Mansour Seck

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Yango 04:42 Tools
Yelayo 00:00 Tools
Ndiatigue 05:46 Tools
Thiaroye 06:27 Tools
Tandibiya 04:59 Tools
Almamy Bocoum 00:00 Tools
Sanu 03:48 Tools
Dona Bamba 06:25 Tools
Africa 04:54 Tools
Elimane Boubacar Kane 00:00 Tools
Rewbe Futa 00:00 Tools
Allah Wata Ko Hana 00:00 Tools
Mbenyu 00:00 Tools
Diewo 00:00 Tools
Soukabe Leydam 00:00 Tools
Quinze Ans 00:00 Tools
Tedoungal 00:00 Tools
Kairaba 00:00 Tools
Poulore 00:00 Tools
Ndiaye Binta Ndiaye 00:00 Tools
Kareli 00:00 Tools
Sediegue 00:00 Tools
Poolel 00:00 Tools
Fisco Konate 00:00 Tools
Tabakaly 00:00 Tools
Mamadou Moussa 00:00 Tools
Almamy Bocoum (Senegal) 00:00 Tools
Afrique Ne 00:00 Tools
Soukanaba 00:00 Tools
Poullori 00:00 Tools
Dialwaly 05:51 Tools
Samba 00:00 Tools
Salminanam 00:00 Tools
Rewbe Fouta 00:00 Tools
Kaïraba 00:00 Tools
Almamy Bocoum [Senegal] 00:00 Tools
Alamy Bocoum 00:00 Tools
Tandiblya 00:00 Tools
Bibbe Leydy 00:00 Tools
Loodo 00:00 Tools
Maacina Tooro 00:00 Tools
Lam Tooro 00:00 Tools
Allah Wata Ko Hana (feat. Ousmane Hamady Diop) 00:00 Tools
Djam Leelii 00:00 Tools
Soukabe Leydam (feat. Ousmane Hamady Diop) 04:49 Tools
Mansour Seck - Diewo 00:00 Tools
Diewo (Senegal) 00:00 Tools
Sehilam 00:00 Tools
Daande Lenol 00:00 Tools
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Mansour Seck is a blind Senegalese singer and musician born in Podor in 1950. From Leopardmannen.no: “He and I have two different roles - he is a guitarist and I am a singer. So when we work together, we complement each other." Thus Baaba Maal explains the relationship with his lifelong friend and music colleague, Mansour Seck. Seck has been a leading figure in Dande Lenon, Baaba Maal's band, for many years, and performed on many of Baaba Maal's disks during that time. Mansour Seck has in the meantime also released disks under his own name. Seck and Maal come from the same town, Podor, in Northern Senegal. They grew up together and Mansour, who comes from a Griot family, introduced Baaba Maal to a line of music styles during their journeys across West Africa. They performed together in a group of traditional musicians and dances from Northern Senegal. Following the completion of Baaba Maal's studies at the conservatory in Dakar, he went to Paris to learn more about western music and modern arrangement. He saved all he earned by playing for the Senegalese in Paris in order to invite Mansour Seck and two other guitarists to come and stay with him. They formed a group that played in restaurants, parks, and other places where people stopped to hear them. Little by little they became known as Dande Lenol (The People's Voice), also the title of one of their songs. At that time, 1984, they recorded the album "Djaam Leeli". They later toured together in the USA. Mansour Seck's first solo release came in 1994. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.