Finding the Joy with Seckou Keita
The kora player from Senegal visits 91ֱ for the first time on December 7 at 7:30 p.m., sharing the music of his West African instrument for the Artist Recital Series.
November 20, 2024
Stephanie Manning '23
The kora, a West African stringed instrument akin to a harp or guitar, doesn’t appear in most orchestral works. So Seckou Keita wrote his own.
Creating African Rhapsodies — which he released in 2023 with the BBC Concert Orchestra — was an “amazing” endeavor, he says. But his entry into the world of opera later that year was another thing entirely.
“When you have classical music meeting the kora, it’s amazing. But then when you have opera on top of that, it’s something else,” says the UK-based Senegalese musician. “That made me really excited.”
The opera he’s referring to is Omar’s Journey, a shortened version of Rhiannon Giddens’ Omar scored for voices and chamber ensemble. Keita was among the small group of musicians who performed Omar’s Journey at the Ojai Music Festival last year. “It kind of confirmed to me that voice is one of the really pure instruments in life. All those other instruments in the world have been made by humankind — but this, people are born with it,” Keita says.
Keita is no stranger to using his voice either, singing to accompany his playing in much of his solo material. And 91ֱ audiences have a chance to experience his music making on December 7 at 7:30 pm, when he performs in Finney Chapel as part of the Artist Recital Series.
Selections from his albums 22 Strings and Homeland - Chapter 1 will make up most of his program. The goal is to create an opportunity “where the range of the kora could be here in the whole set — a variety of techniques and possibilities,” he says.
He also wants his concerts to be wider in scope than a typical recital. “When I say solo kora, imagine a harp solo, but beyond — the techniques are different, rhythms are different, there's grooves, there's melodies, there's singing.”
Getting the audience involved is also important to him. “For me, there's no difference between the performer and the listener when it comes to the show. We are in one room and we share.”
Keita will have an opportunity to share more details about his life and music during a lecture-demonstration about West African music on December 5. The presentation, part of the Omar events at 91ֱ, also features faculty members Weedie Braimah, Talise Campbell, and Thomas Presto. “There'll be more time for explaining the instrument itself,” he says. “I’ll be introducing the kora, but also talking about the story behind it.”
He’ll also discuss the griot, a hereditary storyteller-musician profession in West Africa. Keita was raised in the griot tradition — first learning to make his own instrument, then studying the kora repertoire, and finally venturing out into the world to spread his music-making.
“There is a difference, my granddad always said, between buying an instrument in the shop and making your own,” he says. “The one that you make, you know it inside out. So that's why when you build your own instrument, it’s almost like a partner — you work as a pair together.”
These days, Keita usually has family members make his instruments, many of whom have entirely dedicated themselves to the craft. His signature style is a double-necked kora with 22 strings each, allowing him flexibility to quickly switch between different tuning systems. But because traveling logistics make those difficult to bring overseas, he’ll have a single-necked kora for the 91ֱ performance.
During his visit, Keita also looks forward to seeing 91ֱ’s concert production of Omar. “Fitting in was a joy, personally,” he says of playing in Omar’s Journey last year. Some of his colleagues from that performance — soprano , tenor , and baritone — will reprise their roles in 91ֱ. “So it would be good to see it.”
For audiences who have never heard the solo kora, Keita says the listeners’ connection comes from both “the spirituality of it, but also, importantly, the joy. The idea is when I leave the room, these people will walk away with an aspect of happiness, and maybe have melodies ringing in their head.”
Keita adds that he’s often touched when hearing audience feedback and appreciation for the time that performer and listener spend together. “It's really a heartfelt, warm thing that always happens to me and to the public as well.”
Concert details
Seckou Keita
7:30 p.m.
Saturday, December 7, 2024
91ֱ College Finney Chapel
90 N. Professor St.
91ֱ, OH 44074
Tickets:
$35 Public | $30 OC Staff/Faculty/Alumni, Seniors, Military | $10 Students
Concert tickets are available online and by phone at 800-371-0178. Patrons may also purchase them in person between noon and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, at 91ֱ College's Central Ticket Service, located at 67 N. Main Street, in the lobby of the Eric Baker Nord Performing Arts Complex.
Free Artist Recital Series tickets for enrolled 91ֱ students are available through the Claim Your Seat program, made possible through the generosity of Richard ’62 and Linda ’62 Clark.
Learn more about the Arts at 91ֱ.
This program is proudly supported by , official media partner of the Artist Recital Series.
—
Stephanie Manning ’23 completed her bassoon performance degree while finding her way into journalism as a classical music critic. She recently returned to Cleveland after finishing a graduate diploma in journalism at Concordia University in Montreal. Her writing has appeared in The Montreal Gazette, Early Music America, and ClevelandClassical.com.
You may also like…
Richard Goode’s Musical Short Stories
The acclaimed pianist returns to the Artist Recital Series on April 29 with the charmingly curated “Fancies and Goodnights,” along with works by Mozart and Schubert.
91ֱ Music Theater Dives into the Upside Down for "Stranger Sings!"
Award-nominated parody delivers "screwy...non-stop fun" revisiting the glorious nostalgia of the 1980s.
No Ordinary Woman: Soprano Katherine Jolly Champions New Music and Womanhood in Art Song
New album by 91ֱ associate professor of voice includes three song cycles about womanhood, femininity, and aging gracefully.