Mama Sana

Mama Sana (1900–1997) was a Tandroy singer and performer of traditional airs on the valiha tube zither, the national instrument of Madagascar. She was a charismatic performer and dressed in traditional clothing with coins braided into her hair. Sana gained national and international acclaim over the course of her career, distinguished by her innovative reinvention of the valiha performance technique and her fusion of traditional Tandroy and Sakalava musical styles.[1]

Mama Sana
Born1900
Madagascar
GenresSalegy
Occupation(s)Singer, songwriter, musician
InstrumentsValiha, voice
Years active1915-1997

Mama Sana recorded several solo albums before her death in 1997. Her music was sampled by French electro-pop new age band Deep Forest for their third album, Comparsa.[2] After her death, Sana's house was converted to a museum and a cultural association was founded in her honor to promote traditional music of the Sakalava and Tandroy people.[1]

Discography

Title Released Label Tracks (Length)
The legendary Mama Sana 1992 Sanachie LC 12 (43'55")
Madagascar: Anthologie des voix. Enregistrements et texte: Victor Randrianary 1997 MCM/INEDIT 12 (43'55")
Madagascar Musique des Sakalava Menabe, Hommage à Mama Sana 2000 MCM/INEDIT 12 (43'55")
gollark: Or ADB.
gollark: I would probably use netcat.
gollark: Oh, very, but only in a chroot-type thing, not baremetal.
gollark: Yes, that is one of the very specific phones.
gollark: So probably a chrootish thing.

See also

Notes

  1. Randrianary, Victor (2002). "Mama Sana: Succès, angoisses… et musique: le blues sakalava". Cahiers d'ethnomusicologie (in French). 15: 97–112. Retrieved 19 April 2013.
  2. Anderson (2000), p. 525

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.