It is 100% a Kamale ngoni, which is quite different to the Djeli ngoni that you are probably thinking of. It has less strings than a Kora and a different body shape.
Hey Sarissa, agreed it does look more like a kora than the other type of ngoni played by musicians such as Bassekou Kouyate. But this instrument has much fewer strings and a different construction and string layout than the kora, so it is definitely a kamale ngoni.
I have no idea what he’s singing about but I loved this so much. Amazing feeling in this, I could listen to this man play all day. 💗💗
The first song sounds so much like Irish or Appalachian folk music.
All ancestral tribes share that same scale. It’s called pentatonic.
The instrument is played with skill and the sound that the harp makes is metdoic an beautiful in my opinion!
beautifull sound , as well as the singer , sounds great rhytm
Africa..bendición para el mundo!
God bless mama Africa
On the 1
Artístico 🇬🇳🇸🇳🙏🏿🙏🏿
Beautiful
Wonderful, Thank you♥
Best
Thank you for sharing peace
Puur en supergoed!!! The Netherlands.
So calm
Beautiful song
muzyka ludowa i elektroniczna są pokrewne
listen the nature in tune
Gorgeous!!!!!!
Gorgeous ❤
Very pure. Love it. ✌🏼❤️
Sounds like he's sampling "on the road again" by Canned Heat
Great song. Anyway of posting lyrics?
does someone know the lyrics? Quelqu'un sait traduire?
Does anyone know if this guy has made any more music? Id love if he released a bunch of songs on spotify ❤❤
❤
this dude is hella good. is this his song or a standard?
this rocks!!! 🎉 🎉
West African Blues
If only I knew the lyrics.
I don't have an ear for that language but rest assured it's about peace and not hate.
The language is wolof
Can I find this music on Spotify or SoundCloud?
Adungu
In which key is this ngoni tuned? Can anybody help me out on this please?
Mali
You know ngoni? Maybe this is kora.
@@Kubzinho This is tuned, low to high: e, a, b, d, e. In Western music, it is a pentatonic scale.
@@Kubzinho this is ngoni, not kora
what are the lyrics? what language?
This is mandika
@@dianyndiaye247 no Wolof
It's mandinka language @@NoRockinMansLand
But he's from Senegal so it must be Wolof right? @@laminconteh1054
Nice my brother you need to be teaching.
G major
E minor
What's the language?
As it's Casamance, maybe it's Wolof
I bene many Times in casamanche,language its wolof
@@claudio7elleri261 Thank you
@@claudio7elleri261it's mandinka language
I believe this is actually a kora also known as a harp lute
This is not the Ngoni, it's clearly a harp lute so it's a Kora
It is 100% a Kamale ngoni, which is quite different to the Djeli ngoni that you are probably thinking of. It has less strings than a Kora and a different body shape.
@@smerin ohh ok, thanks for the input
kora instrument not ngoni
Hey Sarissa, agreed it does look more like a kora than the other type of ngoni played by musicians such as Bassekou Kouyate. But this instrument has much fewer strings and a different construction and string layout than the kora, so it is definitely a kamale ngoni.
This intrumen is not kora
sorry mate its an Ngoni I should know as I make and play them
@@georgepeel7469 I know I'm a year late but do you still make these instruments?
Kamale ngoni, yeah!
Beautiful