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Modern Day Griot

Writer Gaylene Gould meets the modern performers who are re-inventing traditional West African music. From 2012.

How are modern musicians re-imagining the role the West African griot?

Traditionally griots belong to particular West African families who act as oral historians, advisors, story-tellers and musicians for their culture.

Now a generation of artists living in the West, who have African roots, are learning musical techniques from the masters but creating songs and stories with contemporary relevance.

Writer Gaylene Gould explores what it means to be a griot today.

When modern culture uses the term as a shorthand - what does it mean to call someone a griot?

Hereditary griot Seckou Keita, leads a music workshop at a primary school, teaching harp-like instrument the Kora. At the age of 10, Tunde Jegede travelled from England to Gambia to train with a master kora player. He now collaborates with both orchestras and the hip-hop artist HKB FiNN - who has changed the way he approaches writing lyrics and embraced the griot label. Sona Jobarteh, Tunde's sister, is a hereditary griot. She gives Gaylene a lesson in kora playing and discusses how her sex affects the role and why she is reluctant to call herself a griot.

Award-winning poet and performer Inua Ellams has been performing at the National Theatre and Malian musician Fatoumata Diawara sells out gigs internationally- both are called griot by their fans but aren't entirely comfortable with the label.

Fatoumata believes she couldn't address topics like female circumcision as a griot. London based spoken word artist Zena Edwards explains why she wants to honour the tradition.

Reflecting on the importance of the tradition in its purest form, Tunde Jedege says "every time a griot dies it's like a library burning down."

Producer Claire Bartleet

First broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in June 2012.

Available now

30 minutes

Last on

Tue 14 Oct 202500:30

Broadcasts

  • Tue 5 Jun 201211:30
  • Sat 9 Jun 201215:30
  • Wed 29 Mar 201706:30
  • Wed 29 Mar 201713:30
  • Wed 29 Mar 201720:30
  • Thu 30 Mar 201701:30
  • Tue 28 Jul 202018:30
  • Wed 29 Jul 202000:30
  • Mon 13 Oct 202510:30
  • Mon 13 Oct 202516:30
  • Tue 14 Oct 202500:30

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