Malian singer-songwriter Fatoumata Diawara brings vibrant music to the Chan Centre, April 14
The Grammy-nominated artist sings mostly in Bambara, the language of Mali

Fatoumata Diawara.
Chan Centre presents Fatoumata Diawara on April 14 at 8 pm at Chan Shun Concert Hall
FATOUMATA DIAWARA IS one of the most compelling and important voices on the planet. Born to Malian parents in Ivory Coast in 1982, Diawara spent her youth in the Malian capital of Bamako. Having left home at age 19 to join the French street theatre company Royale de Luxe, Diawara toured the globe, going on to sing solo in clubs and cafés in Paris. From there, she sang backup vocals for American jazz singer Dee Dee Bridgewater and Malian superstar Oumou Sangaré on tour and on recordings.
In 2011, the World Circuit label released her acclaimed debut album, Fatou. Her latest album, Maliba, speaks to the importance of protecting the Timbuktu Manuscripts, a collection of historic cultural artifacts that were threatened with destruction in Mali.
Drawing on everything from syncopated Afropop to funk, Diawara is coming to Vancouver for a one-night-only appearance as part of the Chan Centre Presents series.
The Grammy-nominated artist sings mostly in Bambara, the language of Mali, about everything from family and humility to migration and women’s rights to how to build a better world for future generations.
“I’m so proud and so happy…with my ancestral past,” Diawara has said. “Many of the ideas I use come to me in dreams about my ancestors. And to be given a chance to help protect our ancestral and cultural legacy is so special to me.”
Over the years, Diawara—who plays electric and acoustic guitar— has performed with Herbie Hancock and Cuban pianist Roberto Fonesca, among many others. She assembled a West African super-group featuring Amadou and Mariam, Oumou Sangaré and Toumani Diabaté to record a song calling for peace in her troubled homeland.
In 2022, she performed at New York City’s Carnegie Hall for the Journey into Afrofuturism Festival. “Fatoumata Diawara, the singer and guitarist originally from Mali, provided two of the night’s most striking moments,” Rolling Stone reported. “Her ode to the power of women, ‘Mousso,’ sung in her native language, was hypnotic, and her captivating stage spins enhanced her anthemic ‘Unite.’”
Based in France, Diawara is also a social activist, campaigning against the trafficking and sale of Black migrants in Libyan slave markets. As an actor, she appeared in Abderrahmane Sissako’s Timbuktu, which The New York Times ranked as the 12th best film of the 21st century to date, among other films.
Tickets and more details are here.
Related Articles
The Pacific Baroque Orchestra led by Alexander Weimann joins the acclaimed Montreal-based Baroque dance company for a spellbinding show
Soprano Tamar Simon, baritone Geoffrey Schellenberg, and pianist Richard Epp perform an afternoon of arias, duets, and operatic drama
A.S.A.P. Duo and three other specialists in historical performance receive recognition for innovative visions
With his new Asante Trio, the multi-talented artist explores the connection between African and Cuban music
From the Brazilian rhythms of Tio Chorinho with Flávia Nascimento to Fijian dancers VOU, there’s something for everyone at the 38th annual event
Joined by her nine-piece MAQkestra at the BlueShore at CapU, Filipino-Canadian keyboardist honours the late musician’s thrilling cultural fusion
With guests such as mezzo-soprano Emma Parkinson, the themed programs range through masterpieces, from the Romantic to the avant-garde
Borealis String Quartet violinist Yuel Yawney and team set innovative programs for strings, piano, and more in tranquil surroundings
Performances from July 27 to August 8 include veteran musician Alexander Weimann, Baroque dance company Les Jardins Chorégraphiques, and beyond
Free performances take place all summer long, with a lineup that includes 54•40, Sam Roberts Band, Bahamas, and more
Offerings range from the intimate acoustic sound of Victoria’s Ocie Elliott to the acclaimed North Carolina pair Watchhouse
Inspired by Spanish desert and old Italian soundtracks, the writer and composer calls on a creative group of friends to help realize his multidisciplinary vision
American singer-guitarist infuses the genre with reggae, soul. and West African influences
Arthur Arnold conducts Alexander Mosolov’s Symphony No. 3, a brooding yet joyful work with a storied history
Shows range across disciplines, from the Australian dance-and-drumming offering Manifesto to the roundtable discussion Listening as Activism
A world premiere from Johannesburg-based composer Thuthuka Sibisi is on the program, with Christopher Gaze as master of ceremonies
Gryphon Trio and Marion Newman lead a powerful performance that confronts historical trauma through poetry, music, and film
Plenty is in store, from Portuguese fado singer Carminho to cooking star Yotam Ottolenghi, culture-fusing songstress Arooj Aftab, and beyond
Singer-songwriter journeys through heartbreak and joy in North Shore Jazz concert as part of the Vancouver International Jazz Festival
Dutch accordionist Erica Roozendaal explores themes of abuse and childhood instability in her heartfelt solo performance
Performance stars creator Rick Maddocks alongside flamenco dancer Maria Avila, soprano vocalist Dory Hayley, and talented musicians
Astrolabe Musik Theatre presents Farshid Samandari’s The Greater Sea and Gheorghi Arnaoudov’s Notes of the Phantom Woman
Fuelled by curiosity and spontaneity, the acclaimed performer looks beyond the Chopin repertoire that made his name
A guest of the Vancouver Chopin Society, the veteran musician risked it all to stand up against tyranny
Alt-rock band Meltt, D.O.A. frontman Joe Keithley, and singer-songwriter Ché Aimee Dorval are among the Burrard Stage highlights
Stellar local musicians play seminal, sassy funk in North Shore Jazz presentation as part of Vancouver International Jazz Festival
In renowned one-man show I Wish I Was a Mountain, the award-winning British poet leans on rhythm of deep musical influences