By Tom Orr on Rootsworld.org
Syran Mbenza & Ensemble Rumba Kongo
Immortal Franco: Africa's Unrivaled Guitar Legend
World Music Network/Riverboat Records (
www.worldmusic.net)
"Heritage Ya Luambo," the leadoff track of this shining tribute album,
is a musical succession of African names, both people and places,
impacted or influenced by Congolese guitar great Franco, who passed
away in 1989. But lovely as it sounds, it's only lip service for the
hour of Franco covers that follow. Franco was there from the
Cuban-leaning beginnings of Congolese rumba, blessed with the licks,
compositional skills and vision that were only part of the success
story of his band OK Jazz. One of the finest ensembles in African
music, OK Jazz seemingly had almost every Congolese singer or player of
note within their ranks at some point. Some of those same names are in
expectedly fine form on Immortal Franco, a session put together by
guitarist Syran Mbenza, lately a member of rumba revival band Kekele.
Vocalist Wuta Mayi, also from Kekele and once a featured singer in OK
Jazz, is also on hand.
Franco's output was vast and some of his songs were epic in length, so
a single CD is only going to go so far in summarizing just what a
towering figure he was in music and in African culture as a whole. But
the songs, which cover (in sometimes compacted form) rumba's acoustic
infancy and later sebene-stretching pieces, are as solid a selection as
you could ask for to fill one disc. Particular standouts include the
unplugged, accordion-laced "Mbanda Nasali Nini?," Mayi's percolating
'80s composition "Zozo Visi" and the transforming of the Miriam
Makeba-popularized ballad "Liwa Ya Wech" into "Liwa Ya Franco," though
everything here will please lovers of the Congolese sound. While
there's no topping the real thing as far as Franco's music goes (for
proof, look no further than the recent first volume of the
retrospective released by Sterns Africa), Mbenza and his associates
here salute the man in fabulous fashion. - Tom Orr