In this edition of “Best of The Beat on Afropop,” we commemorate the life and music of the great Remmy Ongala, who passed away Dec. 13, 2010. Born in 1947 in eastern Congo, he, like many of his compatriots, migrated to the fertile music scene in East Africa, where an irresistible fusion of rumba Lingala and benga was developing in the ‘70s.
A guitarist in the style of TPOK Jazz’s Franco Luambo Makiadi, Remmy joined the Tanzanian group Orchestra Makassy, led by his uncle, in Dar es Salaam in 1978, until eventually going solo and establishing his own band, Orchestra Super Matimila.
At the time of this feature, Peter Gabriel’s Real World Records had just been launched in 1989 and was releasing wonderful new global sounds. Remmy’s international career took off, and he became one of the pioneering African acts on European and North American stages, notably through appearances at the Real World-sponsored WOMAD festivals. He released three albums via Real World and one on the WOMAD imprint.
As I noted in the forward to this issue of The Beat in 1990, Remmy was still relatively unknown in the States, and we took a bit of a risk putting him on the cover. However, I had been so taken by Real World’s own gamble in releasing Songs For the Poor Man, and seduced by the beauty of the music, that I wrote: “[The music] is constantly rewarding, soothing in a way unique to African music. Remmy’s melancholy French-horn voice is capable of evoking both sweet sadness and dance-happy exhortations. His rough charisma is completely opposed to the suave personalities of soukous stars like Papa Wemba and Kanda Bongo Man. I urge you to give the music of Remmy Ongala a chance—let it grow on you. You won't regret it.”







