Yandé Codou Sène

Yandé Codou Sène

Serer Diva
Background information
Birth name Yandé Codou Sène
Also known as Yande Codou Sene
Born 1932
Somb, in Senegal
Died July 15, 2010(2010-07-15)
Gandiaye, Senegal
Genres West African (World music, Folk music)
Occupations Singer, genealogist, historian,
Years active Active since 1947. Big break in 1995
Associated acts Youssou N'Dour, Safi Faye, Ousmane Sembene, Rémi Jegaan Dioh, Doudou N'Diaye Rose, Joseph Gai Ramaka, Phillippe Cosson, Richard Sadler, Frederic Sichler, Daniel Toscan du Plantier, Oumy Samb

Yandé Codou Sène (also Yande Codou Sene) was a Senegalese singer of Serer origin. She was born in 1932 at Somb in the Sine-Saloum delta and died on 15 July 2010 at Gandiaye in (Sénégal).[1] She was the official griot of president Léopold Sédar Senghor. Most of her music is sang in the Serer language.[2][3]

Yandé Codou sings in the old Serer tradition and have had a significant impact on Senegambian music as well as artists including Youssou N'Dour whom she has inspired immensely.[4] Although she has been singing since she was a child and have had a profound effect on Senegambia's music scene, she did not record her first album (Night Sky in Sine Saloum) until was was aged 65. [5] Her first recording debut on an album "Gainde" was in 1995 that she shared with Youssou N'Dour in which she received rave reviews.[6] In that same year, her vocals were showcased on the full length album "Youssou N'Dour Presents Yandé Codou Sène". RootsWorld described her as someone who:

"can move mountains with her positively poetic voice."

www.freehosting.net/djembemande said,

"her voice is a technically marvelous instrument with great sustain and rich overtones and she uses it to convey fervent emotion rather than facile sentimentality."

In Safi Faye's Mossane (a 1996 film), Yandé's powerful vocals received rave reviews whose song in the film is associated with the evocation of the Serer Pangool (ancestral spirits and Serer Saints in the Serer religion).[7]

President Senghor who is famous for adopting the African griot technique of "naming" in his poems is adopted from the Serer tradition as in his poem "Aux tirailleurs Sénégalais morts pour la France." Yandé Codou who is proficient in this technique used a similar technique in the funeral of President Senghor. [8]

Contents

Albums

Gainde, Yandé Codou Sène and Youssou N'Dour, 1995

Yandé Codou Sène, Night Sky in Sine Saloum, 1997

Tracks

Filmography

External links

Notes

  1. ^ African Studies. Columbia University Libraries
  2. ^ RFI
  3. ^ Ali Colleen Neff. Tassou: the Ancient Spoken Word of African Women. Ethnolyrical
  4. ^ C. Parker, 1996. The Wire, Volumes 143-148, p43, 54
  5. ^ emusic.com
  6. ^ All music.com
  7. ^ Melissa Thackway. Africa shoots back: alternative perspectives in Sub-Saharan Francophone African film, p82. James Currey Publishers, 2003. ISBN 0852555768
  8. ^ Mamadou Badiane. The changing face of Afro-Caribbean cultural identity: Negrismo and Négritude, p91. Rowman & Littlefield, 2010. ISBN 0739125532