Bamako Sounds

Bamako Sounds

The Afropolitan Ethics of Malian Music

Ryan Thomas Skinner

A rich ethnography of contemporary urban life in Mali and its world-renowned yet little understood popular music culture

248 Pages, 6 x 9 in

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Details

Bamako Sounds

The Afropolitan Ethics of Malian Music

Series: A Quadrant Book

Ryan Thomas Skinner

ISBN: 9781452944418

Publication date: June 1st, 2015

248 Pages

22

8 x 5

Bamako Sounds tells the story of an African city, its people, their values, and their music. Centered on the music and musicians of Bamako, Mali’s booming capital city, this book reveals a community of artists whose lives and works evince a complex world shaped by urban culture, postcolonialism, musical expression, religious identity, and intellectual property.

Drawing on years of ethnographic research with classically trained players of the kora (a twenty-one-string West African harp) as well as more contemporary, hip-hop influenced musicians and producers, Ryan Thomas Skinner analyzes how Bamako artists balance social imperatives with personal interests and global imaginations. Whether performed live on stage, broadcast on the radio, or shared over the Internet, music is a privileged mode of expression that suffuses Bamako’s urban soundscape. It animates professional projects, communicates cultural values, pronounces public piety, resounds in the marketplace, and quite literally performs the nation. Music, the artists who make it, and the audiences who interpret it thus represent a crucial means of articulating and disseminating the ethics and aesthetics of a varied and vital Afropolitanism, in Bamako and beyond.


Ryan Thomas Skinner is assistant professor of ethnomusicology at the Ohio State University. He is the author and illustrator of a children’s book, Sidikiba’s Kora Lesson, and an accomplished kora player.

Contents

Introduction: A Sense of Urban Africa
1. Representing Bamako
2. Artistiya
3. Ethics and Aesthetics
4. A Pious Poetics of Place
5. Money Trouble
6. Afropolitan Patriotism
Conclusion: An Africanist’s Query
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index