Mose Se Sengo Explained

Mose Se Sengo
Birth Name:Mose Se Sengo
Alias:Mose Fan Fan
Birth Date:16 October 1945
Birth Place:Léopoldville, Belgian Congo (now Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo)
Death Place:Nairobi, Kenya
Instrument:Solo guitar
Genre:Congo music
Occupation:composer, guitarist, band leader
Years Active:1960 – 2019
Associated Acts:TPOK Jazz
Lovy du Zaire
Somo Somo
Bana OK

Mose Se Sengo ("Fan Fan") (16 October 1945 – 3 May 2019) was a guitarist, composer and band-leader from the Democratic Republic of Congo. He was one of the pioneers of Congolese Soukous.[1]

Background

Mose Se Sengo, was born in present-day Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo, on 16 October 1945. He began to play the guitar at boarding school in Kinanga.[1]

Music career

He played with Franco and TPOK Jazz, which he joined in 1968.[2] He later joined the band Lovy du Zaire, formed in 1971 or 1972 by Victor "Vicky" Longomba, who was previously a co-founder of OK Jazz and afterward a member of African Jazz. Other later-famous musicians in Lovy du Zaire included Bumba Massa, Youlou Mabiala and Syran Mbenza.[3] [4] According to one source, however, he "could not tolerate the leader's hypocrisy and soon quit."[5]

In 1974, he traveled from Zaire to East Africa, first settling in Tanzania for several years.[5] In the late 1970s, he formed a new version of his band Somo Somo, roughly translated Double Trouble, performing in the Lingala language. The band performed in Tanzania, Zambia and Kenya. In the early 1980s he moved to Kenya, where he re-formed Somo Somo and recorded several albums.[5] In 1983 "Fan Fan" arrived in London, England mixing his music with English jazz musicians.[5]

In the 1990s he joined Bana OK, a tribute band to the late Franco Luambo Makiadi of TPOK Jazz. By 2000, "Fan Fan" had returned to the roots of the Acoustic Rumba style. As of the early 2010s, he was resident in London and had acquired British citizenship by the time of his death.[6]

Death

On 3 May 2019, Mose Se Sengo was on a routine recording tour in Nairobi, Kenya, when he collapsed and died following a suspected heart attack. Fan Fan, who was staying at an apartment on Thika Superhighway, was taken to a Kasarani Hospital within Nairobi, where he was pronounced dead on arrival.[7] [8]

The musician's producer, Tabu Osusa, said Fan Fan was in the city recording a new song with vocalists based in Nairobi including Paddy Makani and Disco Longwa. Mose Fan Fan, whose residence was in London, loved Nairobi and had been visiting Kenya consistently since 2016.[8] His death came a day before the burial of another Congolese musician of his era, Lutumba SImaro, with whom they had played together in the TPOK Jazz band.[9] Plans are underway, as of 11 May 2019, to repatriate his remains to the United Kingdom for final interment.[6]

Discography

Albums
Contributing artist

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2019 . Mose Se 'Fan Fan': Artist Biography . 11 May 2019 . Allmusic.com . AllMusic.
  2. [#Graham|Graham]
  3. Web site: Hommage à Vicky Longomba Besange Lokuli . Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 & Translated from the original French language . 6 July 2011 . 11 May 2019 . Congolite.ca . Congolite Canada. https://web.archive.org/web/20110706173642/http://www.congolite.ca/music21.htm/ . 6 July 2011 .
  4. Web site: 14 July 2007 . Biography & Discography: Victor Besange Lokuli Longomba . Afrisson . 11 May 2019 . Sylvie Clerfeuille.
  5. Web site: Mose Se 'Fan Fan':'Belle Epoque' . 2003 . Retroafric.com . 11 May 2019 . RetroAfric.
  6. Web site: British record firm to help fly back Mose Fan Fan's remains . . 11 May 2019 . 11 May 2019 . Amos . Ngaira . Nairobi.
  7. Web site: Citizen Digital . Veteran Congolese musician Mose Fan Fan dies in Nairobi . 4 May 2019 . 11 May 2019 . Brian Okoth . Nairobi.
  8. Web site: Congolese musician 'Fan Fan' dies in Nairobi . . 4 May 2019 . 11 May 2019 . Simon Ndonga . Nairobi.
  9. Web site: 23 April 2019 . Musician Simaro to be buried in Kinshasa on May 5 . . 11 May 2019 . Amos Ngaira . Nairobi.