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Manu Dibango: African saxophone legend dies of Covid-19 | Manu Dibango: African saxophone legend dies of Covid-19 |
(about 4 hours later) | |
The African saxophone legend Manu Dibango has died in Paris after catching coronavirus. | The African saxophone legend Manu Dibango has died in Paris after catching coronavirus. |
Dibango - best known for his 1972 hit Soul Makossa - is one of the first global stars to die from Covid-19. | |
The 86-year-old fused jazz and funk music with traditional sounds from his home country, Cameroon. | The 86-year-old fused jazz and funk music with traditional sounds from his home country, Cameroon. |
He collaborated with numerous artists over a long career, including US pianist Herbie Hancock and Nigeria's Afrobeat pioneer Fela Kuti. | |
The Cameroonian musician filed a lawsuit in 2009 saying Michael Jackson had stolen a hook from his song, Soul Makossa, for two tracks on the world's best-selling album, Thriller. Jackson settled the case out of court. | |
“It is with deep sadness that we announce you the loss of Manu Dibango, our Papy Groove,” a statement on his official Facebook page read. | “It is with deep sadness that we announce you the loss of Manu Dibango, our Papy Groove,” a statement on his official Facebook page read. |
His funeral will take place in “strict privacy”, the statement read, asking instead for people to send condolences by email and adding that a tribute will be arranged “when possible”. | His funeral will take place in “strict privacy”, the statement read, asking instead for people to send condolences by email and adding that a tribute will be arranged “when possible”. |
Top African musicians Angelique Kidjo and Youssou Ndour have led the tributes. | |
'Giant of African music' | |
On Twitter, Kidjo shared a video, recorded two months ago, of her rehearsing the end of Soul Makossa with Dibango. | |
"You're the original giant of African music and a beautiful human being," the Beninois performer wrote. | |
Ndour called the Cameroonian a "genius" on the saxophone and described him as a "big brother, a pride for Cameroon and all of Africa". | |
Both Ndour and Kidjo, along with other stars such as Salif Keita, Papa Wemba and King Sunny Ade, worked on Dibangu's 1992 album Wakafrika. | |
Speaking to the BBC in 2013 about how he wanted to be remembered, Dibangu said: "When you are gone, it is finished, it is not up to me to say, 'I want this.'" | |
Born in the Cameroonian city of Douala in 1933, which at the time was under French colonial rule, Dibango’s musical career spanned across more than six decades. | Born in the Cameroonian city of Douala in 1933, which at the time was under French colonial rule, Dibango’s musical career spanned across more than six decades. |
'Raised in the Hallelujah' | |
He grew up in a religious Protestant family, the AFP news agency reports, and his first musical influences came from the church. | |
"I'm a child raised in the 'Hallelujah'," he is quoted as saying. | |
But he drew on many influences and was well known for his eclectic style. | |
"I play different kinds of music before playing my own. I think that that's very important to play other people's music," he told the BBC in 2017. | |
"As you are African they expect you always to play African. Forget that. You're not a musician because you're African. You're a musician because you are musician. Coming from Africa, but first, musician." | |
He was sent to high school in France, which is where he learnt to play the saxophone. | |
The first tune he performed, in front of fellow students, was When the Saints Go Marching In, he told the BBC. | |
To the disappointment of his father, Dibango failed his high school exams and took up music performing in nightclubs in Belgium instead, AFP reports. |