Senegalese drums

CNN does a story on Abdoulaye Wade's praise singer, Coumba Gawlo.

Screen shot from CNN.

Senegalese griot singer Coumba Gawlo Seck is a rising star both in her native country and in Europe. People also occasionally ask her about her political opinions. What makes Coumba Gawlo interesting is that she is a supporter of embattled Senegalese President Abdoulaye Wade. He is so unpopular that he has been forced to face a second round of voting against a divided opposition later this month. The thing about Coumba Gawlo is that she feels compelled to defend Wade at all costs. This is certainly at odds with the political stances of most of Senegal top musicians (if you don’t include Akon; he is also a fan of Wade).

In a recent interview on Senegalese TV, she quoted her grandmother about the meaning of true friendship and loyalty. Coumba Gawlo was asked why she’s not part of those musicians and artists organized under the Y’En A Marre movement in protesting president Wade’s run for another term:

A man wants to know who his real friends are, so he goes knocking on a first friend’s door. “I’ve killed somebody,” he says. The friend responds he doesn’t want anything to do with it. The man goes over to a second friend’s house, knocks on the door and says: “I’ve killed somebody.” The friend gets angry and shouts he should go the police, but he won’ let him in. So the man goes to a third friend, knocks on his door and says: “I’ve killed somebody.” The friend hears this and invites him in. “You’re my friend, no matter what happens in life.”

She defends her loyalty to Wade because of his supporting and looking after her from a young age, which jumpstarted her career and made her into the popular singer she is today. “He’s like a father to me.” But, she also says, “the fact that Y’En A Mar exists, is a sign of Senegal being an open, free and democratic country.” She’s a praise singer, after all.

The news that demonstrators were killed by Wade’s police force, gives her answers an eerie edge.

Asked for her opinion on Youssou N’Dour’s candidacy, (the veteran music star is running for president against Wade) she’s defensively evasive.

Which brings me to a recent special on Senegalese music, broadcast on CNN’s “Inside Africa” program. This is of course part of CNN’s ongoing “discovery of the real Africa.” Journalist Errol Barnett traveled to Dakar where he met a few musicians, including the legendary rap group, Daara J Family (more on that later), Doudou N’Diaye Rose and Coumba Gawlo. Barnett’s insert on Coumba Gawlo amounts to “a bizarre interview” (in his words). He is basically forced to wait hours outside her dressing room at the National Theater and when he does get to talk to her, he’s covered in glitter dust. Anyway, what was interesting is that given that he seems to be in Dakar during these tumultuous times (elections anyone?) he asks her about Senegalese drums. I’m not sure if it’s the glitter or the struggle to get the interview.

To talk to musicians about their instruments is fine, but given today’s circumstances in Senegal, an insight into the “real” part of Africa they’re so eager to cover, a different approach might have given us a more interesting picture.

Watch the full CNN documentary here (in which he also pays a visit to the Daara J Family hoping to learn something about Senegal’s music — there’s a nice diversion into their engagement with South African choral music — but Barnett can’t resist zooming in on Nigeria’s Afrobeat two minutes in).

A better use of your time would be Arte’s interview with Didier Awadi around the same time as Erroll was being covered in glitter and asking about Senegalese drums. He is more to the point: “we’ve killed the youth’s hope; listen to the rap albums to understand what’s happening.”

Further Reading

No one should be surprised we exist

The documentary film, ‘Rolé—Histórias dos Rolezinhos’ by Afro-Brazilian filmmaker Vladimir Seixas uses sharp commentary to expose social, political, and cultural inequalities within Brazilian society.

Kenya’s stalemate

A fundamental contest between two orders is taking place in Kenya. Will its progressives seize the moment to catalyze a vision for social, economic, and political change?

More than a building

The film ‘No Place But Here’ uses VR or 360 media to immerse a viewer inside a housing occupation in Cape Town. In the process, it wants to challenge gentrification and the capitalist logic of home ownership.