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
1 |
Savane | Savane | 7:43 | £0.79 | View In iTunes |
|
2 |
Ai Du | Talking Timbuktu | 7:09 | £0.79 | View In iTunes |
|
3 |
Soukora | Talking Timbuktu | 6:05 | £0.79 | View In iTunes |
|
4 |
Gomni | Talking Timbuktu | 7:00 | £0.79 | View In iTunes |
|
5 |
Keito | Talking Timbuktu | 5:42 | £0.79 | View In iTunes |
|
6 |
Amandrai | Talking Timbuktu | 9:23 | £0.79 | View In iTunes |
|
7 |
Kaira | In The Heart Of The Moon | 6:24 | £0.79 | View In iTunes |
|
8 |
Diaraby | Talking Timbuktu | 7:26 | £0.79 | View In iTunes |
|
9 |
Bonde | Talking Timbuktu | 5:28 | £0.79 | View In iTunes |
|
10 |
Lasidan | Talking Timbuktu | 6:06 | £0.79 | View In iTunes |














