Nico quit teaching and broke away from African Jazz to form African Fiesta in 1963 with Tabu Ley Rochereau, brother Déchaud, Kwamy, Mujos, Depuissant on conga and bassist Joseph Mwena. The band was joined by Roger's brother Faugus Izeidi on third guitar, with Paul Mizele and a Congolese woman singer (with a Greek name) Photas Myosotis ("Forget-me-not") on vocals; Dominique "Willy" Kuntima doubled Jeef Mingiedi on trumpet. [Information from Gary Stewart's book Rumba On The River.] When Rochereau split in 1965 to form African Fiesta National, Nico reformed his group as African Fiesta Sukisa, which existed until 1973. They ruled the roost in the late sixties, with endless hits. However, in 1969, the entire band, except his brother Déchaud, walked out because they felt they weren't getting their due. Nico quickly assembled a new band that included Josky Kiambukuta and Lessa Lassan on vocals. Bopol Mansiamina joined on guitar in 1970 and they kept it together for a few more years. Success eluded Docteur Nico in later life and he drank heavily, leading to his early death in a Belgian hospital on 22 September 1985. His improvisations are so surprisingly fluid and ecstatic that he truly earned the nickname 'God of the Guitar.' » (Muzikifan – Click for an almost complete discography)
This outing was originally released in 1967 (with sides reversed) under the title African Fiesta sous la direction du Docteur Nico
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8 comments:
http://sharebee.com/8addefeb
merci bien!
merci beaucoup!
Merci bien pour avoir mis cet belle album!
Gracias por darme a conocer musica que no pensaba que existia.
Could this book be posted perhaps some day?
Gary Stewart's "Rumba On The River"
It would be great.
Thank you for your wonderful offers.
maybe this has expired... any tips on accessing the file?
http://easyjams.blogspot.com/2010/09/zaire-volume-2-kinshasa-united-artists.html
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