Sign Up

Latest News

Catch up on the latest news at Emarcy.

Artists

Youssou N'Dour

Youssou N'Dour

Youssou N'Dour

Youssou N'Dour

Youssou N'Dour

MEDIA

After countless forays into the western world, Youssou N'Dour chose Dakar as a base from which to lead his geopolitical campaign in music. His strategy is pan-African: "What all of us Africans share is much more important than what we don't share," says this elegant, fifty-year old youngster, who grew up in the Medina in Senegal's capital city, Dakar. Bringing unity to the African continent has been his priority for a long time; the key (along with love, opinions and a great festive sense) lay in the professional practise of music for some thirty-seven years. Yet his career was bound to lead to a form of musical expression that has become universal: Reggae, which was born in Jamaica in the Sixties.

As a man of the media and a fighter for citizens' rights - from wiping out the African debt to the battle against malaria - Youssou N'Dour is well aware of the political import of reggae, the music-genre directly linked to Rastafarianism, whose leading figure was the "Ras Tafari" Haile Selassie, the black Emperor of Ethiopia.

As a religion, intellectual movement and way of life, Rastafarianism was conceived some thirty years before the first sound-systems by two Jamaican renegades living in The United States, Marcus Garvey, the ideologist of beauty and black rebellion, and preacher Leonard Percival Howell, who left Jamaica on a ship to America but returned from Harlem to work the soil in the hills of the Caribbean. "From Brazil to Australia and even in Bombay / Africans, Indians and the Portuguese / they love the one-drop in the roots of reggae." sings Youssou N'Dour today. And in Marley Demna, a tribute to Bob Marley, he goes on, "In the market, his music played all day. Marley was a young man who floated away. He showed the world the route of reggae / One love, No woman no cry." Youssou N'Dour shows his allegiance to the genre without pretending to belong; his approach is different from that of African reggae's creators, Alpha Blondy from the Ivory Coast, the South African Lucky Dube, who was shot to death in 2007, or followers such as Tiken Jah Fakoli, who took refuge in Mali in 2003 to escape the violence of the civil war raging in the Ivory Coast. What they created, diving deep into their roots, was a radical political movement. Youssou, on the other hand, brushed the wings of reggae with his fingertips. He did so notably in 2000, with the album Joko from Village to Town, which featured an appearance by the Fugee Wyclef Jean, an Afro-American of Haitian origin.

But African unity wasn't the only thing in the...

(Read More)

RELEASES BY THIS ARTIST

Dakar - Kingston

The products on this website may not be available via Emarcy in all territories.
Contact Us: