Kora (instrument)
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
The kora (Manding languages: ߞߐߙߊ kɔra) is a beautiful stringed instrument from West Africa. It has 21 strings that a player plucks with their fingers to make music. The kora mixes the sounds of both a lute and a harp, making it a special and unique instrument. People have enjoyed its gentle, rich tones for many years, and it remains an important part of West African music and culture.
Description
The kora is a special musical instrument from West Africa. It is made from a gourd that is cut in half and covered with cow skin to create a sound box. It has a long wooden neck and 21 strings that are played by plucking with the fingers. The kora has features of both a lute and a harp, making it unique.
Kora players often come from families of traditional storytellers and historians. The instrument is popular in countries like Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Mali, Senegal, and was first found in the Gambia. Traditional koras have 11 strings for the left hand and 10 for the right, but modern versions can have extra bass strings. Players used to use a special tin plate to make the sound louder, but today they often use electronic pickups.
History
Possible Antecedents
In the 1300s, a traveler named Ibn Battuta wrote about women who played stringed instruments by plucking them with their fingers. This shows that string instruments like the kora existed in Mali a long time ago.
Legendary Origin
Stories from the Mandinka people say the kora began in Kaabu. One story tells of a famous Jali, Mady Wouling Cissoko, who got the kora from a spirit and was the first person to play it.
Modern history
The first European writer to describe the kora was Mungo Park, a Scotsman, in a book from 1799.
The kora is even mentioned in the national anthem of Senegal: "Pincez tous vos koras, frappez les balafons."
In recent years, some players have used koras with 25 strings, mainly in Casamance, Senegal. Some players have special koras with two necks, letting them change the tuning quickly.
Monks in Senegal created a way to teach the kora using musical scores. One monk, Brother Dominique Catta, was the first person from Europe to write music for the kora.
A modern version of the kora called the gravikord was made in recent years. It has 24 strings and is made mostly of metal. Another modern version, the gravi-kora, has 21 strings and can be plugged into amplifiers. It is played the same way as the traditional kora and has been used by musicians like Foday Musa Suso, who worked with famous jazz musician Herbie Hancock.
Tuning
Many koras today use parts from guitars instead of the old way with leather rings. This makes them easier to tune. But it can limit how much the sound can change because the strings are shorter and lighter. Learning to adjust a traditional kora can be very hard. Many visitors to West Africa love the sound but find it hard to keep their kora in tune when they return home. Some koras can be changed to use guitar parts instead of leather. Even wooden pegs can have tuning issues in certain weather unless they are made very well.
Images
Here are some historical pictures of kora players and koras from different times and places:
- A kora player from the central northern Bandiagara Escarpment, Mopti Region, Mali, from the late 1700s.
- Sambou, a jali of Niantanso, Mali, with a Kamalengoni in 1872.
- Kora players in Sénégal, 1900.
- Jali Fily Sissokho playing a 22-string kora with konso string terminations and nylon monofilament strings in 2008.
- Sona Jobarteh tuning a 22-string kora with open machine head tuners in 2017.
- An illustration showing the playing position of a kora.
- Images of 4 koras showing 4 different sides.
- A zoomed-in version of the 4 koras.
Scores
In West Africa, music for the kora was not written down until the 20th century. Only experts called ethnomusicologists recorded some traditional tunes.
Today, kora music uses a special system called the Keur Moussa notation. This system was created in the late 1970s by a monk named Brother Dominique Catta from Senegal. Some Western musicians began using this system in the 1980s. Many scores have been written for kora solo or with Western instruments. Notable composers include Jacques Burtin from France and others like Carole Ouellet from Canada.
Derek Gripper from Cape Town, South Africa has turned some West African kora music into pieces for classical guitar and has performed these works.
Selected discography
African composers (oral tradition)
- Mali: cordes anciennes ("Mali: Ancient Strings"), Sidiki Diabaté, Batourou Sekou Kouyaté and Djelimadi Sissoko, Buda Music, 2000. This CD was the first album totally devoted to the kora. Sidiki Diabaté was the father of Toumani Diabaté and Mamadou Sidiki Diabaté, and Djelimadi Sissoko was the father of Ballaké Sissoko. Toumani and Ballaké recorded New Ancient Strings - Nouvelles Cordes Anciennes in 1999 (Hannibal), as a tribute to their fathers.
- Gambie : l'art de la kora, Jali Nyama Suso, edited by Roderic Knight, Ocora, 1996. This CD is also a historical recording.
- Kora Melodies from the Republic of The Gambia, West Africa, Alhaji Bai Konte, Recorded and produced by Marc D. Pevar; photography and notes by Marc and Susan Pever. Rounder Records 5001.
- Jali Kunda - Griots of West Africa & Beyond, Ellipsis Arts, 1996. A book and a CD edited by Foday Musa Suso, produced by Bill Laswell. Photographs by Daniel Lainé. This album shows traditional kora music and three original meetings: kora and piano ("Spring Waterfall" by Foday Musa Suso and Philip Glass); kora and synthesizers ("Lanmbasy Dub'", with Bill Laswell, bass, and Jeff Bova, synthesizers); kora and saxophone ("Samma", a duet with jazz saxophonist Pharoah Sanders).
- The Mandé Variations, Toumani Diabaté, World Circuit, 2008. Twenty years after his first CD, Kaira (Hannibal, 1988) - the first CD ever recorded with solo kora pieces without any song, Toumani Diabate alternates traditional pieces on a kora with leather rings and his own creations with a special tuning on a kora with wooden pegs.
Western composers (written music)
- Quand renaît le matin, Abbaye de Keur Moussa, Art et Musique, 2007. This album gathers pieces composed and performed by Brother Dominique Catta and Carole Ouellet: solo kora pieces, songs with kora accompaniment and a Concerto for flute and three koras. There is also a piece composed by Brother Grégoire for three koras differently tuned and played by one musician.
- Le Jour des Merveilles, Jacques Burtin, 3-CD Box Set, Bayard Musique, 2009. Pieces for solo kora, duets with cello, viola, guitar and koto, suites for flute, guitar and three koras.
Notable players
Main page: Category:Kora (instrument) players
France
Gambia
- Foday Musa Suso (Gambia, United States), recorded with Herbie Hancock
- Jali Nyama Suso (Gambia)
- Jalli Lamin Kuyateh (Gambia/The Netherlands)
- Sona Jobarteh (Gambia/United Kingdom, female kora player)
- Bai Konte (Gambia)
- Dembo Konte (Gambia)
- Jaliba Kuyateh (Gambia)
- Lamin Saho (Gambia)
- Papa Susso (Gambia)
- Suntou Susso (Gambia/UK)
Guinea
- Tasana Camara (Guinea)
- Djeli Moussa Diawara also known as Jali Musa Jawara (Guinea, now playing a 32-stringed Kora)
- N'Faly Kouyate (Guinea)
- Prince Diabate (Guinea)
Haiti
- Guylene Solon (Haiti/United States, female kora player)
Mali
- Toumani Diabaté (Mali)
- Sidiki Diabaté (Mali)
- Mamadou Sidiki Diabaté (Mali)
- Mamadou Diabaté (Mali)
- Kandia Kouyaté (Mali)
- Moussa Kouyate (Mali)
- Ballaké Sissoko (Mali)
Nigeria
- Tunde Jegede (Nigeria/United Kingdom)
Senegal
- Soriba Kouyate (Senegal)
- Ablaye Cissoko (Senegal)
- Kadialy Kouyaté (Senegal, United Kingdom)
- Momi Maiga (Senegal)
United Kingdom
- Seckou Keita (United Kingdom)
- Adam Doughty (United Kingdom)
United States
- William Parker (United States)
- Justin Perkins (United States)
Images
Related articles
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