African Jazz
Congolese rumba band
Le Grand Kallé et l'African Jazz, often simply referred to as African Jazz, was one of the most influential Congolese rumba bands of the twentieth century. Founded in 1953 in Léopoldville by Joseph Athanase Tshamala Kabasele, widely known as Le Grand Kallé, the band played a pivotal part in shaping modern Congolese popular music during the late colonial era and the early years following independence. The band's style fused Central African traditional instruments, including the Tetela tam-tam, the ngongi drum, and the lokole, with Western guitars, brass, and percussion, creating a cosmopolitan form of Congolese rumba that came to epitomize urban life in the 1950s and 1960s. The term jazz in their name, chosen not for its American musical meaning but for its association with elegance and modernity in the Belgian Congo, went on to influence the nomenclature of several African bands, including OK Jazz, Negro-Jazz, Circul Jazz, and, across the continent, bands such as Bembeya Jazz, Chari Jazz, and Mystère Jazz de Tombouctou.
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