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Muntu Valdo

MUNTU VALDO - THE ONE & THE MANY - OUT NOW

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The One & The Many is the much anticipated new album from one-man maverick musician Muntu Valdo.

Muntu Valdo is a Sawa from the coast of Cameroon in West Africa. Now based in London, he delivers his unique ‘Sawa Blues’ solo, with just guitar and harmonica and using live technology to underpin his powerful melodies – conjuring up multi-layered loops and mysterious sound textures thanks to a constantly expanding armada of pedals at his feet. As a solo artist, Muntu became fascinated by an ever more acute awareness of his inseparability from the world around him and the inspiration behind The One & The Many was born.

With The One & The Many, Muntu Valdo wills us to stand up and unleash the power of the many inside each and every one of us. A touchingly honest new album, Muntu Valdo has successfully pulled together a rich diversity of elements and environments, commanding us to recognise an artist deeply rooted in the riches of his culture whilst striving for modernity, open to and pushing towards the future.
Br> MUNTU VALDO - THE ONE & THE MANY - EPK

MUNTU VALDO IN SESSION FOR BBC AFRICA



MUNTU VALDO ON TOUR WITH STAFF BENDA BILILI - NOV 2009

DEAREST CAMEROON....

Sawa Blues - The Story

Muntu Valdo belongs to the Sawa community who populate the length of Cameroon’s coastline along the Golf of Guinea. His father is from the small village of Dibombari, 30km west of Douala, his mother from the Malimba Islands out in the Atlantic Ocean, famous for their oysters. Muntu then is a Sawa, a child of the coast, a child of the mangroves and of the water, a child whose birth was hailed and blessed by the « Miengu » (mermaids) who are known to protect or destruct people and populations depending on their humour. Eighty kilometres east of Douala, the economic capital of Cameroon and its most densely populated city, is the town of Edea. It’s here, inside his grandmother’s small house perched on the banks of Cameroon’s longest river, The Sanaga, that Muntu was born. As a young boy his nickname was Muutu (from “Muut’esucudu” which translates as “good student”), because of the exceptional ease with which he could memorise and recite stories and legends. With time Muutu will become Muntu.

It was at the age of 8yrs old, sat under a huge mango tree in the ‘Cité Verte’ of Yaoundé that Muntu played his first notes on an old, three-stringed guitar made of plasterboard and fishing wire. These enormous trees, which transform patches of wasteland into shady clearings perfect for football, were Muntu’s favourite hangout and would fuel his two passions: football and guitar. At this stage of the early eighties, television had yet to arrive in Cameroon and cinema and videos were a luxury reserved only for the few. Radio and newspapers were the only medias readily available and for many kids in the working class quarters of Yaoundé, much of their time was spent wandering the streets looking for mischief. It is Muntu’s love for music and sport that would help keep him out of trouble and prevent him getting up to no good.

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With Muntu’s adolescence came the arrival of the television and Internet. During this period his passion for music was cultivated via school concerts and competitions and his enthusiasm for football fired by the success of the “Indomitable Lions” and of Roger Milla, the most famous African footballer of all time! In Douala and Yaoundé, this era also heralded a rapid mushrooming of shantytowns, as more and more people began to leave their villages looking for a more prosperous life in the city. Both cities began to expose an increasingly fractured urbanism, their vast colonial avenues, now riddled with pot holes, rubbing shoulders with alternately dust ridden or mud entrenched (depending on the season) roads, markets and working class quarters. The absence of public transport and traffic lights, the endless traffic jams and clouds of fumes pumped into the air by battered old cars and moto-taxis, a constant honking of horns mixed with the overlapping beats of music booming out from the multiple bars lining the streets, all came together to create a chaotic yet exuberant and eccentric ambiance. It’s the early nineties and Muntu, the oldest of four brothers is preparing to start university. It’s amidst a climate of huge incertitude, punctuated by political upheavals and shaken by the winds of a democracy imposed by the old colonial powers of the West, that we find Muntu, studying Law at the University of Yaoundé. Across Africa, nations, who had lived under the oppressive regime of dictators and unique party systems, left to do as they pleased for over 30 years, are crying out for democracy. In Yaoundé student marches and demonstrations took over the city, but were quickly and violently repressed by the state. Some died and many were injured, including Muntu, who was severely beaten by the military. Bed ridden for several weeks, Muntu returned to live with his parents in Douala. They forbade him from returning to university, which they believed had nearly cost him his life. After a year spent recovering from his injuries and giving the odd after school lesson to kids here and there, Muntu secretly went back to university in Douala. He threw himself into the study of linguistics and history, notably that of Africa and ancient Egypt.

This period played a key role in Muntu’s musical development. His vast readings enabled him to discover the many spiritual masters who still guide him today, transforming him from the child “Muutu” that he was, into the man “Muntu” that he is today. From Cheik Anta Diop to Kwame Nkrumah, via Marcus Garvey, Bob Marley, Gandi, Jesus Christ, Ari-Krishna, Mahomet, Omram Aïvanov, Mohamed Ali or Thomas Sankara, Muntu started to build the illusive, calm, nonchalant and meditative personality that defines him today. During this period, whilst playing with the Douala University Orchestra, he also met the musician Eko Roosevelt who took him on as guitarist in his Big Band. This new opportunity gave Muntu his first experience as a professional musician, enabling him to tour and to accompany many of Cameroon’s top vocalists including Bébé Manga, André-Marie Tala, Annie Disco, Beko Sadey to name but a few.

In 1998 having spent three years under the direction of Eko Roosevelt, Muntu Valdo creates his own group, the “Muntu Band”, later named “Mulema”. He starts to perform regular concerts as well as frequently going into studio to record. In 2000 the Cooperation Française organise a national tour, giving Muntu the chance to perform in Cameroon’s eight major cities. The same year, one of Cameroon’s best sound engineers, Gilbert Moodio plays an old recording of one of Muntu’s concerts to a French producer working in Cameroon. One week later Moodio organises the meeting: its 7pm, dusk is engulfing the equator and Muntu sings Di Sibi, an emotionally captivating ballad. The producer is seduced and a new chapter begins for Muntu Valdo as he heads for Europe.


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October 3rd 2001, it’s almost 1am when the Camair flight touches down on the runway at Charles de Gaulle airport. Thus its under the starry skies of Paris, with temperatures well below 10°C, that Muntu takes his first steps on European soil. Paris and the area of Belleville become his new home. A creature of the night, he quickly meets other young musicians and adopts the areas and Oberkampf and Chatelet, as his favourite hangouts, wandering from bar to bar, guitar on his back and harmonica in his pocket, playing in various jam sessions and concerts. During the first few years, Muntu finds his way onto the stage of almost every bar or club in Paris, often alone, sometimes with his trio or full group, and every so often accompanying other musicians. Gradually establishing himself, his collaborations become increasing impressive playing with and sharing the stage with international stars such as Manu Dibango, Alpha Blondy, Ali Farka Touré, Lokua Kanza, Cheick Tidianne Seck, Tony Allen, Rido Bayonne, Etienne Mbappe, to name just a few. On hearing his demos, Manu Dibango was seduced by Muntu’s soaring melodies, inventive harmonies and insightful lyrics and was one of the driving forces behind encouraging him to produce his debut album. Boosted by this support, Muntu manages to clinch the financial support of the Sacem for the release, in 2005, of his first album “Gods and Devils – Moiye Na Muititi”. The album resonates with a sensual, and spiritual music, both delicate and powerful, a synthesis of Muntu’s many musical influences. But rather than hybridism, Muntu prefers the concept of reconciliation: blues, bossa nova, jazz, afro-cuban, soul, funk, all have their origins rooted deep in the heart of Africa. The quality of this album, as well as his spellbinding live shows enable him to travel across Africa, Europe and Asia playing in prestigious festivals and concert halls from The Queen Elisabeth Hall (London) to New Morning (Paris), Womad (Carceres, Charlton Park, Singapour) to Théâtre de la Petite Reine (Tbilisi), The Sage (Newcastle), Festival Africolor (France), as well as tours in France, Cameroon, Uk, and Ireland.

In January 2008, a new adventure begins for the prince of “Sawa Blues”, changing country yet again. This time Muntu chooses London, attracted by the city’s dynamic cultural scene, perfect for cultivating fresh ideas and new material. Playing increasingly alone with just guitar and harmonica, Muntu continues to develop his unique solo show using live technology to underpin his powerful melodies with multi-layered loops and mysterious sound textures thanks to a constantly expanding armada of pedals at his feet. Touring extensively (including UK wide tours supporting Richard Bona in 2008, Staff Benda Bilili in 2009 and LadySmith Black Mambazo in 2011) as a solo performer, Muntu became fascinated by an ever more acute awareness of his inseparability from everything and everyone and the inspiration behind new album, The One & The Many, was born.

Photobucket

All ten tracks of the new album pay testimony to Muntu’s faith in the power of the individual to harness the power of the many. Completed by his hand alone, the album was written and produced by him, all instruments and all vocals performed by him. With this touchingly honest new album Muntu Valdo successfully pulls together a rich diversity of elements and environments and commands us to recognise an artist deeply rooted in the riches of his heritage and culture, whilst striving for modernity, open to and pushing towards the future.

With The One & The Many, Muntu Valdo wills us to stand up and unleash the power of the many inside each and every one of us. A TASTE OF SAWA BLUES SHOWS AROUND THE WORLD (2007)...


MUNTU GETTING THE CROWD GOING AT MANCHESTER'S BRIDGE WATER HALL
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PHOTOS FROM WOMAD CHARLTON PARK 2010




RECENT PRESS QUOTES

THE FINANCIAL TIMES - THE ONE & THE MANY - CD REVIEW ****
Muntu Valdo is a literal one-man band, providing all the singing and playing every instrument from guitar to harmonica, like a Cameroonian Phil Collins. The comparison half fits his anguished, betrayed lyrics wrapped in lushly summery tunes, never more than on “Ate Aye”. The water calabash splashes like a river, and crickets punctuate “Djongo”’s massed chorus. “Timba” is lolloping country ‘n’ west African.

THE TIMES - THE ONE & THE MANY - CD REVIEW ****
Is now the time for the Cameroon-born singer? It could be: a British tour with Ladysmith Black Mambazo should have enough people talking about him to make this one-man band's second album a word of mouth hit. Using loops he builds nifty rhythm tracks (try the irrestible Timba) over which he plays a mean guitar and harmonica, all topped off with a fine voice and just a hint of grit.

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH - THE ONE & THE MANY - CD REVIEW ***
Backing his sensitive guitar playing and dreamy, voice with distinctively textured, self-created loops and rhythms, London-based, Cameroonian one-man band Valdo translates a compelling live sound successfully to disc. The best tracks have an airy, poetic feel that’s a bit Brazilian, a bit Cape Verdean, while keeping a toe in the world of international busking folk.

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General Info

  • Genre: Afro-beat / Blues / Jazz

    Location London / Douala, Un

    Profile Views: 122440

    Last Login: 9/25/2012

    Member Since 4/17/2006

    Website www.sawablues.com

    Record Label Warner Jazz

    Type of Label Major

  • Bio

    Muntu Valdo belongs to the Sawa community who populate the length of Cameroon's coastline along the Golf of Guinea. His father is from the small village of Dibombari, 30km west of Douala, his mother from the Malimba Islands out in the Atlantic Ocean, famous for their oysters. Muntu then is a Sawa, a child of the coast, a child of the mangroves and of the water, a child whose birth was hailed and blessed by the « Miengu » (mermaids) who are known to protect or destruct people and populations depending on their humour. Eighty kilometres east of Douala, the economic capital of Cameroon and its most densely populated city, is the town of Edea. It's here, inside his grandmother's small house perched on the banks of Cameroon's longest river, The Sanaga, that Muntu was born. As a young boy his nickname was Muutu (from "Muut'esucudu" which translates as "good student"), because of the exceptional ease with which he could memorise and recite stories and legends. With time Muutu will become Muntu. It was at the age of 8yrs old, sat under a huge mango tree in the 'Cité Verte' of Yaoundé that Muntu played his first notes on an old, three-stringed guitar made of plasterboard and fishing wire. These enormous trees, which transform patches of wasteland into shady clearings perfect for football, were Muntu's favourite hangout and would fuel his two passions: football and guitar. At this stage of the early eighties, television had yet to arrive in Cameroon and cinema and videos were a luxury reserved only for the few. Radio and newspapers were the only medias readily available and for many kids in the working class quarters of Yaoundé, much of their time was spent wandering the streets looking for mischief. It is Muntu's love for music and sport that would help keep him out of trouble and prevent him getting up to no good. With Muntu's adolescence came the arrival of the television and Internet. During this period his passion for music was cultivated via school concerts and competitions and his enthusiasm for football fired by the success of the "Indomitable Lions" and of Roger Milla, the most famous African footballer of all time! In Douala and Yaoundé, this era also heralded a rapid mushrooming of shantytowns, as more and more people began to leave their villages looking for a more prosperous life in the city. Both cities began to expose an increasingly fractured urbanism, their vast colonial avenues, now riddled with pot holes, rubbing shoulders with alternately dust ridden or mud entrenched (depending on the season) roads, markets and working class quarters. The absence of public transport and traffic lights, the endless traffic jams and clouds of fumes pumped into the air by battered old cars and moto-taxis, a constant honking of horns mixed with the overlapping beats of music booming out from the multiple bars lining the streets, all came together to create a chaotic yet exuberant and eccentric ambiance. It's the early nineties and Muntu, the oldest of four brothers is preparing to start university. It's amidst a climate of huge incertitude, punctuated by political upheavals and shaken by the winds of a democracy imposed by the old colonial powers of the West, that we find Muntu, studying Law at the University of Yaoundé. Across Africa, nations, who had lived under the oppressive regime of dictators and unique party systems, left to do as they pleased for over 30 years, are crying out for democracy. In Yaoundé student marches and demonstrations took over the city, but were quickly and violently repressed by the state. Some died and many were injured, including Muntu, who was severely beaten by the military. Bed ridden for several weeks, Muntu returned to live with his parents in Douala. They forbade him from returning to university, which they believed had nearly cost him his life. After a year spent recovering from his injuries and giving the odd after school lesson to kids here and there, Muntu secretly went back to university in Douala. He threw himself into the study of linguistics and history, notably that of Africa and ancient Egypt. This period played a key role in Muntu's musical development. His vast readings enabled him to discover the many spiritual masters who still guide him today, transforming him from the child "Muutu" that he was, into the man "Muntu" that he is today. From Cheik Anta Diop to Kwame Nkrumah, via Marcus Garvey, Bob Marley, Gandi, Jesus Christ, Ari-Krishna, Mahomet, Omram Aïvanov, Mohamed Ali or Thomas Sankara, Muntu started to build the illusive, calm, nonchalant and meditative personality that defines him today. During this period, whilst playing with the Douala University Orchestra, he also met the musician Eko Roosevelt who took him on as guitarist in his Big Band. This new opportunity gave Muntu his first experience as a professional musician, enabling him to tour and to accompany many of Cameroon's top vocalists including Bébé Manga, André-Marie Tala, Annie Disco, Beko Sadey to name but a few. In 1998 having spent three years under the direction of Eko Roosevelt, Muntu Valdo creates his own group, the "Muntu Band", later named "Mulema". He starts to perform regular concerts as well as frequently going into studio to record. In 2000 the Cooperation Française organise a national tour, giving Muntu the chance to perform in Cameroon's eight major cities. The same year, one of Cameroon's best sound engineers, Gilbert Moodio plays an old recording of one of Muntu's concerts to a French producer working in Cameroon. One week later Moodio organises the meeting: its 7pm, dusk is engulfing the equator and Muntu sings Di Sibi, an emotionally captivating ballad. The producer is seduced and a new chapter begins for Muntu Valdo as he heads for Europe. October 3rd 2001, it's almost 1am when the Camair flight touches down on the runway at Charles de Gaulle airport. Thus its under the starry skies of Paris, with temperatures well below 10°C, that Muntu takes his first steps on European soil. Paris and the area of Belleville become his new home. A creature of the night, he quickly meets other young musicians and adopts the areas and Oberkampf and Chatelet, as his favourite hangouts, wandering from bar to bar, guitar on his back and harmonica in his pocket, playing in various jam sessions and concerts. During the first few years, Muntu finds his way onto the stage of almost every bar or club in Paris, often alone, sometimes with his trio or full group, and every so often accompanying other musicians. Gradually establishing himself, his collaborations become increasing impressive playing with and sharing the stage with international stars such as Manu Dibango, Alpha Blondy, Ali Farka Touré, Lokua Kanza, Cheick Tidianne Seck, Tony Allen, Rido Bayonne, Etienne Mbappe, to name just a few. On hearing his demos, Manu Dibango was seduced by Muntu's soaring melodies, inventive harmonies and insightful lyrics and was one of the driving forces behind encouraging him to produce his debut album. Boosted by this support, Muntu manages to clinch the financial support of the Sacem for the release, in 2005, of his first album "Gods and Devils – Moiye Na Muititi". The album resonates with a sensual, and spiritual music, both delicate and powerful, a synthesis of Muntu's many musical influences. But rather than hybridism, Muntu prefers the concept of reconciliation: blues, bossa nova, jazz, afro-cuban, soul, funk, all have their origins rooted deep in the heart of Africa. The quality of this album, as well as his spellbinding live shows enable him to travel across Africa, Europe and Asia playing in prestigious festivals and concert halls from The Queen Elisabeth Hall (London) to New Morning (Paris), Womad (Carceres, Charlton Park, Singapour) to Théâtre de la Petite Reine (Tbilisi), The Sage (Newcastle), Festival Africolor (France), as well as tours in France, Cameroon, Uk, and Ireland. In January 2008, a new adventure begins for the prince of "Sawa Blues", changing country yet again. This time Muntu chooses London, attracted by the city's dynamic cultural scene, perfect for cultivating fresh ideas and new material. Playing increasingly alone with just guitar and harmonica, Muntu continues to develop his unique solo show using live technology to underpin his powerful melodies with multi-layered loops and mysterious sound textures thanks to a constantly expanding armada of pedals at his feet. Touring extensively (including UK wide tours supporting Richard Bona in 2008, Staff Benda Bilili in 2009 and LadySmith Black Mambazo in 2011) as a solo performer, Muntu became fascinated by an ever more acute awareness of his inseparability from everything and everyone and the inspiration behind new album, The One & The Many, was born. All ten tracks of the new album pay testimony to Muntu's faith in the power of the individual to harness the power of the many. Completed by his hand alone, the album was written and produced by him, all instruments and all vocals performed by him. With this touchingly honest new album Muntu Valdo successfully pulls together a rich diversity of elements and environments and commands us to recognise an artist deeply rooted in the riches of his heritage and culture, whilst striving for modernity, open to and pushing towards the future. With The One & The Many, Muntu Valdo wills us to stand up and unleash the power of the many inside each and every one of us.
  • Members

    .. Muntu Valdo on tour with Staff Benda Bilili - Nov 2009 .... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..A taste of Muntu concerts around the world in ....... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .... .. Muntu getting the crowd going at Manchester Bridgewater Hall whilst supporting Ladysmith Black Mambazo in Nov 2009 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
  • Influences

    ....RECENT PRESS QUOTES.. .. ....ARISE MAGASINE (SARAH BENTLEY) ... "At last year's Africa Now concert in London, it took Muntu Valdo just a few bars to win over an audience who has initially come to hear Amadou & Mariam, Baaba Maal and Oumou Sangare. That's because Valdo sings and plays guitar and harmonica with the emotive presence of an old blues man and, singing in Cameroonian dialect Douala, his voice is immediately captivating".. .... ECHOES - NOW'S THE TIME (KEVIN LE GENRE) ... "Of all the artists that I've seen recently the London-based Cameroonian Muntu Valdo is possibly one of the most intriguing...At a recent gig at Jamm in Brixton, he played a quite mesmerising solo set in which he used looping pedals as well as guitar and harmonica to create finely woven tapestries of sound that, with the occaisonally marked afro-Brazilian resonance of the material, came across as an audacious gathering of the spirits of Milton Nascimento and Cleveland Watkiss" .. .. ..THE FINANCIAL TIMES (MARK ESPINER) .... "The crowd were treated to Muntu Valdo's guitar magic. Sauntering on stage with a springy step, softly picking at his guitar and blowing in his harmonica, he resembled a youthful, latter-day Bob Dylan. But his music is from a different stream. Using a box of tricks to double-track his guitar and voice live, he added layers of sound to create full-textured, soft songs about peace, love and Cameroonian witchcraft and charmed the audience" .... .. .. PHOTOS FROM WOMAD CHARLTON PARK 2010 .. .. .... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .......... ...... .......... .. .. ..........
  • Sounds Like

    ..MANAGEMENT: .. www.sawablues.com .. Contact: info@sawablues.com .. .. ..BOOKING: .. www.serious.org.uk .. Contact: david.jones@serious.org.uk ..

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