Sarabande Africaine
Angélique Kidjo & Yo-Yo Ma
with Thierry Vaton and David Donatien
and special guest Sinkane
Saturday, August 30, 2025, 8pm
William Randolph Hearst Greek Theatre, UC Berkeley
This evening’s program will be announced from the stage and performed without intermission.
Leadership support for this performance is provided by Nadine Tang.
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About the Performance
Angélique Kidjo and Yo-Yo Ma first met under the Arc de Triomphe, gathered with dozens of world leaders to mark the centenary of the end of the first world war. Yo-Yo played a Bach sarabande; Angélique sang “Blewu,” an Ewe dirge, in memory of the many and often-forgotten African soldiers killed in the war. It was a fitting beginning to a conversation between Angélique and Yo-Yo about the ways in which African culture is so
In the years since, Angélique and Yo-Yo have explored the intersections of their voices, their stories, and their musical sensibilities, developing new, collaborative arrangements of iconic music from each of their traditions, music that surfaces the many centuries of interaction between African musical idioms and what has come to be defined as western classical music.
For example, the sarabande—the dance at the heart of J.S. Bach’s suites for solo cello—traveled from Africa to the Americas, then back to Spain, where it made its way into European courts. Dvořák’s New World symphony was inspired in part by Black American spirituals; Gershwin re-imagined Gullah Geechee songs. Meanwhile, Miriam Makeba grew up listening to western classical music; Angélique’s “Aisha” re-interprets Bach’s Keyboard Concerto No. 5, with lyrics in the Yoruba language.
Two endlessly curious musicians come together to search beyond the edges of their musical backgrounds, exposing the ways we have all been connected for a very long time; it’s a collaboration that asks us to joyfully question the tenets of genre and tradition that underpin our cultural thinking.
When the 1723–1724 season opened, Handel had two rival composers, Giovanni Bononcini and Attilio Ariosti, serving along with him at the King’s Theatre. By the end of the season, they had both left. It was impossible to compete with Handel’s musical and theatrical genius or his burgeoning popularity with the London public.
—Janet E. Bedell © 2025
Janet E. Bedell is a program annotator and feature writer who writes for Carnegie Hall, the Metropolitan Opera, Los Angeles Opera, Caramoor Festival of the Arts, and other musical organizations.