J.P. Bimeni, a.k.a Mudibu | |||||||||
Birth Name: | Jean Patrick Bimenyimana Serukamba | ||||||||
Birth Date: | 1976 | ||||||||
Birth Place: | Bujumbura, Burundi | ||||||||
Other Names: | Mudibu | ||||||||
Years Active: | 2017–present | ||||||||
Module: |
|
J.P. Bimeni a.k.a Mudibu (né Jean Patrick Bimenyimana Serukamba; born December, 1976) is a Burundian-British singer, songwriter, and musician.
J.P. Bimeni was born on December, 1976, in Burundian capital Bujumbura. His father was in the military and his mother was a descendant of the royal family.[1] Bimeni was raised by his mother, alongside his three brothers. Bimeni was sent to convent school in the countryside.
At the start of the Burundian civil war, in October 1993, he was 16 and survived a massacre at his school. Soon after he was shot in the chest and at the hospital was given medication that caused a dangerous reaction resulting in him losing half of his body weight. He was airlifted to Nairobi's Aga Khan hospital where they managed to save his life despite doctors having little hope and a priest coming to read his last rites.[2]
He registered as a refugee and applied for a scholarship program run by the Hugh Pilkington Trust. In 1995, he earned a scholarship to Atlantic College in Wales even though he spoke little English. He earned an International Baccalaureate in Oxford and a degree in politics from the University of Central Lancashire in Preston.[3]
In 2001, Bimeni moved to London, where his music career began. As a child, he had always dreamed of being an artist and performer ("I'd choreograph Michael Jackson dances with my friends"). The first records he collected included Ray Charles, Otis Redding, Bob Marley and Marvin Gaye. He taught himself to play guitar alone and began to sing his songs at open mics and jam sessions, meeting artists like Roots Manuva, Adele, Amy Winehouse and Shingai Shoniwa along the way.
For several years, he performed with different bands: Mantilla, covering Sam & Dave; Jezebel Sextet, covering Otis Redding.
In 2017, he sang with a funk group, Speedometer, in Spain. The Tucxone Records label spotted Bimeni and offered him a chance to tour with the Spanish band The Black Belts. In 2018, the album Free Me was released to wide acclaim. Craig Charles from BBC Radio 6 Music said "very few people have a soul story to compare and from all the trauma has emerged one of the very best soul voices we’ve heard for a very long time."[4] To Radio France Bimeni's voice, recalling tones of Otis Redding and Marvin Gaye earned him the nickname 'the Burundian Otis Redding.' This album, with classic 60s-sounding, Motown and Stax inspired grooves, was written by musical director Eduardo Martínez and songwriter Marc Ibarz. Bimeni imbued these tales with his tragic experiences making ‘Free Me’ a deep soul soundtrack to his life: "When I sing I feel like I’m cleansing myself: music is a way for me to forget."[5]
In 2022, the second album Give Me Hope was released and on it he paid tribute to James Stern and Martin Luther King.[6]
In 2021, Bimeni returned to Burundi for the first time in 10 years. He performed for the first time in Rwanda in 2023 under his childhood nickname Mudibu.[7] Bimeni released two albums under the Mudibu moniker, and that is how his people know him.
In 2024, Bimeni was invited by Moby to work on his new album Always Centered at Night with the title Should Sleep. He declared :