- Tabu Ley Rochereau
Tabu Ley Rochereau (born
1940 ) is the leader of Orchestre Afrisa International and one ofAfrica 's most influentialvocalist s and prolificsongwriter s. Along withguitar istDr Nico Kasanda , Tabu Ley pioneeredsoukous ; he internationalised his music by fusing elements ofCongo lese folk music withCuba n,Caribbean , andLatin America n rumba.Biography
Tabu Ley was born in
Bandundu ,Democratic Republic of the Congo , as Pascal Tabu. In 1954, at the age of fourteen, he wrote his first song "Bessama Muchacha" which he recorded with Joseph "Grand Kalle " Kabasele's band, African Jazz. After finishing high school he joined the band as a full time musician. Tabu Ley sang the pan-African hit "Independence cha cha" which was composed by Grand Kalle when Congo was declared an independent nation in 1960, propelling him to instant fame. He remained with African Jazz until 1963 when he andDr Nico Kasanda formed their own group,African Fiesta . Two years later, Tabu Ley and Dr. Nico split and Tabu Ley formed African Fiesta National, also known as African Fiesta Flash. The group became one of the most successful bands in African history, recording African classics like "Afrika Mokili Mobimba", and surpassing record sales of one million copies by 1970.Papa Wemba andSam Mangwana were among the many influential musicians that were part of the group.In 1970 Tabu Ley formed Orchestre Afrisa International. Along with Franco Luambo's TPOK Jazz, Afrisa was now one of Africa's greatest bands. They recorded hits such as "Sorozo", "Kaful Mayay", "Aon Aon", and "Mose Konzo".
In the mid 1980s Tabu Ley discovered a young talented singer and dancer,
M'bilia Bel , who helped popularise his band further. M'bilia Bel became the first female soukous singer to gain acclaim throughout Africa. Tabu Ley and M'bilia Bel later got married and had one child together. In 1988 Tabu Ley introduced another female vocalist known asFaya Tess , and M'bilia Bel left and continued to be successful on her own. After M'bilia Bel's departure Afrisa's influence along with that of their rivals TPOK Jazz continued to wane as fans gravitated toward the faster version of soukous.In
1985 , the Government ofKenya banned all foreign music from the National Radio service. After Tabu Ley composed the song "Twende Nairobi" ("Let's go to Nairobi"), sung byM'bilia Bel , in praise of Kenyan presidentDaniel arap Moi , the ban was promptly lifted.In the early 1990s he briefly settled in
Southern California . He began to tailor his music towards an International audience by including more English lyrics and by increasing more international dance styles such as Samba. He found success with the release of albums such as "Muzina", "Exil Ley", "Africa worldwide" and "Babeti soukous".In
1996 , Tabu Ley participated in the album "Gombo Salsa" by thesalsa music projectAfricando . The song "Paquita" from that album is a remake of a song that he recorded in the late 1960s with African Fiesta.When President
Mobutu Sese Seko was deposed in1997 , Tabu Ley returned toKinshasa and took up a position as acabinet minister in the government of new PresidentLaurent Kabila . Following Kabila's death, Tabu Ley then joined the appointed transitional parliament created by Laurent Kabila, until it was dissolved following the establishment of the inclusive transitional institutions.In November
2005 , Tabu Ley was appointed Vice-Governor in charge of political, administrative, and socio-cultural questions, for the city ofKinshasa , a position devolved to his party, theCongolese Rally for Democracy by the2002 peace agreements.Awards
* Honorary Knight of
Senegal
* Officer of the National Order, the Republic ofChad References
* [http://kenyapage.net/franco/tabu.html Tabu Ley at kenyapage.net]
* [http://www.musicweb-international.com/encyclopaedia/t/T2.HTM MusicWeb Encyclopaedia of Popular Music]
* [http://www.mp3.com/tabu-ley-rochereau/artists/2853/discography.html Discography at mp3.com]
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