Description
The jeli (griots) of West Africa are the hereditary custodians of historical knowledge, genealogy, and musical tradition — their performance function as both historians and living libraries for the communities they serve. The kora — a 21-string instrument whose calabash resonator is covered with cow skin and whose hardwood neck carries the bridge and tuning rings — is the defining instrument of Mande jeli culture across Mali, Senegal, Guinea, and the Gambia. This portrait was made during a private performance session in Bamako with an established kora player from a family whose jeli lineage extends ten generations. His closed-eye improvisational focus during a bridge passage provides the portrait’s emotional core. Shot at f/2 on a 50mm prime in available ambient light, the kora’s carved bridge detail and the player’s hands on the strings are both sharp within the depth of field.
