27
September 2007 20:40
Laba
Badara Sosseh, the renowned vocalist of Senegalese and Gambian
salsa, passed away on Thursday September 20, 2007 at around 3
a.m local time after a long illness. He is survived by 27
children.
"This monument of African music was amongst the first
Africans to make an incursion into the international stage,"
said Gambian newspaper The Point.
Born in The Gambia on March 12, 1943, Laba Sosseh was half
Senegalese, half Gambian. Laba’s father was from Senegal and his
mother is Gambian. Although he is frequently categorized as
Senegalese, Laba grew up in Banjul (The Gambia), listening to
Cuban music and Johnny Pacheco, who was one of his stars.
Laba moved to Senegal in the 1960s and in 1962 he and Nigerian
sax player Dexter Johnson, formed pioneering salsa band Star
Band de Dakar. He also worked with Special Liwanza Band, which
recorded for producer Aboudou Lassissi's Sacodis label.
Lassissi took Laba Sosseh to New York to
record the classic LPs, "Salsa Africana Vol.1 & 2". Laba later
went to Paris to record an LP with Cuban band Orquesta Aragón,
and he headed back to New York to record several LPs for Roberto
Torres' label. Laba Sosseh collaborated with singer Monguito and
other New York salsa musicians, thus leading the way to many
similar kinds of musical associations.
Laba collaborated with popular Senegalese
salsa band Africando, with whom he remade his trademark hit "Aminata"
in 1998's Baloba!
His music appeared on muerous recent
compilations such as Tinder Records' Salsa Africa and Putumayos'
Congo to Cuba.
WMC_News_Dept.