"Alexandre Sènou Adandé" Ethnographic Museum
(Benin)


The "Alexandre Dumas" School of Foreign Languages
(Bulgaria)


Burkina Faso Cultural Heritage Branch
(Burkina Faso)


The Museum of Art and Archeology of the University of Antananarivo
(Madagascar)


National Museum of Mali
(Mali)


St. Boniface Museum
(Manitoba, Canada)


Andalusian Study and Research Centre
(Morocco)


Musée acadien de l'Université de Moncton
(New Brunswick, Canada)


World Music Research Laboratory
(Quebec, Canada)


Canadian Museum of Civilization
(Quebec, Canada)


Museum of the Romanian Peasant
(Romania)


The Arab and Mediterranean Music Centre
(Tunisia)

THE KORA

Kora
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Note Book
Kora (harp-lute)
Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso
gourd, goat skin, nails, wood, guitar keys and nylon strings
Burkina Faso Cultural Heritage Branch

"Griots" or wandering musicians play this traditional instrument. Organologically, the kora is classified as a harp-lute because it possesses features of both the lute (it is played with the right hand) and the harp (it has perpendicular strings with a resonator).

It is undoubtedly the best known of all African stringed instruments. It seems the kora has existed since the beginning of the Middle Ages but its popularity dates from the Mali empire (1240s). It is used to celebrate heroes in very rich and moving instrumental forms. It is made from half of a large gourd covered with goat or calf skin stretched by leather laces (the skin is now held in place by pegs or pins). The skin is perforated by two handles, which the player uses to hold the kora, and a stick runs through the gourd across the middle of the skin perpendicular to the two handles and the bridge. The strings are joined to the bridge (formerly 7 strings but now 21) by circles of steer-hide thongs.

As the kora evolved, the rings were gradually replaced by hardwood keys or guitar keys. The strings were once made from twisted skin but are now made of nylon.

The kora player, generally seated with crossed legs with the kora in front of him, holds the instrument by its two stick handles leaving the thumbs and index fingers free to pluck the strings like a harp.

The Gambian musician Djeli Madi Woulendi improved the instrument’s range by increasing the number of strings from 7 to 21.

There is a story that the kora was actually invented in Gambia in Talitodembakounda. It takes at least ten years to learn how to play the kora properly. It is very difficult to make and tune. The kora is played in Mali, Guinea, Senegal, the Casamance area, in Gambia and in Guinea Bissau. It originated with the Mandingo culture of Senegal and this is why its various tunings are related to Mandingo songs. Each ethnic group adapts it to suit its own tunes.

The kora can be tuned to the following scales:

1. SAOUTA ("Socés" scale from Casamance) with the fourth degree raised by a chromatic semitone; the same as the hypolydian mode. F G A B C D E F

2. MANDÉKA is the leading note scale that the Mandingo themselves use and call niani, kirina, kangaba… F G A B( C D E( F

3. SIM'BI is the name of a Mandingo arched harp and the scale used most often for songs about heroes. F G A( B C D( E F

4. SILABA, a scale in F F (minor) G A B( C D E 5. TOMORA F (minor) G A( B( C D E(