On Wednesday, September 1, 2010, Aliyu Ibrahim Kankara posted the following article in his blog called Taskar Mamman Shata. In it, he clearly admitted, "In 1993 I began writing Shata’s biography,
alongside collecting his albums." He added: "I met Ibrahim Sheme in 1997 whom began
writing his own Shata’s book earlier then I, may be 1988 or 1990."
This, for me, rested the abusive argument he launched recently that he had met and written a biography of Shata before I introduced him to the singer. By stating - in September 2010 - that 1) he began to write on Shata in 1993 and that 2) I began writing Shata's biography before him, he has discredited all the false claims he made about me, about the book that I authored and about his own perceived status as a leading commentator on the life and works of Dr Shata. The liar has caught himself in his own web!
Please check out his poorly-written article at this web link:
http://taskarmammanshata.blogspot.com/2010/09/analytical-approach-to-shatas.html
AN ANALYTICAL APPROACH TO SHATA’S COLLECTION OF SONGS: 1999 ONWARD
By Aliyu Ibrahim Kankara
Perhaps should in case the name does not ring a bell across the core
northern States in Nigeria because of numerous publications and radio or
media featuring in advertising late Mamman Shata’s entire life, my name
is Aliyu Ibrahim Kankara. Because Shata’s songs were unfathomable or
rather too mysterious to be understood, especially those he composed
between 1936 when he started singing, to 1953 when he stopped composing
wakokin Datsa or Zube. Shata’s style of songs are uncanny and
difficult to explain. In 1993 I began writing Shata’s biography,
alongside collecting his albums. I met Ibrahim Sheme in 1997 whom began
writing his own Shata’s book earlier then I, may be 1988 or 1990. After
merging our works together, we suddenly, on the request of Mamman Shata
himself met other two writers of the same biography, Tijjani Yusuf
Albasu and Ali Malami both at Kano. That was on Saturday, 19th
September, 1998. In 2006 we came out with an enchanting book, Shata Ikon
Allah, culminating to about 604 pages with an index containing about
638 bits of songs collection of the evergreen hero of the millennium.
Meeting so many people who lived with Shata for long periods of times,
some of them were Usman Gizo makaman Rokon Kano, Alhaji Alasan Abdallah
Dunu, Alhaji Dankwara Na Tabawa, Alhaji Dankwara uban Ladidi, Hajiya
Nana matar Dankwara, Alhaji Mayau Kaduna, Alhaji Bature Sarkin Makadan
Bakori, Alhaji Shehu Tsatso Katsina and many others I came to realize
that Shata Ikon Allah was still an incomplete biography. There were
many things of exciting, of interest about Shata that were missing or
untold in the book. I was frisky and fortuitous. Fortunately the people
listed above gave me the audience I was to be given, and after about
half a decade most of them except Shehu Tsatso and Nana were dead. Usman
Gizo knew Shata since in 1947 when the latter made his first appearance
at Kano, Alasan Abdallah came to know him at Malumfashi at Kwastan’s
House in 1942, Dankwara Ladidi knew and hosted him in his house at
Fagge, Kano in 1954. Bature Sarkin Makadan Bakori knew Shata in June
1943. The earlier biography seems to be feeble.
To make Shata’s biography and collection of songs fatten so that they
can be ready for analyses and appraisals I had to indulge in writing
another book on Shata. In fact it is incredible for four writers to
collect a teaspoonful collections of 638 songs. Shata claimed to have
had more than 10,000 songs to his credits. He once in 1998 lamented to
us that a researcher (white lady) came to him from America with a
collection of his 1,670 songs which she gathered, far ahead of us with
1,032. If Shata died by the middle of 1999 then the period after his
death should be the one to begin analyzing his songs and grouping them
into various classes or families. In 2010 I emerged with another
spectacular unpublished biography of the late Hausa music sensation,
Mahadi Mai Dogon Zamani: Shata Da Kundin Wakokinsa, with an index or a
complete chapter containing of about 4,000 songs. It is believed that
this new biography will open up a new window or path that will groom or
entice researchers to think of exploring more of Shata and his
contemporaries.
Although I am currently down with financial reductionisms I therefore
can’t print the present book now. Nobody also among the community
members who are well to do can handle the financial aspect of the
printing. Along side I am receiving strong attacks and onslaught from
some members of the academics that they urge the quick presentation of
the book. Although there was failure to recover the money for the
launching of the earlier book ‘Shata Ikon Allah’. Shata’s family members
are reluctant and weak about this new venture. The new book Mahadi…’
now appears like a Sanatorium or a hospital for people who are getting
better but still need rest and care(I mean the uncertainty condition of
the book not the story it carries). But there is an auspicious feeling
in me and the book. Why the public are enthusiastic on the publication
of the long awaited new book? Across the whole continents the book can
be availably useful for academic research in African Languages,
especially in America, Asia and Britain were Shata’s legacies are quit
far and or scarce. The Hausa academic corner shouldn’t be lackadaisical
about this new venture. Mahadi…’ is an elevation of Shata’s carrier and
legacies, to properly tell who really Mamman Shata was. There are
strong feelings in me that the book must even be translated to major
international languages of the world. Who ever is ready to do it is
welcome. I also defy anybody wanting to hinder the successful maturity
of the book.
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