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  • Cheikh Lô

    Country  Senegal
    Genres roots spiritual
    Website www.worldcircuit.co.uk
    FestivalSauti za Busara 2013
    Recordings📼

    Ne La Thiass, 1996 Bambay Gueej, 2001 Lamp Fall, 2006 Jamm, 2011

    Cheikh Lo - Jamm

    Cheikh Lô
    Cheikh Lô

    Cheikh Lô is one of the great mavericks of African music. A superb singer and songwriter as well as a distinctive guitarist, percussionist and drummer he has personalised and distilled a variety of influences from West and Central Africa, to create a style that is uniquely his own.

    Lô dedicates both his life and music to Baye Fall, a specifically Senegalese form of Islam and part of the larger Islamic brotherhood of Mouridism.  Established by Cheikh Ahmadou Bamba M'Becke at the end of the 19th century, Mouridism emerged from opposition to French colonialism and many fabulous stories are told of Bamba's struggles with the authorities who feared that the rapid spread of Mouridism would inspire armed insurrection.  Bamba's closest disciple Cheikh Ibra Fall (also known as Lamp Fall) established the Baye Fall movement, and he was the first to wear the patchwork clothes and long dreadlocks that are still Baye Fall trademarks today. Cheikh Lô's own marabout, Maame Massamba N'Diaye is said to be over 100 years old, and was a disciple of Cheikh Ibra Fall; Cheikh Lô wears his picture in a pendant around his neck.

    Cheikh Lô was born in 1955, to Senegalese parents in Bobo Dioulasso, Burkina Faso, not far from the border with Mali, where he grew up speaking Bambara (language of Mali), Wolof (language of Senegal) and French. His father was from a long line of marabouts. From an early age Lô was only interested in music, running away from school to teach himself guitar and percussion on borrowed instruments.
    During his teens he listened to all kinds of music, especially the Congolese rumba which was popular throughout Africa.  Cuban music was also all the rage in West Africa at this time, so when his older brothers started up their 78s and danced to 'El Pancho Bravo', Cheikh, without understanding a word, would mime exactly to the Spanish lyrics.
    At 21 he started singing and playing percussion with Orchestra Volta Jazz in Bobo Dioulasso. The band played a variety of music from Burkina Faso and neighbouring countries, as well Cuban and other styles.
    In 1981 he moved to Dakar, Senegal where he played drums for the renowned and progressive singer, Ouza, before joining the house band at the Hotel Savana, drumming and singing an international repertoire.
    In 1984 he moved to Paris and worked as a studio session drummer. He recalls: "Studio - sleep - studio for two years.  I love Congolese and Cameroonian music and I absorbed a lot of it during this period". On his return to Senegal he found that his (now very long) dreadlocks made him no longer entirely welcome at the Hotel Savana so he concentrated on his own music.

    Cheikh's first cassette 'Doxandeme' ('Immigrants'), on which he sang about the experience of being Senegalese abroad, came out in 1990. Despite his reservations about the quality of the local production, it sold well and earned him the 'Nouveau Talent' award in Dakar. The following year he started to work on the compositions for his album 'Ne La Thiass'.
    Youssou N'Dour first encountered Lô as a session singer in 1989. "Whenever he sang the choruses I was overwhelmed by his voice," explains N'Dour, "but I really got to know him from his cassette 'Doxandeme'.  I heard his voice and said "wow" - I found something in his voice that's like a voyage through Burkina, Niger, Mali".
    Lô continued to develop his own repertoire, holding out for better recording conditions for his next production. In August 1995 Youssou N'Dour agreed to produce the next album at his Xippi Studio in Dakar.
    On this album 'Ne La Thiass', Lô is joined on vocals by Youssou N'Dour ('Guiss Guiss' and 'Set') and by musicians from N'dour's Super Etoile de Dakar. Lo's signature sound - a semi acoustic, Spanish-tinged take on the popular mbalax style - was an instant success in Senegal gaining him a dedicated local following.  'Set' - a plea to clean up the streets during a Dakar municipal strike, was broadcast on loudspeakers throughout the country in a campaign by the Ministry of Health.
    'Ne La Thiass' was released internationally on World Circuit in 1996 and followed by a higely successful European tour.  His early performances prompted rave reviews - 'A rare talent destined to become one of world music's biggest stars', The Times - 'a compelling performer with energy and personality to match that of the early Bob Marley', The Guardian.
    In 1997 he was awarded Best Newcomer at the Kora All-African Awards in South Africa and the following year he toured the US, as part of the 'Africa-Fête' line-up that included Salif Keita and Papa Wemba.  In 1999 he received the prestigious 'Ordre National de Merite de Léon' from the President of Senegal.

    Cheikh's second album 'Bambay Gueej' (World Circuit) was released in 1999. It was co-produced by Nick Gold and Youssou N'Dour in Dakar with additional recording in Havana and London.  Expanding on his previous album, he drew on sounds from Burkina Faso, Mali (with guest Oumou Sangare), and incorporated touches of Cuban son (with Richard Egues on flute) and funk (with Pee Wee Ellis of James Brown fame on sax).
    His eclectic mix was furthered on 'Lamp Fall (World Circuit 2005) by his discovery of Brazilian sounds and rhythms and he travelled to Bahia, Brazil to work with acclaimed producer Alê Siqueira (Tribalistas, Omara Portuondo). These Brazilian recordings were coupled on the album with sessions recorded in Dakar and London.

    For the next few years Lo withdrew from the international stage and immersed himself in the Dakar scene playing regularly with his own band. This return to home is reflected in his latest album 'Jamm'.  His signature blend of semi-acoustic flavours - West and Central African,  Cuban, flamenco - has been distilled into his most mature, focused, yet diverse statement to date.