Griot, composer, and kora master
Foday Musa Suso loomed large over the worldbeat landscape both before and after the
Graceland groundswell. The solo records of this relentlessly innovative performer and tireless ambassador of African culture remained rooted in the meditative folk traditions of his native Gambia, but he also collaborated with similarly omnivorous Western musicians including
Bill Laswell,
Herbie Hancock, and
Philip Glass to fuse West African music with classical minimalism, free jazz, and avant funk. Born in 1950 into a family of Mandingo griots -- musicians, historians, and oral storytellers -- dating back about a thousand years,
Suso spent his formative years on a peanut farm, studying the kora (the harplike 21-string instrument that dominates West African music) at the feet of his father, Saikou Suso. At the age of ten he was sent to a nearby village to continue his education under the tutelage of an uncle. When
Suso was 18, a group of Western tourists funded his airfare to Sweden, and in exchange he spent six months playing solo in bars and restaurants throughout the Scandinavian region. While in Stockholm he befriended a French accordionist, and together they performed across Europe for the next five years, with
Suso finally returning to Africa in 1974 to teach kora at the University of Ghana.
While at the university
Suso met Chicago-based percussionist
Adam Rudolph, and in mid-1977 he relocated to the Windy City, forming the world fusion outfit
Mandingo Griot Society with
Rudolph, percussionist
Hamid Drake, and bassist
Joe Thomas. The group's first performance at the Daley Center in downtown Chicago earned significant media exposure and landed
Suso a job with the Illinois Arts Council teaching African culture in area schools. Following just their second gig,
the Mandingo Griot Society signed with the local Flying Fish label, in 1978 recording their self-titled debut LP with the great
Don Cherry on trumpet. A follow-up,
Mighty Rhythm, appeared in 1981, but after
Rudolph relocated to Los Angeles and
Drake began focusing his energies almost exclusively on his burgeoning collaboration with saxophonist
Fred Anderson, the unit effectively dissolved, and
Suso returned to his solo career. In 1983 he contacted
Laswell, inspired by the producer's work on
Hancock's groundbreaking
Future Shock album, and
Laswell invited
Suso to contribute to
Hancock's follow-up,
Sound-System. The legendary keyboardist was so pleased with the end result that he invited
Suso to join his band for a Japanese tour that yielded the live LP
Village Life.
Suso signed to the Celluloid label to release his 1984 solo debut,
Watto Sitta, recorded with the core
Mandingo Griot Society lineup with contributions from
Hancock and djembe master
Manu Washington. After he and
Hancock jointly headlined a 1986 live record entitled
Jazz Africa,
Suso returned to West Africa for a month in the company of composer
Philip Glass, then preparing his score for filmmaker
Godfrey Reggio's Powaqqatsi, and upon coming back to the U.S. they agreed to collaborate, ultimately scoring Minneapolis' Guthrie Theater's 1989 production of The Screens, Jean Genet's stage drama about Algeria's struggle for independence from France.
Glass' influence profoundly affected the minimalist aesthetic dominant on
Suso's 1990 LP,
Dreamtime.
Glass also introduced
Suso to
Kronos Quartet violinist
David Harrington, and in 1992 he played kora on the avant classical group's
Pieces of Africa. In 1995 the original
Mandingo Griot Society lineup reunited to perform at the African Festival of the Arts, and the following year
Suso's contributions to the
Jali Kunda: Griots of West Africa and Beyond collection earned widespread attention from the mainstream media. In the years to follow he collaborated with jazz legends
Pharoah Sanders and
Jack DeJohnette, and in June 2004 he and
Glass traveled to Athens, Greece, to perform Orion, a new piece commissioned in honor of the Summer Olympic Games.
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Jason Ankeny, Rovi