Services
Stages de Musique Mandingue
« La musique lave l’âme de la poussière du quotidien. »
-Berthold Auerbach
Balafon Workshop in Sédéron, France
July 26-August 2, 2026
with Kanazoe Dioubate of Burkina Faso
Lisa Feder, the organiser of the workshop, is an American anthropologist who has worked with griots for over 20 years. In her workshops, Lisa guides us in opening ourselves to the positive psychological benefits of learning this traditional instrument with griot teachers like Famoro Dioubate and Kanazoe Diabate. Kanazoe Diabate leads this balafon workshop with rhythms from the Manding people on the diatonic balafon. He also specializes in the pentatonic melodies from his cultural group, the Semla people from Tolonso, Burkina Faso.
Participants start each day with a short meditation and listening quietly to the music from a master griot. Then, we embark on 2-3 hours of balafon lessons. At noon, we pause for lunch and free time for several hours. Take a walk in the woods, bath in the river, or take it easy at our country home.
For the balafon ambitious, Kanazoe will be available for small group lessons – particularly for the advanced players who want to maximise their learning experience. Later in the afternoon, we practice what we learned earlier that day, as an ensemble.
In the evening we pause for yoga, meditation, and relaxation before the Musical Cocktail Hour when balafon enthusiasts can continue playing. Tired of the balafon? You can play other instruments like the doundouns, djembes, bells, and if you bring them: bass, flute, guitar, etc. It’s also a chance to dance, listen, paint, play and be free!
Read About The Manding Grooves Pedagogy
More than just a music lesson
In Manding Grooves workshops, we blend African and European styles of learning.
Learning balafon the West African way comprises a system of education indigenous to Manding culture. Famoro Dioubaté from Guinea and Kanazoe Diabaté from Burkina Faso, two of our teachers, began their apprenticeship at the age of 7. Rather than concentrating on schoolwork, they concentrated on learning balafon. This is how they developed their sense of humanity. It is very rare for Europeans to learn in this style.
Classes are combined with village-style learning during which time the teachers transmit values and qualities such as patience, concentration, coordination, grace, listening, respect, and a sense of community. These are values that we can integrate into our daily lives.
With the assistance of Lisa Feder and other experienced individuals, we have the opportunity to explore and practice the rich spiritual culture of the jelis (or griots) around different themes.The Manding Grooves pedagogy is based on over 20 years of Lisa’s anthropological research and practice.
Lisa Feder is an American anthropologist specialising in the study of jeli culture as an indigenous educational system. Author of the book « Jeliya at the Crossroads, » now translated into French, she has studied under the late Saikou Jobarteh of the Gambia, Famoro Dioubaté of Guinea, Seydou « Kanazoé » Diabaté of Burkina Faso, and others since 2000. Based in Marseille, France since 2015, she co-founded Manding Grooves with Famoro Dioubaté. She believes in the ancient system of apprenticeship and oral transmission as a path for developing a conscious and well-balanced society.
Lisa is a practitioner of Integral Evolution in the Namgyal Rinpoche lineage, and studied under Doug « Qapel » Duncan for 18 years. Using Buddhism, the Western Mysteries, and Manding music in her offerings, she is also a working member of Dharma Europe and Planet Dharma.