Wawali Bonane & Yoka Nzenze
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Wawali Bonane & Yoka Nzenze

Seattle, Washington, United States | SELF

Seattle, Washington, United States | SELF
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Three Songs On Safarini in Transit: Music of African Immigrants By Smithsonian Folkways Recordings

An instructive table set as a lesson to a younger sibling, Wumba Wumba gives the listener valuable advice on how to live a good and productive life. Three songs on Safarini feature Wawali Bonane and Yoka Nzenze - Tcheni Tcheni, Wumba Wumba and Kusanga Ema. "Tcheni Tcheni" means "don't worry, don't worry", Wumba Wumba gives lessons on how to live a productive life, and Kusanga Ema is a love ballad to a woman named Kusanga, in a Congolese rumba/calypso style. Wawali describes the singing as "like talking to someoneā€¦ when you are in love, you forget your mother and everyone, but sometimes the person you love is not the one you can stay with forever".

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In 1974, Wawali was invited by superstar Tabu Ley Rochereou to join his band, Afrisa International. Throughout his career Wawali has been creating hybrid music known as soukous, a popular style that first came to prominence in the 1950s and combines elements of Cuban rhumba and Antillean music with Congolese aesthetics. Following the soukous scene from Congo to Paris, the international center for soukous, Wawali was a mainstay on the scene, working as a support singer for a variety of performers and pursuing his own solo projects. After leaving Afrisa International, Wawali and longtime partner Steve Mgondo came to Seattle and tenaciously dug in with their band Yoka Nzenze. Later, they were joined by renowned soukous guitarist Nseka Binwela (a.k.a. Huit Kilo). They are also supported by an ever-changing variety of Seattle-based backing musicians.