Angelique Kidjo: One of Guardian's Top 100 Women

< Back

Monday March 28, 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 is burning his own country and abducting his own people. If you live by violence, you die by violence.” The audience prevented her being pulled of the stage and she managed to flee.

In Benin, where Kidjo was brought up, she faced opposition because singers were not seen as respectable. But more serious problems arrived in the 1980s when she refused to praise the communist regime in her work. She fled to Paris and was unable to speak to her parents on the phone for fear of putting them in danger. Today she is wildly popular – gathering Grammy awards, A-list collaborators such as Alicia Keys, and playing at events including Nobel peace prize ceremonies – but she still pens political songs, is a UN goodwill ambassador, supports groups such as Oxfam, and Unicef and has a foundation to improve access to education for African girls.

Read full article 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
[+] open in new window

Watch what's on

Move On Up
Afirika (2010 FIFA World Cup™ Kick-off Concert)
[+] open in new window

IMN / INDUSTRY NEWS

Happy International Jazz Day!

from unesco.org About the Day What: In November 2011, during the UNESCO General Conference, the international community proclaimed 30 April as “International Jazz Day”....

Posted Apr 30th, 2012

Oscar Castro-Neves "Offers the Best of Old and New"

From The Birmingham Times Review: Oscar Castro-Neves, Live at the Blue Note Tokyo By: Esther Callens There are very few live recordings that deliver...

Posted Apr 26th, 2012

Jazz gestator: The Falcon and the Inexplicable Local Miracle

from hudsonvalleyalmanacweekly.com Jazz gestator: The Falcon and the Inexplicable Local Miracle By: John Burdick There’s a joke out there among musicians: Folk/rockers play three...

Posted Mar 8th, 2012

News Archive