Feb 25th 2012
St. Thomas, US Virgin Islands
Grammy winning singer Angélique Kidjo is one of the greatest artists in international music today, a creative force with eleven albums to her name. Time Magazine has called her “Africa’s premier diva”. The BBC has included her in its list of the continent’s 50 most iconic figures, and in 2011 the Guardian listed her as one of their Top 100 Most Inspiring Women in the World. Forbes Magazine has just ranked Angelique as the first woman in their list of the Most Powerful Celebrities in Africa.
Her 2007 album Djin Djin featured collaborations with luminaries such as Peter Gabriel, Carlos Santana and Josh Groban. In 2010 Kidjo shared the stage with Alicia Keys, John Legend and Shakira for the FIFA World Cup Opening Ceremony in Johannesburg South Africa. Kidjo’s most recent release, 2010’s Oyo featuring John Legend, Bono and Dianne Reeves, is a measure of her maturity. The album is deeply introspective, reflecting on the events that have brought Kidjo to this point. Born in the West African state of Benin, Kidjo is a tireless campaigner for women’s health and education in Africa, a UNICEF international Goodwill Ambassador and a prolific songwriter. “When your history is not written, you count on storytellers and traditional singers in Africa to tell you who you are, what your family’s about and what is going on in your society. This is what I do with my music, because I am a witness of my time.” Between 1972 and 1989 Benin was run as a Marxist state under Mathieu Kérékou who took over in a military coup d’état. Kidjo was forced into exile in order to avoid imprisonment. Her friend and mentor Miriam Makeba was a constant source of guidance. “Miriam Makeba was the African role model that I needed. She left Africa and went to America, she was really the pan-African artist and I needed somebody like that. She’s really the person behind my choice of life of being a singer.” Similarly, Kidjo’s campaigning for UNICEF, the United Nations Children’s Fund, as well as her own organization, Batonga Foundation, which provides African girls with an education, will go down in the annals of history.
As a child, Kidjo was constantly surrounded by traditional and foreign music: Beninese singers but also the records of James Brown, Carlos Santana and that influence is heavily marked on the new album. “Without music I don’t think I would have had the adolescence and the childhood that I had,” she says, recalling that she was just six when she first appeared on stage. ‘Atcha Houn,’ a traditional track of staccato vocals laid over the sparse plucking of a guitar, was the song she sang as a young girl and features on Oyo.
In December 2011, Kidjo performed for the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony and concert in Oslo.
OYO
Angélique Kidjo digs into her roots with her new Razor & Tie release, OYO. Roots that reach far beyond her West African homeland of Benin, because Grammy Award winning singer, dancer and songwriter Kidjo is a definitive 21st century world artist. Her art roves across boundaries, genres and ethnicities, finding the connections that link musical forms from every part of the world, while still bonding closely with her own traditions.
The songs on OYO embrace rhythm & blues, soul music, jazz, and Beninese melodies, as well as a trio of her own original works. Growing up in the port city of Cotonou, raised by parents who honored many forms of creativity, she was exposed to a far-ranging array of music and dance. West Africa, in the ‘60s, had an omnivorous appetite for international pop music, and Kidjo was intensely familiar with the music of James Brown, Otis Redding and Carlos Santana, as well as Miriam Makeba and Bella Bellow before she reached her teens.
Curtis Mayfield’s “Move On Up,” which she sings in a duet with multiple Grammy Award-winning singer John Legend epitomizes her affection for that music. Chosen, says Kidjo, “by my daughter,” the song illustrates her skill at finding both the timelessness and the contemporary qualities in a song. In 1970, Mayfield sang “Move On Up” as a rallying call to underprivileged American youth. In 2010, Kidjo and Legend, backed by a spirited chorus and riffing horns, sing “Move On Up” as a call to African youth to direct the fate of their continent.
But the closing piece she selected for the album traces to even earlier memories. Kidjo was only six years old the first time she sang in public, and the song was “Atcha Houn,” a traditional melody she describes as “a kind of parade music people sing when they gather together. I sang it at my Mom’s theatre company,” she recalls. “My Mom had to push me on stage to do it, but that’s when my addiction to singing, and to the stage, too, got started.”
Kidjo was delighted to have the superb guitarist/singer, Lionel Loueke – also a native of Benin – backing her on “Atcha Houn,” as well as numerous other songs on the CD. Their friendship reaches back to their youth. “His brother was in my class,” she says. “Lionel understood exactly what I was trying to do when I told him I wanted to get into the music that influenced me as a child.”
That music – the music from her youth – is the theme of the album’s mesmerizing tracks. In the case of her renderings of four songs from iconic American pop music figures, each is a display of Kidjo’s ability to, as she says, “bring the music of Benin” into her interpretations. Carlos Santana’s “Samba Pa Ti” emerges as a captivating ballad spotlighting the always-gripping trumpet of Roy Hargrove. On “Cold Sweat,” featuring members of the Afro Beat band, Antibalas, the horn-heavy riffs and call and response back-up singing frame a driving vocal from Kidjo that would surely have been a turn-on for James Brown. She remembers hearing Otis Redding’s “I Got Dreams To Remember” when she was young, and her brother telling her to “shut up” when she sang it, saying “You don’t know the words.” But Kidjo prevailed and sings it with a quality of soul that is utterly transcendent. Another old familiar tune, Aretha Franklin’s “Baby I Love You,” begins with percussion and voices before Kidjo and Dianne Reeves dig into a stirring series of Franklin-inspired diva exchanges.
In the years after Kidjo’s initial exposure to the American pop music that influenced her as a child her career escalated in a steadily rising arc. Heard on national radio as a teen-ager, she moved to Paris in the early ‘80s, when the political situation in Benin became untenable for an independent creative artist. Initially active in the jazz community, she gradually expanded her interests and, by the ‘90s had become a major international artist.
Over the past decade, she has used her visibility to support a far-reaching collection of advocacy groups, from UNICEF (for whom she is a Goodwill Ambassador) to her own Batonga Foundation (providing educational aid to young African girls). In September, 2009, she joined forces with UNICEF in a campaign to eliminate tetanus. A portion of proceeds for downloads of the song, “You Can Count On Me,” will provide tetanus vaccines to pregnant women and mothers. Another haunting song, “Agbalagba,” was originally penned for and offered as a free download with the New York Times best-selling book Say You’re One Of Them by African writer Uwem Akpan. The book, recently featured in Oprah Winfrey’s Book Club consists of five stories, each written from the point of view of a child in Africa. Written with her longtime collaborator Jean Hebrail in the Yoruba language, “Agbalagba” roughly translates to “the ancestors,” as the song pertains to young peoples’ responsibility to those that came before them. “I immediately felt a bond with Uwem. The second we met, it was as if we had always known each other. I’m proud to contribute a song to his beautiful collection of stories.”
But Kidjo has never lost her African musical connections, the linkages of which are present in several traditionally-oriented pieces. The dramatic, call-like melody of “Zelie” was composed by Togo’s Bella Bellow, and sung by Kidjo with articulate, theatrical intensity. The lullaby “Lakutsn Llanga,” delivered in a sweet-toned interpretation, recalls her admiration for the late Miriam Makeba. “Mbube,” performed with a spirited rhythmic propulsion and also associated with Makeba (and Harry Belafonte) is, says Kidjo, “the original version of ‘The Lion Sleeps Tonight,’ before it had French or English lyrics.” And John Barry’s music from the Sidney Pollack film, “Out of Africa,” is sung with passionate intensity. “I had to sing it,” she explains, “because the music was so perfectly done.”
Kidjo’s original songs illuminate the emotional range of her creativity. She describes the spirited “Kelele” as a “High Life from Ghana,” and goes on to add that “Everywhere I go in the world I want people to remember that they are human beings and to remember that if we don’t have fun, everything we do will have no taste.” Traces of Brazil course through the lyrical, floating rhythms of “Afia,” written with guitarist/singer Vinicius Cantuaria.
Two other items further illustrate her open-minded receptivity to different forms of music. “Petite Fleur” is a classic jazz piece written by soprano saxophonist Sidney Bechet, and a favorite song of Kidjo’s father, who died in the spring of 2008. “I had to include something to remember him,” says Kidjo. “He produced my first concert, and he stood up against those people who said ‘You should never let your child become an entertainer’.” She invests the French lyrics with the intimate warmth of loving memory.
“Dil Main Chuppa Ke Pyar Ka,” a very different song, may be the most unusual track on the CD. Beginning with the sound of an Indian flute, it switches quickly into a jaunty rhythm combining African High Life with the spirit of Bollywood film music. Its source is an Indian musical film called Aan that Kidjo saw in her youth. “I loved it, and I never forgot one of the songs,” she explains. “But it took my brother, who flies to India for his job, to find it for me. I sent him an MP-3 of what I remembered and – incredibly – he found the film and the song.”
Given the stylistic range of the selections, the music for OYO was recorded in an amazingly short period of time. “In four days, with the help of Christian McBride on upright bass, Kendrick Scott on drums and Thiokho Diagne on percussion,” says Kidjo, “we did 16 songs. But it wasn’t hard, because I have so much music in my brain. It was there, it was dominant, it was ready to be expressed, and I urgently wanted to express it.“
And express it she did, with the same kind of charismatic life force that Kidjo expresses in her stage performances. Asked about her seemingly boundless enthusiasm, drive and creativity, she simply laughs and says, “Without challenges in life, we get bored. Me, I just always keep in mind what my grandmother used to say, ‘You rest when you die’.”
- Don Heckman
Feb 25th 2012
St. Thomas, US Virgin Islands
Reichhold Center for the Arts
Angelique Kidjo
Mar 2nd 2012
Davis, CA USA
Mondavi Center for the Performing Arts
Angelique Kidjo
Mar 8th 2012
Austin, TX USA
Bass Concert Hall - University of Texas
Angelique Kidjo
Mar 23rd 2012
Blue Bell, PA USA
Montgomery County Community
Angelique Kidjo
Mar 25th 2012
Roanoke, VA USA
Shaftman Performance Hall, Jefferson Center
Angelique Kidjo
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ANGELIQUE KIDJO TO RELEASE FIRST LIVE ALBUM, SPIRIT RISING, ON FEBRUARY 21, 2012 Features Performances With Josh Groban, Dianne Reeves, Ezra Koenig and Branford Marsalis Concert Aired On PBS Nationwide With Performance From the FELA! Dancers Watch the “Spirit Rising”...
Posted Feb 21st, 2012
US fans have the opportunity to get Angelique Kidjo’s new album a day early as part of @AmazonMP3’s Daily Deal today! Spirit Rising was recorded in Boston when Kidjo partnered with PBS and WGBH for a captivating live performance featuring...
Posted Feb 20th, 2012
from Music Feeds Angelique Kidjo Announces Sydney Opera House Show By Brayden Darke This April, one of the greatest forces in African music, Angelique Kidjo, will return to Sydney Opera House on the back of her appearance on the Bluesfest...
Posted Jan 26th, 2012
Angelique Kidjo was honored to perform at the 2011 Nobel Peace Prize Ceremony and Concert. Each year the Nobel Peace Prize Concert gathers a selection of talented musical artists from around the world to pay tribute to the year’s laureate....
Posted Dec 14th, 2011
Each year the Nobel Peace Prize Concert gathers a selection of talented musical artists from around the world to pay tribute to the year’s laureate. The resulting Concert is a virtual melting pot of melodies ranging in genre from classical...
Posted Dec 7th, 2011
ANGELIQUE KIDJO “POPS AT THE PHIL” With the Luxembourg Philharmonic Ochestra, Conducted by Gast Waltzing On June 8th 2011, Angelique set the audience of the Philharmonie Luxembourg on fire with her “Pops at the Phil” show. The Grammy winning “Africa’s...
Posted Jun 30th, 2011
From: 365 Give I am honoured to be doing a guest post today from a remarkable women that is changing the part of the world she grew up in. It is the story of growing up in Africa as a...
Posted Jun 29th, 2011
from Huffington Post No Excuse I love food. There is nothing better than sitting down to a meal of Tchep bou djen, a Senegalese dish with fish, rice and vegetables. Unfortunately I also know what it’s like to go without...
Posted Jun 20th, 2011
from The Boston Globe A Commanding Kidjo Shows Us How To Duet By James Reed Within the first few minutes of her new concert film, Angélique Kidjo relays a list of what she wants her music to impart: empowerment, joy,...
Posted Jun 15th, 2011
From mysanantonio.com Angelique Kidjo truly makes world music. By Jim Beal Jr. If anyone asks what kind of music vocalist Angelique Kidjo sings, the best answer is probably “All of it.” Born in Benin in West Africa, Kidjo relocated to...
Posted Jun 10th, 2011
from French Culture Angelique Kidjo Receives the Insignia of the Order of Arts and Letters On Wednesday, May 11, Antonin Baudry, Cultural Counselor of the Embassy of France, confered upon internationally acclaimed artist, Angélique Kidjo, the insignia of Officer of...
Posted May 13th, 2011
from The Globe and Mail Angelique Kidjo’s African Values By Guy Dixon When Benin-born singer Angélique Kidjo takes to the stage Tuesday for the Hope Rising benefit concert in Toronto, something unspecific, but very apparent will happen. The air will...
Posted May 2nd, 2011
from The Star-Ledger Angelique Kidjo Honors Influences with New Album By Marty Lipp Angelique Kidjo has lived around the world — from Benin to Brooklyn — but she is most at home on the stage. The 50-year-old singer has had...
Posted Apr 22nd, 2011
from Guardian.co.uk Angélique Kidjo Africa’s Grammy award-winning ‘premier diva’, who is politically outspoken and runs an education foundation In 2006, at a concert in Zimbabwe, Africa’s “premier diva”, aged 50, launched an attack on Mugabe: “I can’t understand someone who...
Posted Mar 28th, 2011
from www.indianexpress.com Songstress with a SOUL Grammy winner Angelique Kidjo on early beginnings, her future plans and how music fuels her life. Time Magazine calls her Africa’s premier diva. Her fans believe that she is Africa’s most internationally celebrated female...
Posted Mar 24th, 2011
Angelique Kidjo recently played two dates in Mumbai, India. While she was there she had time to sit down (or stand up) for an interview and, among other things, talk about Bollywood’s influence on her music.
Posted Mar 16th, 2011
from The Korea Herald Powerful Female Vocalists to Take to Seoul Stage By Kim Yoon-mi World musician Kidjo and jazz singer Nah Youn-sun bring their unique sound to Seoul. Those tired of Seoul’s brutally cold winter may want to check...
Posted Mar 4th, 2011
Angelique Kidjo and Friends Light up Carnegie Hall from Afropop Blog by Banning Eyre It has been quite a year for Benin’s Angelique Kidjo. Her new CD Oyo—a musical autobiography featuring cameos by Bono, John Legend and others—garnered sterling reviews...
Posted Nov 15th, 2010
On Thursday, November 11, 2010 GRAMMY Award winner and Beninoise native Angelique Kidjo will headline Carnegie Hall for the first time as part of its 2010-2011 “Around the Globe” concert series. Kidjo will present “The Sound of the Drum,” a...
Posted Nov 9th, 2010
from The Huffington Post Angelique Kidjo and “The Sound of the Drum” By Holly Cara Price Beninoise singer Angelique Kidjo has had a spectacular year. In April she released her newest album, OYO, where she revisited the music that inspired...
Posted Nov 6th, 2010
Singer Angelique Kidjo Vocalizes On Carnegie Hall, The Power Of Giving from NY1 by Stephanie Simon Before her big concert at Carnegie Hall next Thursday night, Angelique Kidjo sits down with NY1’s Arts reporter Stephanie Simon in Harlem to talk...
Posted Nov 5th, 2010
This article was originally published in the March 2010 (#66) issue of Songlines ,the world music magazine. Trying to keep up in a conversation with Angélique Kidjo is like trying to catch a typhoon in a Tupperware box. From the...
Posted Oct 7th, 2010
Angélique Kidjo will make her Headlining Debut At Carnegie Hall on November 11, 2010 For “Around The Globe” Concert Series. Special Guests To Include Dianne Reeves, Omara Portuondo, Youssou N’Dour and more… Kidjo will present “The Sound of the Drum,”...
Posted Sep 3rd, 2010
from the New York Times Daughter of Independence By Angelique Kidjo Like a true revolutionary, I was born on Bastille Day (July 14), 1960, in Dahomey, which was then a part of the French Empire in West Africa. A few...
Posted Aug 16th, 2010
from PBS Grammy-winning West African singer-songwriter Angelique Kidjo describes the appeal of her music and talks about her foundation; and, in her first appearance on American television in support of her new CD, performs a track from “Oyo.” Check your...
Posted Aug 4th, 2010
from Paste Magazine The African Union Names Angélique Kidjo a Peace Ambassador By Ani Vrabel Benin-born musician Angélique Kidjo has been named a Peace Ambassador by the Commission of the African Union (AU). She—and 25 other ambassadors, including African musicians...
Posted Jul 28th, 2010
from Shore Fire Media Angelique Kidjo Performs Live With John Legend And The Roots On Late Night With Jimmy Fallon International recording star Angelique Kidjo has made 2010 her year. The first single off of her album, “Move On Up,”...
Posted Jul 27th, 2010
from The Toronto Star Angélique Kidjo celebrates musical diversity by Ashante Infantry Afro pop star Angélique Kidjo celebrates her musical roots on her latest album, Oyo, which includes covers of Curtis Mayfield and James Brown tunes that influenced her, as...
Posted Jun 25th, 2010
From NPR The World Cup As A Symbol Of Hope In South Africa By Angelique Kidjo If I tell you about my seven brothers, you will understand why soccer was so important in my early life. In order to complete...
Posted Jun 23rd, 2010
(From Sunday Times Magazine) I’m excited that my continent is going to be in the media around the world for all the right reasons, not for war or violence or all those nasty things people have come to “expect” from...
Posted Jun 21st, 2010
Watch IMN artists Angelique Kidjo and Vusi Mahlasela perform at the FIFA WORLD CUP™ KICK–OFF CELEBRATION CONCERT, courtesy of VEVO. Click here to watch Angelique perform Afiriki Click here to watch Vusi perform Say Africa Click here to watch Vusi...
Posted Jun 15th, 2010
The world’s biggest superstars will come together live on VEVO June 10 from Soweto/Johannesburg, South Africa for the FIFA WORLD CUP™ KICK–OFF CELEBRATION CONCERT. Watch once in a lifetime performances from Alicia Keys, Amadou & Mariam, Angélique Kidjo, Black Eyed...
Posted Jun 10th, 2010
From CNN.com Angelique Kidjo video blogs her journey from Brooklyn, NY to South Africa and her preparations for her performance in the FIFA WORLD CUP™ KICK–OFF CELEBRATION CONCERT. See her explain her motivations behind her trip to South Africa, makes...
Posted Jun 10th, 2010
From Shore Fire Media and The Huffington Post New York, NY, June 4 — Continuing to garner acclaim for OYO, an album of music that inspired her while growing up in Benin, Angelique Kidjo debuts the album’s first video on...
Posted Jun 7th, 2010
Angélique Kidjo: Defying the Africa of Clichés The singer from Benin has never been afraid to defy the ‘Africa of clichés’ in her musical choices By Clive Davis From Times Online She is only days away from one of the...
Posted Jun 4th, 2010
From The Guardian by John L Walters Next month, the Benin-born Angélique Kidjo will share a bill with Black Eyed Peas, Tinariwen and others at the World Cup’s opening concert in South Africa. This London performance showcased her passionate performing...
Posted May 31st, 2010
From JazzTimes By Jeff Tamarkin At roughly 43,500 square miles, slightly smaller than Pennsylvania, the West African nation of Benin is one of the smallest on the continent. But in the singer Angélique Kidjo and, more recently, the guitarist Lionel...
Posted Apr 27th, 2010
By DAN AQUILANTE of the New York Post Angelique Kidjo — a New Yorker by way of Benin — proves she’s a citizen of the world on her latest album, “Oyo.” Along with such soaring African tunes as “Zelie” and...
Posted Apr 13th, 2010
From NPR’s Morning Edition with Renee Montagne Growing up on the southern coast of Benin, Angelique Kidjo was surrounded by music, both at home and in the crowded marketplaces nearby. Under the influence of her mother, an actress and dancer,...
Posted Apr 8th, 2010
From Berklee.edu Gamble & Huff, Paco de Lucia, Angelique Kidjo, and Kenny Barron at Commencement Berklee College of Music President Roger Brown will present Angelique Kidjo, as well as Kenneth Gamble, Leon Huff, Paco de Lucia, and Kenny Barron with...
Posted Apr 6th, 2010
From The Philadelphia Inquirer By David R. Stampone Stylistically diverse since the start of her quarter-century international career, Angélique Kidjo is one Afropop star who has never been limited by genre expectations. She made that clear on a rainy Sunday...
Posted Mar 30th, 2010
From The New York Times By Nate Chinen Funk, Jazz and Bollywood with Rhythms of Africa It took about an hour before Angélique Kidjo had the crowd on its feet en masse at Town Hall on Friday night, but once...
Posted Mar 28th, 2010
From The Washington Post By David Malitz When I called Angelique Kidjo earlier this week to talk about her new album, “Oyo,” we first got sidetracked with a bit of food talk. She was in her Brooklyn kitchen preparing potato...
Posted Mar 26th, 2010
From Afrobeatradio.net Angelique Kidjo sits down with Akenataa Hammagaadji, host of WVKR’s (Vassar College Radio) First World Music to discuss her new album *Oyo*, which will be released on April 6, 2010. Click here to listen to the interview Angelique...
Posted Mar 22nd, 2010
Kidjo Returns to Her Roots to Interpret the Music That Inspired Her Growing Up in Benin: Aretha Franklin, Curtis Mayfield, Otis Redding, James Brown and Miriam Makeba, Plus Beninese Traditional Music and Songs from Hollywood and Bollywood Films. On her...
Posted Mar 20th, 2010
In celebration of her new album, Oyo, and her various humanitarian endeavors including her Batonga Foundation, Angelique Kidjo presided over the NASDAQ Opening Bell this morning, March 24 in Times Square, New York City. Click here to see photos from...
Posted Mar 19th, 2010
Johannesburg, South Africa (March 17, 2010) – Today, Control Room, the world’s leading producer of global music events, and FIFA (Fédération Internationale de Football Association), the international governing body of football, announced the first group of legendary musicians confirmed to...
Posted Mar 18th, 2010
Startribune.com By: Tim Campbell A half-block away, a small fleet of trucks and generators lined either side of 10th St. as a crew filmed scenes for the Greg Kinnear-Alan Arkin movie “The Convincer.” But the real star time Tuesday was...
Posted Mar 3rd, 2010
Source: PBS, Tavis Smiley Grammy-winning West African singer-songwriter Angelique Kidjo describes the appeal of her music and talks about her foundation; and, in her first appearance on American television in support of her new CD, performs a track from “Oyo.”...
Posted Mar 2nd, 2010
The International Review Of Music By: Don Heckman Two years ago, Angelique Kidjo staked out her creative ownership of Royce Hall with a performance that utterly captivated a full house crowd. On Sunday night, she did it again, this time...
Posted Mar 1st, 2010
Source: The Los Angeles Times Writer: Reed Johnson The term clanked off Angélique Kidjo’s ear when she first heard it. “African American.” How could someone be American and African at the same time, she wondered? “You think I’m stupid because...
Posted Feb 27th, 2010
From Reuters NEW YORK (Billboard) – Singer-songwriter Angelique Kidjo is one of Africa’s most internationally successful performers, blending the music of her native Benin with Western jazz, soul and rock during a nearly three-decade career. Her new album “Oyo,” due...
Posted Feb 4th, 2010
From: Times Online By Clive Davis Angelique Kidjo: Oyo World-music purists may well turn up their noses, but the Beninese singer’s celebration of her musical roots turns out to be a magnificently upbeat marriage of African tradition and western pop....
Posted Jan 10th, 2010
From BBC Radio: A woman of dimunitive stature, massive voice and larger than life character, Beninois singer Angelique Kidjo is a musical tour de force. In recent days her brimming schedule has included a role in a Mo Ibrahim Prize...
Posted Dec 8th, 2009
From Spinner.com By Steve Hochman What a playlist! Some African folk songs mixed with the African-American R&B of Otis Redding, Aretha Franklin and James Brown. Sidney Bechet and Bollywood. Santana’s ‘Samba Pa Ti’ and a South African lullaby. And it...
Posted Nov 25th, 2009
From Oprah’s Book Club By Angelique Kidjo Grammy-winning singer/songwriter Angelique Kidjo has been working on behalf of children in her native Africa as a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador since 2002. But when she read Uwem Akpan’s _Say You’re One of Them,...
Posted Oct 24th, 2009
From Radio France Internationale By Eglantine Chabasseur Translation : Julie Street Angélique Kidjo will take to the stage at the Cirque d’Hiver, in Paris, on 25, 26 & 27 September with a collective tribute to the late South African diva...
Posted Sep 29th, 2009
From “unicef.org”: PARIS, France, 28 September 2009 – UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador and Grammy-winning world music artist Angélique Kidjo has launched ‘Give the Gift of Life’, a new campaign with Pampers to help eliminate maternal and neonatal tetanus (MNT) by 2012....
Posted Sep 28th, 2009
Stream the complete piece below featuring Anglique talking about her recent successes, artistic process, her family’s influence, and her philanthropic work. Embedded video from CNN Video
Posted May 11th, 2009
If you’re in the Massachusetts area during August, check out the new Angelique Kidjo special broadcasting on local public television stations. Angelique filmed this 30-minute pledge special while at WGBH in Boston, and it includes clips from recent musical performances...
Posted Aug 20th, 2008
Last night at the 50th Annual Grammy Awards Angelique Kidjo won her first Grammy, for best contemporary world music album, after five nominations. She dedicated her award to her parents in Benin, to the African continent, to “the women of...
Posted Feb 11th, 2008
It’s that time of year again, when music critics cast back through their teetering piles of new releases to come up with their annual ‘best of’ lists. This year the Nat Geo music team scoured the globe to come up...
Posted Dec 20th, 2007
(New York, NY) International music star/charitable ambassador Angelique Kidjo has been busy! The energetic Kidjo and her band of accomplished musicians have been criss-crossing the globe on tour since February of this year in support of her latest album, DJIN...
Posted Jul 30th, 2007
LOS ANGELES (Starbucks Entertainment) – International music star Angelique Kidjo has notched her highest chart position ever, as her new album DJIN DJIN (pronounced "gin gin") bows at No 61 on the Billboard Top 200 Album chart, selling nearly 11,000...
Posted May 16th, 2007
Angelique Kidjo will release the highly anticipated “Djin Djin” on May 1st via Razor & Tie / Starbucks Entertainment. The new album features duets with Josh Groban, Alicia Keys, Peter Gabriel, Joss Stone, Carlos Santana and more. Angelique has also...
Posted Jan 24th, 2007
Official Website: www.kidjo.com
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Angelique Kidjo Symphony
One of the world’s most electrifying performers, UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador Angelique Kidjo has garnered four Grammy nominations while cross-pollinating the West African music of Benin with elements of R&B, funk, jazz, and latin music. Angelique’s soaring voice, fun-loving personality and on-stage charisma are propelled by a full program of her music, presented in collaboration with some of the world’s most highly-respected orchestras.
ANGELIQUE KIDJO “POPS AT THE PHIL”
On June 8th 2011, Angelique set the audience of the Philharmonie Luxembourg on fire with her “Pops at the Phil” show. “Africa’s premier diva” (Time Magazine) performed some of her most famous songs arranged by conductor and composer Gast Waltzing with the 110 musicians of the Luxembourg Philharmonic Orchestra, an 8-piece choir and a small combo of musicians. The renowned composer captured the energy and intricacy of African rhythms in his arrangements of Angelique’s music. From the poignant adaptation of her classic Malaika to the irresistible groove of Afirika, Angelique and the Luxembourg Philharmonic Orchestra brought the audience to its feet for 3 encores.
Learn more about this performance here
| Baby, I Love You feat. Dianne Reeves | 3:10 | Angélique Kidjo |
| Zelie | 2:04 | Angélique Kidjo |
| Move On Up feat. John Legend | 3:46 | Angélique Kidjo |
| Ae Ae | 3:31 | Angélique Kidjo |
Kidjo’s voice has never sounded more expressive or exquisitely nuanced.
The Times of London
[Kidjo’s] supercharged pipes have never sounded better, her irresistible energy and joie de vivre never more palpable… Kidjo reaffirms her global-diva credentials
LA Times
Kidjo demands your undivided attention with her electrifying stage presence and forceful voice.
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