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The neon-lit dance floor at Tiken Jah Fakoly's club is empty for a Friday night, but a determined few have braved a state of emergency, security checkpoints and ongoing war to hear some Mali music. The headliner and only act tonight at the Ivory Coast-born reggae star's Radio Libre night-club is Ami Kouyate, an up-and-coming singer from a renowned family of griots - the musicians, poets and storytellers who are the keepers of West Africa's oral history.
Some 1,000 kilometres (620 miles) north-east of this night oasis in Bamako, the Malian capital, is the edge of a combat zone. The conflict seems far away as Kouyate's emotive voice washes over the audience and the drummer's hands blur in the stage lights, the rapid-fire staccato of his djembe punctuating the slow chords of two electric guitars and an ngoni, or stringed calabash, in the polyrhythmic style for which Mali is famous.
But the 40-odd people in the room are a meagre crowd for Radio Libre. "Since the crisis started not many people come here. People are afraid to go out," says Djeneba Kouyate, the singer's sister, who has come with about a dozen friends. Fakoly, an icon of African reggae famous for his politically charged songs, says the crisis is hurting the music scene in a country known as the cradle of the blues.
"When there's no crisis in Mali, at midnight on a Friday night there are lots of people. But now there's practically no one," he tells AFP behind the double layer of leather-padded doors that insulate his private recording studio from the sounds of the club upstairs. "But this is better than before. Since the intervention in the north, people are starting to go out. There was a time when we had to close completely because no one was coming."
Getting to the club from downtown Bamako means spending half an hour sitting in a long line of cars at a security checkpoint where police with AK-47s check drivers' papers and look in the boots of their cars, a bid to stop the string of suicide bombings that have shaken the north-east from spreading to Bamako. Under the government decree, public gatherings, rallies and anything that can disrupt public order are banned.
Fakoly, 44, opened Radio Libre in September 2010, eight years after fleeing a conflict that effectively cut his home country in two. He says it has saddened him to watch his adopted country descend into a crisis of its own. He has made two singles about the situation in Mali - a solo effort called "An Ka Wili" ("Let's Rise Up") that recalls Malian warriors such as Samory Toure, who resisted French colonisation, and "Mali Ko" ("For Mali"), a collaboration with some 40 other singers calling for peace.
He praises Mali's musical culture, which he calls "one of the richest" in the world, and rattles off a list of well-known colleagues he admires: Amadou and Mariam, Habib Koite, Salif Keita, Rokia Traore, Oumou Sangare.
Fakoly says a sense of solidarity compelled him to stay in Mali as it descended into chaos. "I think that as one of the musicians who has sung songs like 'An Ka Wili', I would have been one of the most vulnerable people," he says. "It's unthinkable, impossible for music to be banned in Mali," he says. "Mali resonates to the sound of its griots."

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2013

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