Africa and The Bass 2 Cameroon

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WOODSHED

CAMEROON

Africa & The Bass


BY M A R LO N B I S H O P

PART 2: CAMEROON

IN CAMEROON, WE HAVE TWO


things, says Etienne Mbapp, speaking
while backstage in Germany after a performance with guitarist John McLaughlin.
Soccer and bass.
Hes not exaggerating. In addition to
having one of Africas best national soccer teams, Cameroon produces more
slap-happy, fingerboard-shredding bass
virtuosos per capita than any other place
on Earth. Of them, Richard Bona is the
best known, but hes just one of many
Cameroonians in high demand on the
jazz-fusion circuit. Etienne Mbapp, Guy
NSangue, Armand Sabal-Lecco, and Noel
Ekwabi are all first-call players on the
international scene as well, and back home
in Cameroon, every kid grows up wanting to play the bass.
How did this strange, bass-crazy parallel universe come to be in an otherwise
inconspicuous West African country? In
Cameroon, we just have a tradition of

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Richard Bona

Richard Bona
grooving hard
and singing.
Wow!

G E T T H E S E L I N K S A N D M O R E AT

INGRID HERTFELDER

S E P T E M B E R 2 0 1 0 B A S S P L AY E R . C O M

Some of the worlds most inventive bass


playing can be found in Africas modern
pop music. While some players have gotten a share of the international spotlight,
most of the continents great bassists have
remained unsung heroes. In this series of
articles, were focusing on four of Africas
most bass-obsessed countriesSouth Africa
(July 10), Cameroon, Congo, and Zimbabweand finding out how Africans have
been taking the instrument to new places.

Serious funk here from


makossa pioneer Manu
Dibango.

WWW.BASSPLAYER.COM/SEPTEMBER2010

WOODSHED

Cameroons capital (see Ex. 2).


While some point to traditional drumming styles as the precursor to
Cameroonian bass styles, players like
James Jamerson and Bootsy Collins had
a lot to do with it as well. Motown, soul,
and funk were wildly popular throughout
Africa in the 1960s and 70s, but these
sounds hit particularly hard in Cameroon.
The hyperactive, contrapuntal bass sound
that was happening in America had a big
impact on the local scene.
In analyzing the root of his countrys
low-end fixation, Etienne Mbapp points
to a trio of makossa bass pioneers: Jean
Dikoto-Mandengu, Vicky Edimo, and
Aladji Tour were all talented Cameroonian bassists working out of Paris in the
70s, cutting African and Afro-jazz records
and playing sessions for French pop artists.
They would dabble in the international
jazz and funk scene, paving the way for
future bassists like Etienne. We listened
to their LPs coming from Paris, and we
just copied what they were doing, he says.
Without knowing it, those guys opened
up a bass school without walls.
It was also a bass school without basses,
apparently. Richard Bona estimated that
when he was cutting his chops in
Cameroon in the 1980s, there were only
eight basses in all of Douala, the countrys
biggest and richest city. The instruments
were owned by club owners, and aspiring

bassists had to go to the venues during the


day to practice. Much of the training was
onstage, playing dance parties that went
on until dawn. When you dont have anything, its amazing how creative you can
be, says Bona, who first learned on a
homemade guitar. None of the bassists I
interviewed for this article owned their
own basses until they were older and making money playing in France.
Bona sees older causes of the Cameroon
bass phenomenon. Everywhere you go in
that country, its amazingthe bass frequencies have such a presence in the traditional
music, he says. Bona recalls that when he
was young and playing in a balafon (traditional African xylophone) group, the
15-piece ensemble refused to play without
the bass balafon present. I think bass must
be in our genes, he jokes.
Today, the bass tradition continues. In
a fairly poor country that provides limited opportunities for young people, the
handful of superstar fusion bassists (after
the big-time soccer players) are some of
the countrys greatest international success stories. The example motivates kids
to sit down and practice, and gives bass
hopefuls a mark to beat. Still, dont expect
a real bass school to open up in Cameroon
anytime soon. I never took a bass lesson
in my life, says Etienne Mbapp proudly.
And I dont know a Cameroonian who
has. BP

Ex. 1
= 120

5 5

9 9

9 9

7 7 5

7 7

5 5

9 9

9 9

Ex. 2
= 120

8 8 8

7 7

10

10 8

10

6 6 6 10 10 8

8 6

9 9

7 7 5

7 7

5 5

9 9

9 9

B A S S P L AY E R . C O M S E P T E M B E R 2 0 1 0

having a very good bassist, says Francis


Mbappe, another great player working out
of New York. In our music, the bass is
in front, even louder than the voice. So
when were young, were already familiar
with the sound.
The country has hundreds of tribal
groups, each with its own rhythms, but
the biggest popular music style by far is
makossa, coming from the cosmopolitan
port city of Douala. Its fast-paced, hardhitting dance music. At its core is a
relentless, muscular bass sound that separates the music from other African
guitar-pop styles. The genres biggest international star is Manu Dibango, whose
1972 song Soul Makossa was remixed
by Michael Jackson in Wanna Be Startin
Somethin (Think: mama-se, mama-sa,
ma-ma-ko-ssa); it has also been sampled
by such artists as Rihanna, Jay-Z, and
Wyclef Jean.
When you look at makossa, says
Richard Bona, its very simple in terms
of harmony and melody, but rhythmically
its so complex. Makossa bass lines are
made up of an endless barrage of tight
16th-notes (see Ex. 1), with finger-busting
fills and shifting accents that keep things
interesting. The result is something like an
African take on the percussive style of
Tower Of Powers Rocco Prestia. The other
Cameroonian genre of note is bikutsi, a
rhythm in 6/8 or 12/8 popular in Yaound,

CAMEROON

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