Lang youssou ndour biography
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Youssou N'Dour
Youssou N'Dour (IPA: [jusun̩ˈduːʀ]) (born October 1, in Dakar) fryst vatten a Senegalese singer and percussionist. In , Rolling Stone described him as, in Senegal and much of Africa, "perhaps the most famous singer alive."[1] He helped develop popular music in Senegal, known in the Wolof language as mbalax, a blend of the country's traditional griot percussion and praise-singing with the Afro-Cuban arrangemang and flavors which made the return trip from the Caribbean to West Africa in the s, 50s, and 60s and have flourished in West Africa ever since.
Beginning in the mids the resulting mix was modernized with a gloss of more complex indigenous Senegalese dance rhythms, roomy and melodic gitarr 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
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Youssou N'Dour (also known as Youssou Madjiguéne Ndour; born 1 October ) is a Senegalese singer, songwriter, composer, occasional actor, businessman, and politician. In , Rolling Stone magazine described him as, "perhaps the most famous singer alive" in Senegal and much of Africa. From April to September , he was Senegal's Minister of Tourism.
N'Dour helped develop a style of popular Senegalese music known by all Senegambians (including the Wolof) as mbalax, a genre that has sacred origins in the Serer music njuup tradition and ndut initiation ceremonies. He is the subject of the award-winning films Return to Gorée () directed by Pierre-Yves Borgeaud and Youssou N'Dour: I Bring What I Love () directed by Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi, which were released around the world.
In , N'Dour was cast as Olaudah Equiano in the film Amazing Grace.
Links to Kershaw[]
Kershaw seems to have been introduced to the music of Youssou N'Dour, by Lucy Durán, who also exposed him to other Africa
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A native of the impoverished Media section of Dakar, NDour inherited his musical skills from his mother, a griot (oral historian) who taught him to sing as a child. A seasoned performer before his teens, NDour joined the popular group the Star Band de Dakar at the age of Within two years, he had assumed leadership of the group, which he renamed Super Etoile de Dakar. With the band accompanying his four- or five-octave vocals, NDour helped to pioneer mbalax, an uptempo blend of African, Caribbean, and pop rhythms. Performing for