Blick Bassy

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Aké 00:00 Tools
Ndjè Yèm 03:16 Tools
Wap Do Wap 00:00 Tools
Kiki 00:00 Tools
Mama 00:00 Tools
MPODOL 00:00 Tools
Ngui Yi 03:15 Tools
One Love 00:00 Tools
Tell Me 00:00 Tools
Ndjé Yèm 00:00 Tools
Donalina 00:00 Tools
Woñi 00:00 Tools
Ngwa 00:00 Tools
Lon 00:00 Tools
SJ 00:00 Tools
Moût 00:00 Tools
Ndjèl 00:00 Tools
Wońi 00:00 Tools
Africa 00:00 Tools
Liké 00:00 Tools
Nyango 00:00 Tools
Kundè 00:00 Tools
Lola 00:00 Tools
Bolo Mo 00:00 Tools
Sango Ngando 00:00 Tools
Likando 00:00 Tools
MAQUI 03:52 Tools
Lipém 00:00 Tools
Ndjéck 00:00 Tools
Je Te Ya Mo 00:00 Tools
Pochë 00:00 Tools
Where we go 00:00 Tools
Nlal 00:00 Tools
Hémle 00:00 Tools
Hongo Limpé 00:00 Tools
Iléla 00:00 Tools
Fala Portugues 00:00 Tools
Omaya 00:00 Tools
SDF 00:00 Tools
Sabada 00:00 Tools
Loñ 00:00 Tools
Maria 00:00 Tools
Aké (Do Moon Remix) 00:00 Tools
Bés na wè 00:00 Tools
Ndjé Yèm (Vendredi Remix) 00:00 Tools
Wap Do Wap (Nicolas Repac Remix) 00:00 Tools
Bolo 00:00 Tools
Moût (Max le Daron & DJ Mellow Remix) 00:00 Tools
Lullaby Mangod 00:00 Tools
Mama (Spoek Mathambo Remix) 00:00 Tools
Ikou 00:00 Tools
Yesu 00:00 Tools
Song Boum 00:00 Tools
Zappa 00:00 Tools
Mintaba 00:00 Tools
Masse 00:00 Tools
Nkolmesseng 00:00 Tools
Bès Na Wé 00:00 Tools
Nlela 00:00 Tools
One Love (SSCK Remix) 00:00 Tools
Sebenikoro 00:00 Tools
We 00:00 Tools
Lullaby Mangond 00:00 Tools
Ake 00:00 Tools
Aké - Do Moon Remix 00:00 Tools
Likanada 00:00 Tools
Moût - Max le Daron & DJ Mellow Remix 00:00 Tools
Massé 00:00 Tools
Hongo Lipèm 00:00 Tools
Fala Português 00:00 Tools
One Love (SSCK & Mawimbi Remix) 00:00 Tools
Likanda 00:00 Tools
Hemle 00:00 Tools
Wap Do Wap - Nicolas Repac Remix 00:00 Tools
Nléla 00:00 Tools
ndje yem 00:00 Tools
Ndjé Yèm - Vendredi Remix 00:00 Tools
WONI 00:00 Tools
Sébénikoro 00:00 Tools
Fala Portugues - Samba remix 00:00 Tools
Mama - Spoek Mathambo Remix 00:00 Tools
Kaät - A COLORS SHOW 00:00 Tools
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Mout 00:00 Tools
Hongo Lipém (feat. Richard Bona) 00:00 Tools
One Love - SSCK Remix 00:00 Tools
Like 00:00 Tools
One Love - SSCK & Mawimbi Remix 00:00 Tools
Sabada (feat. Régis Gizavo) 00:00 Tools
Hèmlè 00:00 Tools
Fala Portugués (feat. Lenine) 00:00 Tools
Ndjeck 00:00 Tools
Ndjel 00:00 Tools
Wo?i 00:00 Tools
Aké 00:00 Tools
Africa (Renaud Letang Radio Edit) 00:00 Tools
NGUIYI 00:00 Tools
Donalina (Cameroon) 00:00 Tools
Moût (Max le Daron DJ Mellow Remix) 00:00 Tools
Hongo lipem 00:00 Tools
Ndjé Yčm 00:00 Tools
Ndjčl 00:00 Tools
Moűt 00:00 Tools
Ake (Do Moon Remix) 00:00 Tools
Wap Do Wap (6Music Session 17th Jan 2016) 00:00 Tools
Wa do wap 00:00 Tools
Massè 00:00 Tools
ILELA 00:00 Tools
Je te ma yo 00:00 Tools
Il ela 00:00 Tools
NinTaba 00:00 Tools
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One Love (Studio Session) 00:00 Tools
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Mbebi 00:00 Tools
Sèbènikoro 00:00 Tools
Lullaby mangono 00:00 Tools
Kiki (6 Music Session, 10 Sep 2015) 00:00 Tools
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Blick Bassy is the new soul voice of Cameroon - soul in the sense of vocals that come from within. Bassy says: “The soul of my music isn’t so much in the words, it’s in the way of singing. In fact, the melody is a mould for the words.” On his album Léman, the singer/ songwriter/ guitarist/ percussionist connects the music of Central and West Africa and mixes it with bossa nova, jazz and soul. Bassy’s guitar playing and intoxicating, soft voice are enriched by the kora, calabash and a double bass resulting in a unique, haunting sound which is velvety with subtle harmonies, yet also raw with groovy rhythms. Léman was recorded in Salif Keita’s studio in Bamako, Mali, and in Bassy’s current hometown of Paris, and co-produced by Jean Lamoot (known for his work with Souad Massi, Salif Keita, Nneka and Kasse Mady Diabaté) and Jean-Louis Solans. It is Bassy’s first solo album, as well as his first album for the World Connection label. Blick explains, “Léman means ‘mirror’. For me a mirror is a reflection of what we are. You cannot lie in front of the mirror. You can also see behind you in a mirror. Léman is about my past, really, and about being African. I see the problems that Africa suffers from and cannot do anything. It’s one of the reasons why I sing in my own language, Bassa, which is one of the 260 Cameroonian languages that fewer and fewer children know how to speak. With that, cultures and traditions are lost forever. The song ‘Africa’ talks about these issues and is maybe the key song of the album. The same song also talks about the richness of Africa. You can only see all that when you take a little distance. Now that I live in Europe, I see clearly where I’m coming from.” Blick continues, “Musically it’s interesting to use Bassa. Its specific intonation determines the melody. When I sing in Bassa, I make use of the proverbs in which the Bassa express themselves. They often have a literal sense but also a deeper meaning which you will only understand when you are initiated. For example, in the song ‘Masse’ I talk about ‘the owl that scratched my forehead’ which means as much as you’ve been struck by misfortune. But it won’t get me down because I feel I’m well protected by my forefathers!” Born in 1974, Bassy grew up with 20 siblings in Cameroon’s capital Yaoundé, a city where people from all parts of the country come together, and the first languages are French and English. Bassy says: “People in Yaoundé lose their traditions and culture rapidly because they don’t speak in their mother tongues with each other or their children. My family is part of the Bassa ethnic group, a nomad tribe that originally comes from Egypt and has descendents down in South Africa. But nowadays people stay in one place because they need visas to cross borders. The word ‘bassa’ means ‘people from the earth’.” Aged 10, Bassy was sent to live with his grandparents for two years in Mintaba, a small village situated in the centre of Cameroon. His grandparents initiated Bassy into traditional customs and culture, training him in a variety of tasks, such as hunting, fishing and agriculture. He was also educated in their musical traditions. In Mintaba, daily life is accompanied by music and it was there that Blick discovered the Bolobo (chant for fishing), the Dingoma (chant and percussion for the inauguration of Mbombock chiefs), the Bekele (chant and percussion for weddings), the Hongo (chant for funerals) and the Assiko (guitar percussion, chant and dance). “In Mintaba, people don’t talk much but they sing a lot during their daily tasks. It’s in the singing that they express their emotions and show their souls. My mother used to sing from morning till night. She’s the one who fired my musical aspirations and taught me how to sing. Back at my parents’ home, I started listening to Marvin Gaye, Gilberto Gil and Nat King Cole. I realised I wanted to blend the beauty of my Bassa culture and its musical traditions with other music that inspired me and create my own soulful sound.” Blick Bassy started his first band, Jazz Crew, when he was 17. Playing a fusion of African melodies, jazz and bossa nova, Jazz Crew quickly became the most sought-after group in the city. In 1996, he formed a new band called Macase. During almost 10 fruitful years Macase released two acclaimed albums, Etam (1999) and Doulou (2003), as well as picking up various regional and international awards, including the RFI Prize for World Music (2001), Best Group by MASA (2001), Best New African Group by the KORA Awards (2003) and the CICIBA Prize (2003). Then in 2005, Bassy decides to leave Macase and he moves to Paris where he starts working with Manu Dibango, Cheikh Tidiane Seck, Lokua Kanza and Etienne Mbappé. A few years later he signs to the World Connection label and he finally gets to do work on his solo album, Léman. About the album he says: “I’ve been creating and carrying some of these songs around in my head for the past five years. Every detail is a part of me. It feels great to have been able to record them now and share them on stage. The song ‘Bolo’, for instance, is about having to leave your country and missing it. Lots of Africans have to move away from their hometowns to make a living. I’m the perfect example. But I also enjoy my travels to other places because I’m always looking for musical encounters. One of my trips took me to Mali and other West African countries. The Malian griot music is very present in the instrumentation (kora, ngoni), harmonies and melodies of this album.” www.myspace.com/blickbassy2 www.worldconnection.nl/blickbassy LéMAN TOUR 2009 5 March Satellit Cafe, Paris - FR 20 March N9, Eeklo - BE 24 March Live Boutique, Glazart, Paris - FR 3 May Theaters Tilburg (support for Salif Keita), Tilburg - NL 4 May Melkweg, (support for Salif Keita), Amsterdam - NL 30 May Festival Musiques Metisses, Angouleme - FR 20 June Afro-Latino Festival, Bree, BE 21 June Festival Mundial, Tilburg - NL 27 June Afrika Festival, Hertme – NL Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.