Biografia de Alpha Blondy Alpha Blondy seu nome verdadeiro Ă© Seydou KonĂ©, nascido em 1 de janeiro de 1953 em Dimbokro, Costa do Marfim Ă© um cantor de reggae. Ă muito popular na Ăfrica ocidental. Tem cantado com o grupo The Wailers. Estudou InglĂȘs no Hunter College em Nova York, e posteriormente no programa de Idioma Americano American Language Program da Universidade de Columbia. Canta principalmente em Dioula, FrancĂȘs e InglĂȘs, mĂĄs tambĂ©m ocasionalmente em Ărabe ou Hebraico. As letras de suas cançÔes expressam fortemente atitude e humor relacionados com a polĂtica. Inventou a palavra "democrature" a qual se pode traduzir como "democradura", combinação de democracia e ditadura para qualificar alguns governos Africanos.
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Alpha BlondyReggae musicianFor the RecordâŠSelected discographySourcesReggae, the spiritual and sometimes sharply political dance music that Jamaica exported to the rest of the world, has often carried a message of peace and universal understanding. One contemporary star who successfully put such ideas into musical practice was Alpha Blondy, a native of Ivory Coast on western Africaâs southern-facing Atlantic shore. With a multicultural message delivered in diverse languages that included French, English, Arabic, Hebrew, and his native tongue of Dioula, this âAfrican Rasta,â as he often called himself, once even succeeded in calming a set of military hostilities in West Africa.âIn Africa the new generation, my generation, is a mixture of Western and African culture,â Blondy told the New York Times. âReggae has succeeded in a musical unification. Itâs a good therapy to bring people together.â In the 1980s, Blondy seemed the heir apparent to reggae superstar Bob Marley; his popularity after that receded along with that of reggae music in general, but his fame remained international in scope. Many musicians have had to overcome obstacles in order to realize their artistic visions, but the personal trials Blondy experienced on the way to a musical career were nearly unprecedented in their the RecordâŠBorn Seydou Kone on January 1, 1953, in Dim-bokora, Ivory Coast; member of the Dioula ethnic group; seven children. Education Attended Hunter College and Columbia University, New York; studied to be an English reggae music star; sings in French, English, Arabic, Hebrew, Dioula, and other languages; incarcerated in psychiatric hospitals in and Ivory Coast, 1970s; appeared on Ivory Coast television program First Chance; recorded debut album Jah Glory, a million-seller in Africa; album Cocody Rock released in the United States, 1984; toured widely, late 1980s; released Masada, in over 50 countries, 1992; released Yitzhak Rabin, 1998; toured United States and Canada, 1998; released Paris Percy, Record company âShanachie Entertainment, 13 Laight St., Sixth Floor, New York, NY 10013. Websiteâ Alpha Blondy Official Website member of the Dioula ethnic group, Blondy was born Seydou Kone on January 1, 1953, in the Ivory Coast town of Dimbokora. He was raised by his grandmother in the predominant Islamic faith of his people but also learned French by reading the Bible. In school, he told the Toronto Star, he also gravitated toward âEnglish waysâ and hoped to become an English teacher. His education was interrupted after an incident that occurred after he was slapped by his math teacher. âLook, baby, a woman like you I got a lot of at home,â he snapped back as quoted in the Star, and slapped the teacher in turn. He sought to make amends to his outraged family by continuing to study English in the neighboring English-speaking country of a fan of reggae and of progressive rock acts such as Pink Floyd and Jimi Hendrix, Blondy demonstrated enough talent as a student to win admission to Hunter College and Columbia University, both competitive institutions, when he came to the United States in the early 1970s. He moved in with a Jamaican classmate and seemed on the road to a successful teaching career, but then things started to go wrong. According to some reports, he became addicted to the drug angel dust, and he began to spend much of his time singing in Central Park, accompanying himself with a drum. Adding to his trouble, he attempted to record an album, but an unscrupulous producer disappeared with the master tapes of his recording despondent due to what he described to the Star as âthe African pride about success, a disease,â Blondy was finally arrested and institutionalized at New Yorkâs Bellevue Hospital. Released after a year, he ran into even worse problems when he returned home to Ivory Coast and confronted a family that was, as he told the Washington Post, âexpecting me to come back with a big diploma, a tuxedo and a car.â Blondy continued, âBut America is not easy; you donât just come and get the diploma. What you see in the movies, the reality is quite different.â His parents, confronted with his Jamaican dreadlocks and total destitution, believed he had completely lost his senses and institutionalized him once endured a brutal two years of forced medication at an asylum in the Ivory Coast capital of Abidjan, but he continued to write songs. After his release his fortunes finally began to improve. Taking the name Alpha Blondy the name carries the connotation of âFirst Banditâ and may have resulted from a family memberâs mispronunciation of the word âbanditâ, he performed on an Ivory Coast talent-search television program, First Chance. Spotted by a producer, he recorded an album, Jah Glory, that went on to become an African of that albumâs songs dealt with a police raid, a risky theme in authoritarian West Africa, and Blondyâs fame spread. Jah Glory and its Paris-recorded 1984 follow-up, Cocody Rock, received international distribution, and, by the middle 1980s, many observers saw in Blondy a successor to the recently deceased Bob Marley, who had drawn huge crowds in the years immediately before his 1981 death from a brain tumor. Blondy toured the United States and Europe, and like Marley, he applied his talents to the peaceful resolution of political conflict. A 1986 concert he gave on the border between the warring nations of Mali and Burkina Faso is credited with helping to bring about a cessation of albums as Jerusalem, Apartheid is Nazism, and Masada brought Blondy worldwide acclaim; Masada was released in over 50 countries. Though firmly rooted musically in the reggae tradition, Blondy added to it a distinctive element of African percussion and African-style backup vocalsâhis full band, Solar System, had 15 membersâthat allowed his music to succeed on his home turf. He often performed in colorful robes or army fatigues, sporting a Jewish Star of David on a helmet and carrying both a Bible and a copy of the Islamic Quran. Challenging his audiences to accept the differences among peoples, Blondy sung in Hebrew in Arabic countries and in Arabic in Israel, where he enjoyed a strong several years during the 1990s, Blondy dropped out of the music scene and spent time attending to the seven children he has fathered with seven different women. He returned to action with the 1998 CD Yitzhak Rabin, commemorating the slain Israeli leader who had tried to bring peace to the Middle East. Partly recorded in Kingston, Jamaica, at Marleyâs Tuff Gong studios, Yitzhak Rabin featured backup vocals from Marleyâs former backing group, the I-Threes. The Ottawa Citizen noted the albumâs âshimmering, textured sound,â and fresh tours undertaken in support of the release put Blondy back in the limelight in the Westâalthough youthful listeners in his native Ivory Coast had largely moved on to newer acts. Blondyâs album Paris Percy was released in 2001, followed by Merci in 2002. Merci was nominated for a Grammy Award in the category of Best Reggae Album the following year. Blondy used the fame he received following the Grammy nomination to call attention to a cause close to his heart peace in his homeland of Ivory Coast following a rebellion that began on September 19, 2002. He spoke out passionately in his interviews, imploring people to understand the dire need for peace in the volatile discographyJah Glory, c. 1980; reissued, Moya, Rock, Shanachie, Shanachie, Shanachie, Is Nazism, shanachie, Prophets, Capitol, Best of Alpha Blondy, Shanachie, Tribal War, Alex, World Pacific, au Zenith, World Pacific, World Pacific, Best of Alpha Blondy, World Pacific, Rabin, Lightyear, Percy, Shanachie, Shanachie, Black Biography, Volume 30, Gale Group, Colin, editor, The Virgin Encyclopedia of Reggae, Virgin, News Service, January 16, 2003Billboard, July 10, 1993, p. Montreal, Canada, November 21, 1998, p. Post, June 6, 2000, Arts p. Angeles Times, February 21, 1988, Calendar p. 76; February 29, 1988, Calendar p. York Times, March 22, 1998, p. Citizen, August 13, 1998, p. Star, March 31, 1988, p. Post, April 8, 1988, p. D1; August 5, 1998, p. C5; August 7, 1998, p. D4; January 10, 2000, p. Blondy,â All Music Guide, November 6, 2002.âJames M. Manheim6yq4s.