Grand Kalle
Joseph Athanase Tshamala Kabasele (16 December 1930 – 11 February 1983), popularly known as Le Grand Kallé, was a Congolese singer-songwriter, composer, record executive, and founder of African Jazz. Regarded as the "father of modern Congolese popular music", he shaped the evolution of urban popular music in the Belgian Congo and the post-independence Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Born to a notable Luba family in Pala Bala, Kabasele received more formal education than many of his contemporaries and worked for a time as a typist in various commercial companies in colonial Léopoldville (now Kinshasa). After collaborating with a group of session musicians that included Zacharie Elenga, Georges Dula, Marcellin Laboga, and Albert Yamba Yamba "Kabondo", he founded African Jazz in 1953, the first fully modern, studio-recording Congolese band, and broke new ground by integrating traditional Congolese instruments, such as the Tetela tam-tam, the ngongi drum, and the lokole slit drum, into a cosmopolitan rumba sound characterized by layered guitar interplay and melodic vocal phrasing. His partnerships with early guitarists Tino Baroza, Charles "Dechaud" Mwamba, and Nico Kasanda were central to developing the signature Congolese rumba guitar style, which went on to influence music throughout East, Central, and West Africa for decades.
Kabasele rose to continental prominence in 1960 when, during the Belgo-Congolese Round Table Conference in Brussels, he and African Jazz performed "Indépendance Cha Cha", a Congolese rumba-steeped anthem heralding Congo's impending independence, which rapidly became a pan-African symbol of decolonization, unity, and political consciousness. Beyond his music, Kabasele also shaped the Congolese music industry by becoming in 1960 the first Congolese musician to establish a record label, Surboum African Jazz, which published his own recordings and those of prominent contemporaries. After multiple internal splits within African Jazz, he co-founded the African Team in Paris in 1969. Though he spent stretches of his later life in partial obscurity, he remained highly regarded in the Congolese music scene and was formally recognized in 1980 by the national musicians' union, UMUZA, as grand maître of Zairean music. Kabasele died in Paris on 11 February 1983 and was interred in Gombe Cemetery.
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