Downloads   Galeries   Forums   Audios   Vidéos   Liens   Livre d´or   Partenaires   Contact   
  Accueil
  Actualité
  Régions/Peuples
  Historique
  Sawanité
  Le Ngondo
  Tourisme
  Littérature
  VIP
  F.A.Q
  Agendas
  Evénements
  Annonces
  Projets
  Communauté



      


Ben Decca - Makossa back on the dancefloor

 
True to its name, Ben Decca`s latest album, Makossa phœnix, has seen the Cameroonian makossa star rise from the flames once again. Indeed, in recent weeks, the album has taken Douala`s club dancefloors by storm. RFI Musique looks back on Decca`s care


Douala 

04/05/2006 - 

True to its name, Ben Decca´s latest album, Makossa phœnix, has seen the Cameroonian makossa star rise from the flames once again. Indeed, in recent weeks, the album has taken Douala´s club dancefloors by storm. RFI Musique looks back on Decca´s career to date.

 


"Who hasn´t heard of Ben Decca in Cameroon?" enthuses Michaël, a 25-year-old Cameroonian fan, "It´s the most wonderful Douala music, the kind no-one makes any more. I grew up listening to singers like him!" Michaël can rest assured – they´re still making Douala like they did in the good old days. At least, Ben Decca is at any rate! In recent weeks, Decca´s velvet tones have been getting clubbers grooving on the dancefloor in discos right across Cameroon´s economic capital, Douala. Grâce Decca´s elder brother is definitively back in the news with Makossa phœnix, his nineteenth album in a career spanning twenty-five years.

"I arrived in the music world like a hair in a bowl of soup," Decca claims, flashing a broad grin. The budding young musician was a student at the time, completing a college course in France. One night a friend happened to hear him sing and his fortunes changed from one day to the next. "My friend thought it was a pretty good song," recounts Decca, "and he offered to record it." But Decca turned down the offer, knowing his father would be furious if he found out his son was neglecting his studies to make music. The friend insisted they could find a solution and persuaded Decca to record an album, promising it would be released without his face on the cover. The album came out at the end of 1981 – featuring a close-up photo of the singer. "And all hell broke out," recalls Decca, "My father took it all very badly, of course. But with time he finally came to accept my career."

Decca senior certainly had time to come to terms with his son´s chosen profession. Twenty-five years on from that debut album, Ben Decca has established himself as one of the leading voices of makossa (a vibrant sound from the coastal region of Douala). The singer actually left his homeland long ago to live in France, but he recounts how he made an attempt to settle back in Cameroon in the ´80s. "There were a lot of political problems at the time," he explains, "and the economic situation was really bad so I was forced to go back to the Paris suburbs." Decca remains firmly attached to his Cameroonian roots, however, spending several months each year in rue de la Joie, in Deido, the family neighbourhood where he grew up. "Deido´s the last surviving village in Douala. The rest of the city´s become really cosmopolitan now, but Deido´s still got its own sense of brotherhood and fraternity. We´re practically all cousins, in fact! For a long time, people used to claim that everyone that lived in the neighbourhood was a gangster. But in reality we just didn´t want anyone treading on our toes. It was only in the ´80s that locals accepted the presence of a police station!"

The Music of Love


This anti-establishment stance did not work its way into Decca´s songs, however. The singer, whose rich, deep vocals recall those of Papa Wemba, insists that "Makossa is very much a regional sound – it´s a music of love!" The songs on his new album, Makossa phoenix (the majority of which are written in Douala with a smattering of French here and there) certainly appear to confirm this, almost all of them making some reference to women and relationships. "There´s no such thing as perfect love," Decca sings on one ballad, "Its past is never simple, its present is imperfect and its future is always conditional!"

Another song on Makossa phoenix evokes the memory of the singer´s father, who died three years ago. Now and again in the course of the past twenty-five years, Decca has delved into more political subjects. "I made a ´protest´ album eight years ago," he says, "but it was censored. On it, I said that if we started reasoning in ethnic terms instead of as a nation, we´d have nothing left in this country. These days, I really think that the Cameroonian people´s acceptance of things has gone way beyond the norm. You can go round denouncing things all you like, but the situation doesn´t change. It´s no use fighting…"


While Decca appears to have ruled out fighting for social and political change, he remains an ardent defender of makossa - even if he does confess to a certain weakness for the blues. Over the years, the boy from Deido has made the style his own by adding a touch of rumba in the final mix, but he remains loyal to makossa´s founding spirit. Makossa greats such as Etienne Mbappé and Guy Nsangue guest on Makossa phoenix and the album´s title track is intended as a "tribute to those who made makossa what it is today!" (They include Nelle Eyoum Emmanu and Eboa Lotin). "Makossa has won audiences over in the past – and it will keep on winning audiences over," he insists, "Some musicians have deformed makossa over the years, but the purists are still there, so I´m not too worried… Makossa´s like ndolé. Saying it´s over is like saying ndolé is no longer one of Cameroon´s national dishes!"

As for coupé-décalé, the hot new style from Ivory Coast that has taken off in Cameroon´s clubs in recent months, Decca dismisses it as a temporary fashion fad. "It´s a sign that the local Cameroonian music scene is not so healthy right now," he says, "And that´s partly due to the pirates. Imagine, just a couple of days after my album was released, pirate copies were already in circulation. Another problem is Cameroonians haven´t understood that you have to accept the notion of ´cultural exception´ like they do everywhere else. The day we grasp that, believe me, a lot of things will start changing." Everything but the essence of makossa, we hope!

Fanny   Pigeaud

Translation : Julie  Street

 DANS LA MEME RUBRIQUE
Attribution du 2ème prix Moumié - Un article confond Woungly Massaga
Selon René EMEH ELONG et Franklin NYAMSI de deux membres de l’UPC, Il y a à charge de W. Massaga des "Pièces à conviction d`un parcours de traîtrise"....

« Man pass man » : Honneur et gloire à l’immortel Ernest Ouandié ! par Beng Yves.
« La gravité de la situation de même que l’amour que nous portons tous à notre pays commandent que tous les Kamerunais se donnent la main pour porter le coup décisif au régime néocolonialiste agonisant. » Ernest Ouandié...

Dibango recalé face à Jackson et Rihanna
Manu Dibango avait engagé une nouvelle action en justice contre les maisons de disques de Michael Jackson et Rihanna pour avoir utilisé sans son autorisation le thème musical de Soul Makossa. Un magistrat parisien a jugé ce mardi 17 février, irreceva...

Connecting to a proud heritage - The Kemet way
Aisha recalls on one of her visits to Kemet, visiting a temple with paintings of medical instruments, and historical records of surgeries and medicines that were used in the BC era. Recognising some of the instruments as instruments used in modern me...

Manu Dibango : « Quand on dit ivoirité, je rigole ! »
J’ai gagné contre Jennifer Lopez. Et j’en ai encore plusieurs en cours dont un contre Rihanna. Alors elle, c’est pire, elle a crédité le morceau à Michael Jackson, mon propre plagiaire!...

David Siegfried Etamè Massoma : Un détective au sommet de l´Etat
Né le 08 août 1946 à Ndoungué, dans le département du Moungo, province du Littoral, il est titulaire d`une licence en Sciences économiques de l`Université de Yaoundé...

Le destin tragique de « l’âme immortelle du Peuple kamerunais ».Il y a 61 ans naissait l´UPC
C’était le 10 Avril 1948. C’était un Samedi.Il faisait chaud ce jour-là. Docteur Samuel Mack-Kit – Président de l’UPC
...

Henriette Ekwe de son nom de guerre "Nyangon". L´âme de l´UPC
Elle fait partie depuis plusieurs années déja des figures médiatiques connues des camerounais. La directrice de publication de l`hebdomadaire Bebela a été et reste une militante politique engagée....

La leçon d´ATT
ATT saura t-il résister à la tentation de ne pas modifier la constitution?...

La Renaisance Africaine du rêve à la réalité...
A Dakar, ancienne capitale de l`Afrique Occidentale française, à quelques encablures de Gorée île au passé tragique, se dresse désormais un monument qui traduit la prise de conscience d`un peuple pour un nouveau départ....

   0 |  1 |  2 |  3 |  4 |  5 |  6 |  7 |  8 |  9 |  10 |  11 |  12 |  13 |  14 |  15 |  16 |  17 |  18 |  19 |  20 |  21 |  22 |  23 |  24 |  25 |      ... >|



Jumeaux Masao "Ngondo"

Remember Moamar Kadhafi

LIVING CHAINS OF COLONISATION






© Peuplesawa.com 2007 | WEB Technology : BN-iCOM by Biangue Networks