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Doudou N'Diaye Rose (28 July 1930), born Mamadou N'Diaye in Dakar, is Senegalese drummer composer and band leader, and is the recognized modern master of Senegal's traditional drum, the sabar -- called the Tam-Tam in Wolof. He is -- literally -- the father of a dynasty of a musical dynasty which includes some of the most successful traditional musicians of contemporary West Africa.[1][2]

Contents

[edit] Career

N'Diaye Rose is one of the most renowned African musicians of the 20th century. While he specializes in the sabar, he also plays many other types of drum such as saourouba, assicot, bougarabou, meung meung, lamb, n'der, gorom babass, and khine. The child of a Griot (West African bard caste) family, N'Diaye Rose began performing in the 1930s, but continued to make his living as a plumber for some time. Shortly before Senegalese independence, he performed with Josephine Baker, and became a favorite amongst Dakar audiences. In 1960 he made the first head of the Senegalese National Ballet, and in the 1970s with his Doudou N’Diaye Rose Orchestra as well as his collaborations with Miles Davis and the Rolling Stones.

[edit] Family of drummers

He is the founder and chief drum major of the Drummers of West Africa (all members of his family - he has 43 children in all),[3] with which he also performs. He also leads an all-female drum group called Les Rosettes, composed entirely of his own daughters and granddaughters.

[edit] Styles

N'Diaye Rose is purported to have developed 500 new rhythms, and, indeed, his music is quite complex, featuring ever-changing rhythmic structures which he conducts with his trademark vigorous style.[4] He has also invented new types of drum.

[edit] Recorded work

Perhaps his most well-known album, Djabote (Real World CDRW43) features 12 tracks recorded on the Isle of Gorée in March 1991. It was recorded in one week with his group of fifty drummers and the Julien Jouga's Choir, an eighty-member, all-female choir. He has performed with Dizzy Gillespie, Alan Stivell, Miles Davis, the Rolling Stones, Peter Gabriel, Kodo and Bill Bruford.

[edit] Films

  • Djabote: Senegalese Drumming & Song From Master Drummer Doudou N'Diaye Rose (1993). Directed by Béatrice Soulé and Eric Millot. Montpelier, Vermont: Multicultural Media.

[edit] References

  1. ^ RFI (2005)
  2. ^ Patricia Tang. Masters of the sabar Wolof griot percussionists of Senegal African soundscapes: Wolof Griot Percussionists of Senegal. Temple University Press, 2007 ISBN 1592134203 p.61
  3. ^ with his : À tout battre, Éric Priou FRANC-PARLER No 75 Octobre 2004
  4. ^ www.si.umich.edu/chico/UMS/Drummers/doudou.html



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