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Borrina
Mapaka & Luzolo
IBorrina
Mapaka was born in Brazzaville (Congo) in 1973. As a child, he dreamt
of becoming a great musician. Every Saturday,
his father who loves music took him to Parafifi, a ngandaof
Bacongo where musicians like Pamelo Mouka or Youlou Mabialia
performed. At six, he made a one- string guitar which he used to
take along with him everywhere. One day, his teacher caught
him playing his guitar instead of attending a class. Teachers and
pupils were his first audience. He stayed for four years
in that school. During those four years, his performanc grew richer
with the inclusion od dance and three percussionists who
played on tins. They were called upon to perform interschool cultural
activities.
As the years went by, he tried to learn more about music. At the
age of ten, he went to Pointe-Noire and had to leave his
guitar in Brazzaville. Indeed, spending all his time with his instrument
did not appeal to his parents. But there, he could
not be enrolled in a school and then he spent a whole year singing
and dancing at the seaside.
When he returned to Brazzaville, his guitar had disappeared and
he devoted more to dance to show his parents that his stay
in Pointe-Noire had changed him.
But there was no way he could give up playing the guitar. So he
started to look for places where he could borrow an instrument
to practice.
He spent as much time as he could, listening to choir rehearsals
in schools and churches. At the end, in order to practice
he would clean the instruments; he was then allowed to play unplugged
electric guitars.
In 1989, he managed to get his first guitar and started playing
day and night. He practiced very hard for two years but never
went to a school to learn.
At that time, he started performing in the streets. With a few friends,
he created a funk band called The strong boys where
he would sing the songs he wrote. As he was interested in traditional
rythms of his own country, he integrated them in his music and his
dance.His first songs date back to that time (1989/1990) In 1995,
he got enough money to buy himself a Yamaha guitar which he still
plays; In 1996, as Irene Tassembedo was in Brazzaville, on a tour,
she noticed him. Selected by Afrique en Créations, he will
attend a training courses with her and Germaine Acogny before entering
Compagnie Ebene of Irene Tassembedo in Paris.
His third CD, Marianne is to be released this year (the
first one, Wivu Sana has been self-produced and the
second one,
Yula, after beeing a few months on BBC play list, got
in february 2000, the first international prize on CKRL MF 89,1,
a
Canadian radio. He is also producing a young senegalese hip hop
rapper (Shake).
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