Njacko Backo and Kalimba Kalimba
Gig Seeker Pro

Njacko Backo and Kalimba Kalimba

Toronto, Ontario, Canada | SELF | AFM

Toronto, Ontario, Canada | SELF | AFM
Band World Children's Music

Calendar

Music

Press


"First Night Toronto"

Njacko is such a nice guy and his music really touched the people who were there. As I'm sure you know, crowds were thin for his sets, for which I feel badly. However, he was the consummate pro and the show went on at the highest level of performance. He's a great talent and I wouldn't hesitate to program him moving forward. - Glenn Sernyk, The Toronto Star, February 20 2005


"First Night Toronto"

Njacko is such a nice guy and his music really touched the people who were there. As I'm sure you know, crowds were thin for his sets, for which I feel badly. However, he was the consummate pro and the show went on at the highest level of performance. He's a great talent and I wouldn't hesitate to program him moving forward. - Glenn Sernyk, The Toronto Star, February 20 2005


"Canada Day 2004"

Njacko Backo's music comes from the soul. In a workshop setting, the audience was completely absorbed by an amazing cultural & musical journey.

Later on in the day, the band's memorable stage performance took place immediately after an electrical storm that took the thousands of Canada Day Participants (and Organizers) by surprise. The energy abounded as the players took the stage and let their infectious rhythms and melodies flow out into the audience. Just as the sun came out, so did a most enthusiastic Njacko Backo and Band... And what a celebration of Life and Music it was.

Merci Merci Njacko Backo!!! - Joel Delaquis, National Capital Commission - Artistic Programming


"Canada Day 2004"

Njacko Backo's music comes from the soul. In a workshop setting, the audience was completely absorbed by an amazing cultural & musical journey.

Later on in the day, the band's memorable stage performance took place immediately after an electrical storm that took the thousands of Canada Day Participants (and Organizers) by surprise. The energy abounded as the players took the stage and let their infectious rhythms and melodies flow out into the audience. Just as the sun came out, so did a most enthusiastic Njacko Backo and Band... And what a celebration of Life and Music it was.

Merci Merci Njacko Backo!!! - Joel Delaquis, National Capital Commission - Artistic Programming


"Family and Musical Ties Intertwine for Native Cameroon (MUSIKFEST'99)"

In concert, Backo and Kalimba try to become closer to their audiences. In the past the band members have even shared their instrument with listeners to try to encourage a feeling of participation...The mission of the band is to break barrier between the band and the audience.
- David Howel, The Morning Call


"Family and Musical Ties Intertwine for Native Cameroon (MUSIKFEST'99)"

In concert, Backo and Kalimba try to become closer to their audiences. In the past the band members have even shared their instrument with listeners to try to encourage a feeling of participation...The mission of the band is to break barrier between the band and the audience.
- David Howel, The Morning Call


"Cadences of the Heart"

World music fans know him mostly as a kalimba player and the leader of Kalimba Kalimba, a seven-piece band that plays festivals and cultural centres around the country. Toronto children knows him as a drum teacher with the Mariposa in the school program. The wider drumming community knows him as leader of Toum Kak, a student troupe that performs at such events as the International Drumming Festival. - John Goddard, The Toronto Star


"Cadences of the Heart"

World music fans know him mostly as a kalimba player and the leader of Kalimba Kalimba, a seven-piece band that plays festivals and cultural centres around the country. Toronto children knows him as a drum teacher with the Mariposa in the school program. The wider drumming community knows him as leader of Toum Kak, a student troupe that performs at such events as the International Drumming Festival. - John Goddard, The Toronto Star


"Meet the Thumb-piano King"

The king of African kalimba - that's thumb piano to you - is about to entrance to your ears with the magic sounds he conjures from his hand-made instruments.
- Geoff Chapman, The Toronto Star


"Meet the Thumb-piano King"

The king of African kalimba - that's thumb piano to you - is about to entrance to your ears with the magic sounds he conjures from his hand-made instruments.
- Geoff Chapman, The Toronto Star


"Ba Ba Oh CD Launch"

From Njacko Backo and Kalimba! Kalimba!’s opening notes, the music’s exotic and hot rhythms had everyone on the dance floor. An inevitable occurrence with this group. - Olivier Bilodeau, Le Métropolitain (Toronto 2006)


"Ba Ba Oh CD Launch"

From Njacko Backo and Kalimba! Kalimba!’s opening notes, the music’s exotic and hot rhythms had everyone on the dance floor. An inevitable occurrence with this group. - Olivier Bilodeau, Le Métropolitain (Toronto 2006)


"Review of "Ou est l'Amour""

"Njacko Backo brings an eclectic mix of Jazz and Caribbean and African rhythms on Ou Est L'Amour, blending in the occasional dash of Reggae, Pop and even Mediterranean elements. Fans of Ladysmith Black Mambazo and Paul Simon's Graceland-era songs will be thrilled with Backo. He wastes no time, wading in quickly on Ben Skin Bazou with neo-Jazz guitar and vocal harmonies that dive and dart like a flock of sparrows in flight....Ou Est L'Amour is a listening experience I would recommend to my readers. Njacko Backo crafts wondrous rhythmic musical landscapes to explore, carried along on melodies you won't soon forget. "
- Wildy
http://wildysworld.blogspot.com/2010/02/review-njacko-backo-ou-est-lamour.html - Wildy's World, wildysworld.blogspot.com


"Review of "Ou est l'Amour""

"Njacko Backo brings an eclectic mix of Jazz and Caribbean and African rhythms on Ou Est L'Amour, blending in the occasional dash of Reggae, Pop and even Mediterranean elements. Fans of Ladysmith Black Mambazo and Paul Simon's Graceland-era songs will be thrilled with Backo. He wastes no time, wading in quickly on Ben Skin Bazou with neo-Jazz guitar and vocal harmonies that dive and dart like a flock of sparrows in flight....Ou Est L'Amour is a listening experience I would recommend to my readers. Njacko Backo crafts wondrous rhythmic musical landscapes to explore, carried along on melodies you won't soon forget. "
- Wildy
http://wildysworld.blogspot.com/2010/02/review-njacko-backo-ou-est-lamour.html - Wildy's World, wildysworld.blogspot.com


Discography

Ici Bas, Rien N'est Impossible/Here Below, Nothing is Impossible (2013)
Où est l’Amour / Where is the Love (2009)
Ba Ba Oh (2006)
The Conscience of Africa (2003)
Kakoua (2000)
Lode Yeuk (1999)
Nkoni (1996)
Ressurection (1992)
Le Destin (1988)
Bamileke Reggae (1986)

* all releases are independent

Photos

Bio

Njacko Backo creates joyful African-influenced world music that instantly evokes images of sun-drenched music festivals, ecstatically-dancing crowds and the spirit of peace, love and social harmony found within.

A master of the kalimba of his native Cameroon, Njacko seamlessly blends the rhythms, melodies and vocal styles of his homeland with the most euphoric and blissful sounds from the world over. The jubilant steel pan of calypso, the droning Sitar of South Asian ragas, the uplifting banjo of old-time country, and the soaring and contemplative Uilleann pipes of Irish music all make appearances on his new album, Ici bas rien nest impossible (Here below, nothing is impossible). Meditative flute, blistering saxophone, shimmering Wurlitzer, and rip-roaring fiddle parts are also woven into the mix. The result is a veritable world party a high-energy musical celebration of the interconnectedness of cultures.

From his early days as a marginalized youth in the village of Bazou, Njacko has risen above circumstance to become a living testament to the transformative power of music; an award-winning musician, a beloved music al educator; an evangelist for the idea that wealth is to be found in community, not in worldly possessions; and a generous philanthropist who is currently rebuilding a school in the very same town that once treated him as an outcast.

Born into a musical family in a village as rural and as untouched by modern technology as the one in the film The Gods Must Be Crazy, Njacko, like all children there, was learning to build and play instruments by the age of three by watching the adults do it. He and some friends had a group that performed around nearby villages.

But when Njacko was just seven, his parents divorced, a scandalous act by the regional moral standards of the time. He was shunned by other children and neglected by his parents. He went to live with his grandmother, who encouraged his love of music, introducing him to village elders who taught him to play the hand drum (toumkak), kalimba (thumb piano), and African harp (zaa koua).

Possessed of a passionate curiosity about the world beyond his village, Njacko left Cameroon at age 17 and began life as an itinerant musician in West Africa, immersing himself in the vibrant live music scene in the restaurants and clubs of Nigeria, Mali, Togo, Burkina Faso, and Ivory Coast and soaking up the influences of the entire region. At 21, he travelled to Europe, where he tapped into the small network of African musicians in Paris who, in the late 70s and early 80s, were in the early stages of launching what would become a massive world music movement. He distinguished himself in that drum-centric milieu by focusing on what is now his signature instrument: the kalimba. He would go on to perform with acts such as Africa Salimata (creation of Salimata Diabat of The National Ballet of Guinea), Ernest Ciss, Sosoba, and Vinjama, and choreograph for Mioso Mika of Surinam.

After 11 years in France, Germany and the Netherlands where he recorded his first two independent albums Njacko immigrated to Canada, where he has carved out a multi-faceted career as a band-leader, dancer, story-teller, author, and educator.

His boundary-smashing global music ensemble, Kalimba Kalimba, won the 1999 Fiati Memorial Award for Best Traditional Performance from the Toronto-based group Music Africa. Njacko also won first prize in the 17th Annual Billboard World Song Contest for his song Afrique Rveille Toi. And his song Mama Oh received honourable mentions from both the 2006 International Songwriting Competition (world music category) and the 15th Annual Billboard World Song Contest. Njacko's most recent album Ici Bas, Rien N'est Impossible was nominated for a 2013 Canadian Folk Music Award (World Group of the Year).

Njacko has released a total of 10 albums seven with Kalimba Kalimba and performed at the Montreal Jazz Festival, the Louisiana Folk Festival (Lafayette, LA) and the Houston International Jazz Festival (Houston, TX), among countless other events. He has also composed music for films including To Walk with Lions, Born Free, and Spirit in the Tree.

As an educator, Njacko has released three instructional African drumming CDs and an instructional DVD. He has given guest lectures at York University, the University of Guelph and the University of Waterloo. He teaches music to young people through Mariposa in the Schools, and hes even written a popular childrens book, Baki and the Magic Egg, and is working on a follow up!

In addition, Njacko has performed fundraising concerts for countless charities and non-profits, including Amnesty International, Foster Parents Plan, The Stephen Lewis Foundation, and The David Suzuki Foundation. Since 2010, he and his wife, Valery Woloshyn and their friends have also been raising money to rebuild the cole St. Albert Le Grand in Bazou, Cameroon.

Band Members