It's
only 15 seconds of music, featuring a delicate jingle of banjo and
guitar topped with a honeyed song in the dialect of Bassa. Yet it's 15
seconds that changed everything for Blick Bassy, the Cameroonian
musician whose song "Kiki" was chosen for Apple's iPhone 6 advertising campaign, airing globally in June.
Bassy has been making music for 20 years, but the hit -- from his third album, "Ako," released earlier this year -- has propelled him onto the international music scene -- he's in concert in London this weekend, a U.S. tour is in the pipeline, while the album has been lapped up by French radio.
"I
was happy (about the Apple deal) of course, but it's not really about
the money," says Bassy. "A friend of mine living in the U.S. called me
and said, 'I was watching NBA and during the adverts I heard your song
in Bassa! I told my wife, you won't believe it, I'm hearing Bassa on TV
in the U.S!'"
Chance discovery
Quite
a surprise for a record that was never intended for release. In March
2014, Bassy was in a studio recording tracks in homage to the American
blues legend Skip James, when the owner of French label No Format
heard his band's rare blend of cello, trombone and soft falsetto and
signed him straight away. He sent the album to an advertising agency
that supplies brands with music, and the rest as they say, is history.
"I
think with Ako, I'm going to be more famous in France than with the two
other albums," says Bassy, referring to 2009's "Leman" and 2011's
"Hongo Calling" records. "It's good for Apple too," he continues,
"because these brands need music to sell their products!"
Early start
The
recent rise to fame marks a long journey for 40 year-old Bassy, who
says he started singing at just three years old. One of 21 children to a
police chief father, Bassy grew up in a village called Mintaba in
central Cameroon. His dad built a church where his mother taught the
kora, while Bassy and his siblings sang.
"All
the kids had to sing every Sunday to draw in people from the
neighboring villages," he remembers. "Every day we woke up at 5am to
pray and to rehearse the songs. We had no choice!"
This
early musical rigor help Bassy to hone his versatile musical talents --
apart from singing, he also plays the banjo, guitar, percussion and
bass. But following his star wasn't straightforward.
"My
father wanted me to go to France, U.S. or Japan to study," he explains.
"I told him I wouldn't go anywhere, I'd stay in Cameroon and do my
music with my friends. He said that the devil was in me and called a
priest to remove it," he laughs. "I was the only guy who didn't want to
go to Europe -- he thought I was crazy."
A turning point
Determined,
Bassy quit "everything" and formed a band called Macase, which toured
Cameroon and became famous. In 2001, it won the Prix Elysse Musique du
Monde award from French radio station RFI. Yet after 10 years performing
at home, Europe began calling.
"For
the others in the band, it was difficult to leave a country where we
were already famous and start again as no one. I was looking for an
ambitious career in music, so I decided to move on," he says. "The
internet wasn't what it was today, and we don't really have professional
music companies in Cameroon."
Relocating
to Paris, Bassy began playing in small clubs -- eventually leading to
the deal that spawned his first two albums. He now lives in a rural
village in northern France, where he enjoys a more tranquil life, closer
to his native Cameroon. But his move to Europe also marked a turning
point in his identity.
"When
I moved to Paris, I understood where I was coming from. Before that, I
wasn't aware how Cameroonian I was! I realized our tradition and
languages make me completely different. At that moment, I decided to try
to use my music to explain to people about my continent and its
problems."
'Ambassador for Bassa'
Bassy's
latest offering, "Ako," speaks of home and separation -- but more
important to him is the language he is singing in. He says he is a
passionate "ambassador for Bassa."
"We're
not like Senegal where Wolof is spoken by everyone, or Bambara in
Mali," he explains. "In Cameroon we have 260 different languages and in a
few years most of them will have disappeared. Language is still the
link between us and our heritage -- if I don't speak Bassa, my
grandfather can't teach me what he knows."
"The
fact that Apple chose a song in Bassa is going to help young artists
from Africa to accept what and who they are. It might also help people
in Cameroon start teaching more of those languages."
Yet,
this isn't the only topic Bassy is shouting about. In 2014 he wrote a
children's book about environmental issues in Africa, Kwem Kwem,
which became a musical he has toured around France. Now he is writing a
novel about immigration -- a familiar issue after his own ordeal of
forced visits to Cameroon every three months while waiting for his
French residency. At one point he got stuck there, leaving his gigs in
Paris abandoned.
"All those guys have
died in the sea just because they wanted to come to the European
paradise," he says. "A human born somewhere in this world doesn't have
the same chances as another one born in Paris, England or the U.S. We
don't have the same chances at the beginning."
He's right. This new star of African music has a platform and he intends to use it.
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