Sidy Maiga Brings West African Sound to Ocean State Sessions

How Maiga brought the djembe to Rhode Island

Episode 1, Season 4 of Ocean State Sessions featuring Sidy Maiga

Share

Episode 1, Season 4 of Ocean State Sessions featuring Sidy Maiga

Sidy Maiga Brings West African Sound to Ocean State Sessions
Copy

Sidy Maiga has a worn-out box full of family photos at his house in Pawtucket. Most of these pictures are more than 20 years old. They’re of him with his family and friends in Mali, West Africa.

Sidy with his djembe while living in Mali, West Africa.
Sidy with his djembe while living in Mali, West Africa.

“I was born in Mali, and I lived there until I was 25 years old. Then I moved to the United States,” Maiga says when we spoke with him for Season 4 of “Ocean State Sessions.” “In Mali, you always hear drumming, you see people dancing. So we grow up with that. You always see people (so) happy, joyful and talented. I grew up watching all of this, so that’s what triggered me to be part of it.”

The drumming he’s referring to is the djembe, a drum that’s the signature of his West African-fusion sound. He’s sitting in front of a large djembe as we talk. When he hits it, the sound bounces throughout the room.

Maiga performing at Big Nice Studio for Season 4 of Ocean State Sessions
Maiga performing at Big Nice Studio for Season 4 of Ocean State Sessions

“At the first I try to show how many sounds is on the djembe, like, notes wise,” Maiga says. “It’s tone, slap, bass. So I always start with that.”

Six months after moving to the United States, Maiga came to Providence and has lived in the area ever since. In that time he has become a prolific musician and producer, a father, and even a music teacher. Sidy travels across the country visiting schools with his djembe, often introducing them to his style of music.

“It’s not always the easiest thing teaching kids,” Maiga says as he lets out a big laugh. “Sometimes you have to worry about somebody interrupting other kids or they just can’t get their hand off the drum.”

Maiga even furthered his own musical education. In 2020, he graduated from the Berklee College of Music in Boston, where he received a full scholarship to attend.

“It was the best decision I ever made in my life, Maiga said. “I’m glad I got to learn from the best.”

Check out Maiga and his band’s full performance from Season 4 of “Ocean State Sessions” below:

On July 5, thousands of Cape Verdeans in Massachusetts and Rhode Island will celebrate the 50th anniversary of the West African country’s independence. Morning host Luis Hernandez spoke with two people from the region who will be honored at a national celebration in Washington, D.C.
This is the eighth year Ocean State Media has awarded a college scholarship worth up to $60,000 over four years
Once thought lost to history, the powerful handwritten declaration by New England Baptist clergy resurfaces—shedding new light on religious resistance to slavery and a pivotal moment in the church’s past
Imagine if you could be the greatest in the world at anything, but you’d have to sell your soul to do it. That’s the story of the show “¡Que Diablos! Fausto,” a bilingual production at Teatro en El Verano
Rhode Island had been poised to become a hub for offshore wind, but the new domestic policy bill debated overnight in the U.S. House could put that work in jeopardy