Hi!
Thanks Oko for the additional info on Ifangbondi. Pa Musa, Coach and
Karamba, thanks for realising the role Ifang played in the subregion. I hope
they will be given their rightful place very soon, i.e., while the remaining
members are still alive. I will dedicate one of these coming days to
Ifangbondi on Raki Web Radio. I will let you know the day. I hope Dave
Manneh will be able to tune in as he is an Afromanding fan. Have a good
night.
Buharry.
----- Original Message -----
From: "pasamba jow" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Sunday, August 20, 2006 3:45 PM
Subject: Re: Ifangbondi - History
> Buharry,
> Thanks for this wonderful info. It is always refreshing to read something
> inspiring about Gambian heroes, and believe or not the Pap Tourays and
> the Badou Jobes are as important to the shaping of Gambia's identity as
> any politician. Just maybe one day, soon i hope, Gambia will put these
> great pioneers in their right historical place, as Gambia's social and
> cultural icons.
> Pasamba Jow
>
> Momodou Buharry Gassama <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> Biography:
>
> For more than twenty years the Gambian roots band Ifang Bondi ('be
> yourself') has had a leading role within West African popular music. It
> was one of the first groups that decided to return to its African roots by
> playing traditional Manding music.
>
> To talk about an influential band such as Ifang Bondi, one needs to know
> how its origins came about. It was the year 1970. The auditorium of Legon
> University in Accra (Ghana) was filled to capacity. There was an
> environment of restless expectation awaiting the arrival on stage of the
> Super Eagles of The Gambia. The devastating performance of highlife, soul,
> Cuban music, reggae and western pop songs which followed, faultlessly
> delivered by the men in sharp suits, revealed why this band from The
> Gambia had become West Africa's number one superstar attraction. West
> Africa had just completed its first decade of independence and was in the
> throes of anticolonialist sentiment, pan-Africanism and 'Say it loud, I am
> Black and Proud'. This was to be the last time most people saw the Super
> Eagles, leaving only the legacy of their all-time classic album 'Viva
> Super Eagles'.
>
> Unknown to their thousands of fans, this was not the end of the story, but
> just the end of the First chapter in one of the longest-running sagas in
> African musical history. The truth is that the founders of the band,
> leader Badou Jobe and vocalist Paps Touray had taken a deliberate decision
> to end Super Eagles at the height of their popularity. Being true
> revolutionary pan Africanists and musical pioneers, they had become
> increasingly disturbed by the music they were playing and the image they
> presented. Despite the greater fame and fortune that was theirs for the
> taking. They radically gave it all up to go back to square one, back to
> the roots, to create something African for Africans, to challenge the
> cultural imperialism of the west which still gripped the continent. They
> went into the bush to sit at the feet of the jelis - the master drummers
> and the old maestros of the kora, xalam, and bala - the guardians of a
> thousand years of culture and tradition.
>
> After two years of exhaustive research and hard practice, Badou Jobe and
> the few musicians like Paps Touray and Ali Harb, who had felt inspired to
> join, came back with unique new music, born from their amazingly rich
> heritage. To their modern electric outfit, including the novelty of an
> electric organ, they had added traditional drums, which, next to the drum
> kit's chromium sheen and the fancy sunburst of the guitars, looked like
> alien objects from another planet. The new repertoire, painstakingly
> composed according to the rules of the jeli teachers, had meant a struggle
> with unfamiliar scales and mind-boggling rhythm structures. They proudly
> coined their music the Afro Manding Sound after the legendary Manding
> empire, cradle of their West African culture.
>
> By 1973 the group had shed its eagles' feathers to reappear as Ifang Bondi
> ('Be yourself), a fearsome Manding spirit that puts the newly initiated to
> the test and seeks out evildoers within society. The band's First public
> performances were greeted with dismay and disbelief by their devoted fans,
> who were outraged by the 'bush' sound of mbalax and jambadongo rhythms,
> although the musicians had been careful to hide the sabar (drums) under
> the British flag. At that time this type of music was considered to be
> played only at weddings and family-gatherings and not for big audiences.
> But bandleader Badou Jobe, veteran of an earlier bade against caste taboos
> to become a musician in the first place, stuck by his guns through the
> sticks and stones of this initial period. The only support at this time
> came from fellow musicians, later to form Toure Kunda and Super Diamono,
> who appreciated the Afro Manding Sound for the momentum it was bound to
> give African music. Gradually their
> revolutionary ideas got accepted, and this was the birth of the popular
> West African modern music that has since catapulted Toure Kunda, Youssou
> N'dour, Mory Kante, and Baaba Maal onto the world stage.
>
> The role of Ifang Bondi has been pivotal - by rehabilitating the
> traditional musicians they made people aware of their own heritage, and
> they offered new dimensions to African artists in search of an authentic
> sound. To rigorously deprive a devoted public of their pop idols, the
> ultimate symbol of modern western cultureto induce them to set their own
> cultural values and to get rid of the inferiority complex, a lingering
> legacy of colonialism, had not been a venture for the faint-hearted. But
> in the end the effort proved to be worthwhile. Ifang Bondi have achieved
> their goal - to create something African for Africans - beyond
> expectations.
>
> Badou Jobe's innovative ideas, based on a vast musical knowledge, have
> crystallized into a comprehensive artistic concept that created also the
> inimitable sound, Ifang Bondi's trademark. Throughout the years, Ifang
> Bondi has continued to develop its unique music which reflects the
> enormous variety and richness of authentic styles, be it Wolof, Mandingo,
> Fula, Jola or other. The band's line-up shows a similar ethnic diversity
> They put fresh blood into musical traditions, not only by a prolific
> output of original material but also by organizing festivals in which they
> invited pop, jazz and reggae musicians from as far as the US and Jamaica
> to play with traditional performers.
>
> From the beginning Ifang Bondi have acted as a true academy of music from
> which many great artists have graduated. Outside West Africa Ifang Bondi
> has always had a solid cult following. The infrequency of record releases,
> all sought after collector's items, plus the enigmatic personality of its
> bandleader, who seems quite happy to stay out of the limelight, "I once
> opened the door to the hell of stardom, had a good look around, and
> slammed it shut again", has only enhanced the mystique surrounding this
> group. Badou Jobe received the prestigious Kora All Africa Music Award,
> also known as the African Grammy Award, in 1989.
>
> The band:
>
> Badou Jobe - bass
> El Hadj Samb - vocals, percussion
> Jali Momodou Suso - kora, vocals
> Juldeh Camara - riti, vocals
> Lin Diaw - guitars
> Bassirou Mbaye - sabar, bugarabu, tama, jembe
> Tafa Ndiaye - keyboards
> Ibou Gueye - drums
>
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Discography:
>
> Saraba (Disques Griot, 1979)
>
> Mantra (Interstate Records LPH 2366, 1983)
>
> Sanjo (D&K 860017, 1989)
>
> Daraja (MW Records MWCD 3009, 1994)
>
> Gis Gis (MW Records MWCD 3019, 1998)
>
>
>
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Booking:
>
> Musik + Aktion. Address: Uta Hofmann, Musik + Aktion, Egilolfstr.77, 91349
> Egloffstein, Germany. Phone: +49 (0) 9197697970, Fax: +49(0)9197697971.
> E-mail: [log in to unmask]
>
>
>
>
> Source: http://worldmusiccentral.org/artists/artist_page.php?id=1021
>
>
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