Baaba Maal (born November 12, 1953, Podor, Senegal) is a Senegalese musician known for his unique blend of traditional African rhythms and modern Western musical styles.
Maal spent his childhood surrounded by music. He frequently joined his father, the muezzin at the local mosque in Podor, for the daily call to prayer—an exercise that helped him to develop a resonant voice that needed little or no amplification. From his mother Maal learned the folk songs of the Tukulor people and the “women’s music” of the yela, a 3/4 beat derived from the rhythms produced while pounding grain. After completing his secondary education, he was offered a scholarship to the École des Beaux Arts in Dakar. He was accompanied to Dakar by Mansour Seck, a griot (troubadour-historian) and a longtime friend and musical mentor, and the two joined Asly Fouta, a 70-piece orchestra that toured West Africa in a celebration of Tukulor culture. The pair left the group in 1977, and in 1982 Maal was offered a scholarship to complete his studies at the Paris Conservatory. Seck again followed him, and the two recorded their debut album, Djam leelii, in Brussels later that year. Maal returned to Podor after the death of his mother in 1984 and formed the nine-piece group Daande Lenol (“The Voice of the People”) the following year. During the next few years, the group released a series of cassettes for the local market, and their popularity grew. Daande Lenol did not shy away from social and political topics, however, and it was not long before authorities in Mauritania banned their recordings.
A series of fruitful collaborations increased Maal’s popularity in Europe. He performed with the English singer Peter Gabriel on the sound track of the film The Last Temptation of Christ (1988) and became a frequent presence at Gabriel’s Real World studios in Bath, England. Maal signed with the world music label Mango Records and released Baayo in 1991. He followed this with the disco-influenced Lam toro (1992) and the pop-tinged Firin’ in Fouta (1994), for which he received a Grammy nomination for best world music album. While 1998’s Nomad Soul continued in the Afropop vein, it was evident that Maal was drifting back toward his Tukulor roots. His 2001 release, Missing You (Mi yeewnii), was a stripped-down acoustic masterpiece that utilized the ambient sounds of the African environment as a background track. In July 2003 the United Nations Development Programme named him a youth emissary in recognition of his social works and his growing world popularity.
Maal continued to raise his profile with a critically acclaimed North American tour in 2004. The 34-date tour featured acoustic arrangements of his extensive catalog and took his music to venues not traditionally associated with the world music scene. Maal also used the exposure to draw attention to the spread of HIV/AIDS in Africa and to the problems of hunger and poverty in his homeland. His later recordings included On the Road (2009), Television (2009), and The Traveller (2016).