Sona Jobarteh and Taj Mahal
Mar 09

Sona Jobarteh and Taj Mahal

With her shimmering 21-string kora melodies and distinctive voice, Sona Jobarteh is “a griot for a new generation of West Africans” (BBC). Breaking from a seven-century-old tradition that reserved the instrument for males of a hereditary musical family, Jobarteh is not only the very first female kora virtuoso, but also a deft innovator who “blends traditional music, blues, and Afropop to impressive effect” (The Guardian). Along with selling out venues like the Barbican in London and La Seine Musicale in Paris, she is also a leading activist for social change and education reform in Africa, delivering potent speeches to the UN, the WTO, and UNICEF, and founding The Gambia Academy.

“A master of blues and folk styles on guitar, banjo, and harmonica, and a commanding singer with a raw, immediately recognizable baritone” (The New York Times), Grammy Award-winning multi-instrumentalist Taj Mahal is a legendary figure in the blues and roots music. A brilliant artist with a musicologist’s mind, he is a hero to rock-and-roll icons such as Eric Clapton and the Rolling Stones, who has collaborated with Sona Jobarteh, Toumani Diabaté, and Keb' Mo', among many others. “The blues is bigger than most people think,” he says. “You could hear Mozart play the blues. It might be more like a lament. It might be more melancholy. But I’m going to tell you: the blues is in there.”

 

Sona Jobarteh, vocals, kora & acoustic guitar

Eric Appapoulay, guitars & vocals

Sidiki Jobarteh, balafon

Andi McLean, electric bass

Yuval Wetzler, drums

Samara Joy, Vocals

Connor Rohrer, Piano

Felix Moseholm, Bass

Evan Sherman, Drums

Jason Charos, Trumpet

David Mason, Sax

Kendrick McCallister, Tenor

Donavan Austin, Trombone

The Royal Conservatory

DETAILS

The Royal Conservatory
(416) 408-0208

273 Bloor Street West
TELUS Centre for Performance and Learning
Toronto ON M5S 1W2
Canada

DATE & TIME

- [ Add to Calendar ] 2024-03-10 01:00:00 2024-03-10 03:00:00 Sona Jobarteh and Taj Mahal <p>With her shimmering 21-string kora melodies and distinctive voice, Sona Jobarteh is “a griot for a new generation of West Africans” (<em>BBC</em>). Breaking from a seven-century-old tradition that reserved the instrument for males of a hereditary musical family, Jobarteh is not only the very first female kora virtuoso, but also a deft innovator who “blends traditional music, blues, and Afropop to impressive effect” (<em>The Guardian</em>).</p>

273 Bloor Street West
TELUS Centre for Performance and Learning
Toronto ON M5S 1W2
Canada

Bloor St. Culture Corridor info@perceptible.com America/Toronto public

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