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Biography
The mutual admiration society that is Volker Goetze and Ablaye Cissoko owes itself to a serendipitous
meeting that took place in 2001 at the African-European Jazz Orchestra rehearsals in Saint-Louis,
Senegal, where they'd been invited to open for Senegalese legend Youssou N'Dour. Despite any cultural
barriers that separated them, the German-born trumpeter and the Senegalese kora player and singer
discovered they had much in common, both musically and personally. Their commonalities can be
heard on Sira, which is an album that reaffirms the maxim that music is the universal language. The
album releases in October 2008 on ObliqSound.
"He comes from the griot tradition. My grandfathers were highly respected spiritual leaders," says
Goetze. "I learn from him and he learns from me. Our music is very much created in the moment, but
we understand each other on a much deeper level."
It was their willingness to absorb new ideas that attracted them to each other. Although Cissoko is wellversed
in the traditional music of West Africa, passed along from generation to generation, he has
always been a seeker, keeping his ears open for new experiences. Despite his ties to West African
traditional music, Cissoko is also a huge fan of jazz, and worked with pianist/composer Randy Weston
and others prior to the project with Goetze. "My early influences," he says, "come from Keith Jarrett,
French saxophonist François Jeanneau, Asian and Senegalese music and, of course, Mandingue music,
the music of my ancestors."
His immersion in jazz, and Goetze's fascination with African music, made them natural candidates for
collaboration. "I was fortunate to have experienced some of the greatest innovators of jazz live in
concert," says Goetze, "like Miles Davis, Ornette Coleman, Don Cherry, Wayne Shorter, the Gil Evans Big
Band and Joe Henderson. They touched and moved me. That is what I am looking for in music, which is
one reason I had to go to Africa. I also am a huge fan of Youssou N'Dour."
Goetze, who has collaborated with some of the most important figures of the contemporary music
scene, including Naná Vasconcelos, Craig Handy and Lenny Pickett, sees similarities between Cissoko's
griot tradition and that of jazz: "[Griot music] is not written; it changes with the epoch and the
performance, which is similar to jazz and improvisation."
"It is our differences that become real strength," adds Cissoko, who has released two previous solo
albums, 2000's Diam and 2006's Le Griot Rouge, prior to the duo album Sira. "I adapt myself to the
context. I have in myself this ancient tradition of communication. It's like the branches of a baobob tree,
which can touch those of another tree. I'm one of these branches. Volker and I are two musicians of the
same generation with different sensibilities, who become one indivisible entity by speaking with our
instruments."
Legendary music photographer Youri Lenquette (Keith Richards, Kurt Cobain, Lou Reed, Prince,
Leonard Cohen, Bob Marley) captured Cissoko and Goetze in Senegal in an extraordinary photo-shoot
during the recording of the album. The most striking images will be included in Sira's album packaging
and the iTunes digital booklet.
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