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Stars and Songbirds of Africa: Mande Music in Contemporary Mali
Contributor(s): Durán, Lucy (Author)
ISBN: 0754657965     ISBN-13: 9780754657965
Publisher: Routledge
OUR PRICE:   $148.50  
Product Type: Hardcover
Published: January 2026
This item may be ordered no more than 25 days prior to its publication date of January 5, 2026
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Music
Dewey: 780
Series: Soas Musicology
Physical Information: 236 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Mali has provided many of Africa's best known and most celebrated artists, several of whom have won Grammy awards and other accolades from the international music industry. Malian music attracts audiences from around the world, is widely recorded, and features prominently in most discussions of 'world music' or culture in West Africa. Among Mali's diverse traditions, it is the music of the Mande jeliw (occupational hereditary musicians) that has dominated professional music-making from pre-colonial times to the present day. The Mande are a widespread group of peoples speaking a number of related languages and the jeliw are central to the sense of common history and identity of all Mande peoples. Though the jeliw are found in many West African countries, and have different regional styles and repertoires, their musical traditions are most vibrant in Mali, which is considered the homeland of the Mande. Academic writings on music have focused on the traditional performing arts of the Maninka and Mandinka jeliw of western Mali, Guinea, Senegal and Gambia but so far less reported are the musical traditions of the Bamana who have had a significant input into contemporary urban jeliya (the art of the jeli) in Mali. Lucy Dur n explores three main developments in Mande music in Mali since the 1980s: firstly the rise of the female jeli (jelimuso) as 'star' performer and musical innovator, working within the ritual context of life cycle celebrations (sumu); secondly the emergence of wassoulou music as a new Mande tradition with ancient roots, performed mainly in the concert hall and on recordings, by non-hereditary musicians calling themselves 'songbirds', and thirdly 'art-jeliya' (virtuoso jeli music arranged for the 'cultural spaces' of Bamako) performed by semi-acoustic groups using traditional instruments. One of the key issues discussed here is the status of hereditary (jeli) versus non-hereditary ('songbird') musicians, challenging or reinforcing the social hierarchies of traditional Mande society. Dur n explores how song has always been genderized as female in Mande culture (as in many other West African cultures) and so women have been the designated singers, while men play instruments and recite through the spoken word. The role of women as bearers of the tradition and as innovators of popular culture is made clear.