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・ Music of Lombardy
・ Music of Long Island
・ Music of Los Angeles
・ Music of Louisiana
・ Music of Luxembourg
・ Music of Macau
・ Music of Macedonia
・ Music of Macedonia (Greece)
・ Music of Madagascar
・ Music of Madeira
・ Music of Madhya Pradesh
・ Music of Maharashtra
・ Music of Maine
・ Music of Malawi
・ Music of Malaysia
Music of Mali
・ Music of Malta
・ Music of Manipur
・ Music of Manitoba
・ Music of Marche
・ Music of Martinique
・ Music of Maryland
・ Music of Mass Destruction
・ Music of Mass Effect 2
・ Music of Mass Effect 3
・ Music of Massachusetts
・ Music of Mauritania
・ Music of Mauritius
・ Music of Meghalaya
・ Music of Melanesia


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Music of Mali : ウィキペディア英語版
Music of Mali

The Music of Mali is, like that of most African nations, ethnically diverse, but one influence predominates; that of the ancient Mali Empire of the Mandinka (from c. 1230 to c. 1600). Mande people (Bambara, Maninke, Soninke) make up 50% of the country's population, other ethnic groups include the Fula (17%), Gur-speakers 12%, Songhai people (6%), Tuareg and Moors (10%) and another 5%, including Europeans. Mali is divided into eight regions; Gao, Kayes, Koulikoro, Mopti, Ségou, Sikasso, Tombouctou and Bamako (the eighth region, Kidal, was created in 1991).
Salif Keita, a noble-born Malian who became a singer, brought Mande-based Afro-pop to the world, adopting traditional garb and styles. He says he sings to express himself, however, and not as a traditional ''jeli'' or praise-singer. The kora players Sidiki Diabaté and Toumani Diabaté have also achieved some international prominence as have the late Songhai/Fula guitarist Ali Farka Touré and his successors Afel Bocoum and Vieux Farka Touré, the Tuareg band Tinariwen, the duo Amadou et Mariam and Oumou Sangare. Mory Kanté saw major mainstream success with techno-influenced Mande music.
While internationally Malian popular music has been known more for its male artists, domestically, since at least the 1980s, female singers such as Kandia Kouyatés are ubiquitous on radio and television, in markets and on street-corner stalls. Fans follow them for the moralizing nature of their lyrics, the perception that they embody tradition and their role as fashion trend-setters.
==National music==
The national anthem of Mali is "Le Mali". After independence under President Modibo Keita orchestras were state-sponsored and the government created regional orchestras for all seven then regions. From 1962 the orchestras competed in the annual "Semaines Nationale de la Jeunesse" ("National Youth Weeks") held in Bamako. Keita was ousted by a coup d'état in 1968 organized by General Moussa Traoré.
Most of Keita's support for the arts was cancelled, but the "Semaines Nationale de la Jeunesse" festival, renamed the "Biennale Artistique et Culturelle de la Jeunesse", was held every 2 years starting in 1970. Notable and influential bands from the period included the first electric dance band, Orchestre Nationale A, and the Ensemble Instrumental National du Mali, comprising 40 traditional musicians from around the country and still in operation today.
Mali's second president, Moussa Traoré, discouraged Cuban music in favor of Malian traditional music. The annual arts festivals were held biannually and were known as the Biennales. At the end of the 1980s public support for the Malian government declined and praise-singing's support for the status quo and its political leaders became unfashionable. The ethnomusicologist Ryan Skinner has done work on the relationship of music and politics in contemporary Mali.〔http://ias.umn.edu/2012/10/11/skinner-ryan/ http://ias.umn.edu/2012/10/11/ryan-skinner/〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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