- Papa Wendo
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▪ 2009Wendo Kolosoy; Antoine KalosoyiCongolese musicianborn 1925, Mushie, Bandundu region, Belgian Congo [now Democratic Republic of the Congo]died July 22, 2008, Kinshasa, Dem. Rep. of the Congohelped lay the foundations of Congolese rumba, a form of lilting Afropop dance music that combines indigenous traditional songs with Afro-Cuban rumba rhythms. He was orphaned as a boy and eventually earned a living as a professional boxer while singing part time until he scored a massive hit with “Marie-Louise” (recorded in 1948), which made great use of his distinctive vocal style and flair for improvisation. Some of his devotees believed the record had supernatural—even satanic—powers, which led concerned officials in the Roman Catholic Church and the government to have Wendo arrested and briefly imprisoned. After his release he became an even more popular performer and a personal friend of Patrice Lumumba (later prime minister). The shift of Congolese rumba into the less-traditional soukous dance music, along with Lumumba's assassination (1961) and other political upheavals in the newly independent country, led Wendo to stop performing in public. He made a comeback—and regained political favour—with the albums Nani akolela Wendo? (1993), Marie Louise (1999), and Amba (2002). Wendo was the subject of the documentary film On the Rumba River (2007) and sang on the 2007 album of the same name.
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Universalium. 2010.