<p>
It’s usually a bad sign when one of the most remarkable aspects of
a show is that it happened at all, but it has been a long time since we were in “usual times.” So while the collaboration between
punk-fuzz-noise maestro Yonatan Gat and Bembeya Jazz/Mandingo
Ambassador guitar hero Mamady Kouyate definitely deserves the
attention, let’s just take a sentence to get this out of the way:
Saturday, an indoor concert happened in New York!
</p>
Yonatan Gat (left) and Mamady Kouyaté (right). All photos by Ben Richmond
<p><a name="m_834662912082234704m_-8151422231907916826gmail-templateContainer1"></a>
Joined by Avishag Cohen Rodrigues and Mamady Kouruma, Kouyate and Gat
comprised the first show for Gat’s <em>Visuæls
</em>residency.
Every third Saturday of the month through August, <a href="https://linktr.ee/visuaels/" target="_blank">Gat will be joined on the Sultan Room stage by a diverse group of collaborators, including the Moroccan ensemble Innov Gnawa, and the Eastern Medicine Singers</a>, an intertribal American Indian group that Gat played with on
his second album, and at the APAP showcase in early 2019.</p>
Mamady Kouyaté (left), Mamady Kouruma (center) and Avishag Cohen Rodrigues (right)
<p>
After breaking out with the punk performance artists Monotonix,
Yonatan Gat has been forging his own path, collecting collaborators
to undergird his trademark squalling guitar sound. On his 2015 album
<em>Visitor</em>, Gat brought the
singer/songwriter <a href="https://afropop.test.ejaedesign.com/articles/photos-sessa-and-stefa-at-the-sultan-room" target="_blank">Sessa</a> on board on bass as he tested the waters of
Brazilian music.
<br>
</p>
<p>Mamady
Kouyate is grounded in the
West African guitar pop tradition, touring with Guinea’s famed
Bembeya Jazz before relocating to America in the early 2000s and
founding the Mandingo Ambassadors, who held a weekly residency late
Wednesday nights at the Brooklyn bar Barbès;
with Mamady Kouruma usually
steadfast on the rhythm guitar.</p>
<p>
Where Gat plays with noise and fury,
Kouyate’s sound is the electric guitar chiming at its clearest,
with runs of articulated notes. How
was this going to work?<br>
</p>
<p>Generally,
the Mamadys laid down the base of the song with their characteristic
rhythmic playing and interwoven lines. Gat would man the mixer,
introducing swells of reverb and delay, and gradually he and
Rodrigues would come in with loud washes of harsh guitar. The melody
and careful harmonic structure would turn impressionistic. Electric
guitar signal <em>is </em>noise,
Gat’s body of work seems to suggest, so why not revel in the
blurring of the lines?</p>
Opener Jaimie Branch
<p>
There was a nice symmetry to it all—The Sultan Room was the last
place I saw a show before live music was shut down in New York. Back
in March 2020, the Mauskovic Dance Band canceled their trip to the U.S.
and Los Cumpleaños celebrated the release of their single “Agua”
with Soul Gnawa opening, back when we were all dead set on not
touching our faces, but also not sold on wearing masks yet. Saturday,
14 months later, it was time to provisionally open things back up.
<br>
</p>
<p>Guests were assigned
seats at tables with the groups they came with, and the room was kept
to a capacity that allowed a generous spread. Although everyone was
asked if they were vaccinated before entering, masks were worn while
walking around the room, but not at the tables with their drinks.</p>
<p>
The energy of sweating shoulder to shoulder understandably wasn’t
there, but for a brief encore, with opener Jaimie Branch lending trumpet skills, the eager crowd got up to indulge in a little
dancing. Out on the street, where bars still had their outdoor
seating, a celebratory atmosphere rippled through the Bushwick night,
a world apart from how it was a year ago.
</p>