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Today's popular music in Senegal, known in the Wolof language as mbalax,
developed as a blend of the country's traditional griot percussion and praisesinging
with the Afro-Cuban arrangements and flavors which made "the return
trip" from the Caribbean to West Africa in the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s and
have flourished in West Africa ever since. Beginning in the mid-1970s the
resulting mix was modernized with a gloss of more complex indigenous
Senegalese dance rhythms, roomy and melodic guitar and saxophone solos,
chattering talking-drum soliloquies and, on occasion, Sufi-inspired Muslim
religious chant. This created a new music which was at turns nostalgic,
restrained and stately, or celebratory, explosively syncopated and indescribably
funky. Younger Senegalese musicians steeped in Jimi Hendrix, Carlos
Santana, James Brown, and the whole range of American jazz, soul music and
rock, which Senegal's cosmopolitan capital, Dakar, had enthusiastically
absorbed, were rediscovering their heritage and seeking out traditional
performers, particularly singers and talking-drummers, to join their bands. (The
griots - musicians, praise-singers and storyteller-historians - comprise a distinct
hereditary caste in Wolof society and throughout West Africa.) As it emerged
from this period of fruitful musical turbulence, mbalax would eventually find in
Youssou N'Dour the performer who has arguably had more to do with its
shaping than any other individual.
Born in Dakar in 1959, N'Dour is a singer endowed with remarkable range and
poise, and, as a composer, bandleader and producer, with a prodigious musical
intelligence. The New York Times most recently described his voice as an
“arresting tenor, a supple weapon deployed with prophetic authority”. N'Dour
absorbs the entire Senegalese musical spectrum in his work, often filtering this
through the lens of genre-defying rock or pop music from outside Senegalese
culture.
Named "African Artist of the Century" by the English publication Roots at the
threshold of the year 2000, N'Dour has made mbalax famous throughout the
world during more than twenty years of recording and touring outside of
Senegal with his band, The Super Etoile. The Village Voice's Robert Christgau,
dean of American rock critics, has boldly called N'Dour “the world's greatest
pop vocalist” and finds him “the one African moving inexorably toward the
world-pop fusion everyone else theorizes about“. Peter Gabriel, whose duet
with N'Dour on In Your Eyes (from Gabriel's 1985 album SO) defined a truly
distinguished moment in the history of rock, has proclaimed N'Dour, as a
singer, simply "one of the best alive".
N'Dour solidified his leadership of The Super Etoile by 1979, having retained
the essential personnel from earlier incarnations of the group, and he soon
thereafter launched an international career with the help of a Senegalese taxi
drivers' fraternal association in France and a small circle of supporters in
England. The beginnings in Dakar had been more inauspicious. As a willowy
teenager, N'Dour had to resort to hustling pirate gigs in the parking lots outside
certain of the city's dance clubs to which he and his bandmates had uneasy or
no access, his distinctive voice eventually earning him a reputation as a boy
wonder and the occasional live amateur-hour slot on the National Radio. As
early as age twelve, N'Dour had also been performing at neighborhood
religious-ceremonial occasions in the hard-bitten Medina section of the city
where he grew up as the first-born child of a pious auto mechanic, Elimane
N'Dour, and his wife, N'Deye Sokhna Mboup, herself of griot origin and an
occasional performer in the ceremonies of the Medina neighborhoods.
Today, N'Dour and The Super Etoile, acknowledged as Africa's most popular
live band on a worldwide scale, continue to play challenging Senegalese roots
music with what The Los Angeles Times says is "a joyous precision".
Responding to the introspective side of the group's recording career, which has
included such critically-acclaimed major-label albums as SET (Virgin 1990),
EYES OPEN (Sony Music 1992) and THE GUIDE (Sony Music 1994), and
JOKO (THE LINK) (Nonesuch/Warner Music 2000) as well as the parallel
release of dozens of local productions in Senegal, The Guardian (London) has
called their music "the finest example yet of the meeting of African and Western
music: wholesome, urgent and thoughtful".
In addition to his malaria advocacy, N’Dour also serves as a Goodwill
Ambassador of the United Nations, Special Ambassador of the ILO, and Knight
Chevalier of France. The YND Foundation, based in Dakar, is a humanitarian
organization founded by N’Dour to bring opportunities to African youth.
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