Angélique Kidjo - Logozo 1991 CD (Tribal, Synth-pop)

Angélique Kidjo - Logozo 1991 CD (Tribal, Synth-pop)

Item ID: 207744695 Item condition: Used Delivery time: 5 days
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Angélique Kidjo – Logozo

Angélique Kidjo - Logozo album cover
 

Media Condition: Very Good Plus (VG+) väga hea! õrnad kasutusjäljed!
Sleeve Condition: Very Good Plus (VG) leidub kasutusjälgi, õrnad kortsud!

Label: Mango – 262 469, Island Records – 262 469
Format:
CD, Album
Country: Europe
Released:
Genre: Electronic
Style: Tribal, Synth-pop
1   Batonga 4:31
2   Tché-Tché
Saxophone – Branford Marsalis
4:31
3   Logozo
Saxophone – Branford Marsalis
3:47
4   Wé-Wé
Backing Vocals – Ray Lema
4:20
5   Malaïka
Written-By [Chant Traditionnel Tanzanien] – Traditional
4:13
6   Ewa Ka Djo
Backing Vocals – Ray Lema
Saxophone – Manu Dibango
4:15
7   Kaléta 4:32
8   Elédjiré 3:49
9   Sénié
Backing Vocals – Ray Lema
1:51
10   Ekoléya
Backing Vocals – Ray Lema
4:12
 
  • Recorded At – International Sound Studios
  • Recorded At – Studio Davout
  • Mastered At – Translab
  • Distributed By – BMG
  • Phonographic Copyright ℗ – Mango
  • Copyright © – Mango
  • Phonographic Copyright ℗ – Island Records France S.A.
  • Copyright © – Island Records France S.A.
  • Glass Mastered At – Sonopress
Recorded at International Sound Studio, Miami and Studio Davout, Paris
Mastered at Translab

℗ & © 1991 Mango/Island Records France S.A.
Distributed by BMG
  • Barcode: 4 007192 624690

Angélique Kidjo

Real Name: Angélique Kpasseloko Hinto Hounsinou Kandjo Manta Zogbin Kidjo
Profile:

Born: July 14, 1960.

Angélique Kidjo grew up in Ouidah (still known as The Slave Port) in Benin, a country (until 1975 known as the French colony Dahomey) in West Africa that sits snugly between Togo and Nigeria. In fact, it took its name from the former Kingdom of Benin in northwestern Nigeria.

She was born into a musical family, her mother is a choreographer and director of a theater group, her brothers are instrumentalists and at the age of six she was singing and dancing in her mother's company and later joined her brothers' group, the Kidjo Brothers Band, where she sang a variety of Benin-style songs. Growing up in Benin exposed her to a rich variety of music. She was heavily influenced by the traditional folk styles and love songs of the country - epic songs full of allusions to the history of the villages and the rituals and voodoo ceremonies of the older generation but, perhaps more importantly, she was listening to the new urban African music percolating up from South Africa and the Western songs ranging from James Brown, Aretha Franklin to Jimi Hendrix that she heard on the radio.

The formidable South African vocalist Miriam Makeba was a great influence on the young Kidjo, so much so that Angelique, who was already making a name for herself, recorded an adaptation of a Makeba song for Benin radio. Her first hits followed and she toured the Ivory Coast.
It wasn't until Kidjo made the trip to Europe that her career came alive. It was Cameroonian producer, Ekambi Brilliant, who suggested that Angelique move to Paris to record and the singer left Benin for Europe. Paris in the eighties was the breeding ground for the new African music and African artists, freed from the constraints of African tradition yet incorporating their roots with western styles were generating revolutionary sounds. Delicately plucked guitars were mixing with rock drums and lyrics were tackling more worldly issues. Makossa from Cameroon, soukous from Zaire which is now the DRC and mbalax from Senegal was being injected with a new attitude and was taking over the dancefloors. Kidjo was in her element.

When she first arrived she sang and recorded with a group called Alafia and then joined the jazz tinged band, Pili Pili. She later recorded two jazz albums with Pili Pili and played with them at the Montreux Festival in 1986. In the same year she joined forces with bass player and composer Jean Hebrail, and together they worked on their own music. Through regularly working at Le Baiser Salé in Paris, she also met many African and Antillean musicians and was able to form her own group and release her first solo album, Parakou.

She is the receiver of the Polar Music Prize of 2023 (as announced on March 28)s.

Sites: kidjo.com

, ayemusic.free.fr , Facebook , Lastfm , X , Wikipedia , YouTube

 
In Groups: "46664 The Event" Cast, Band Aid 30, Donnons Nous La Main, Pili Pili, Sing The Truth, We Are Family Collective

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