Tag Archives | Kwassa Kwassa

A Bridge From Congo to Cuba

Why is there such a deep connection between Cuba and the Congo, one that would inspire Congolese musicians — like Congolese music master Kanda Bongo Man — develop an African version of rumba?

During the colonization of the Americas most slaves came from West and Central Africa, bringing their African rhythms with them. Over the centuries Afro-Latin musicians often returned to their roots by touring in the region and by building cultural and instrumental connections with West and Central African musicians. Perhaps because of this shared history, in the 1960s Latin Americas most prominent Communist revolutionaries, Fidel Castro and Che Guevara, supported Congolese anti-colonalialist struggles–Fidel by sending Cuban troops, Che by sending himself. Let’s watch this video of “revolutionary” musician Kanda Bongo Man inspiring Africans to dance.

Kwassa Kwassa What What?

Very clearly our favorite Congolese dance is the kwassa kwassa:
Kwassa kwassa is the primary dance of Congolese Soukous, in which the legs shake, the hips roll around and the hands follow the hips’ motion. This Congolese dance originated in the 1970s and became popular all over Africa in the ’80s. The name for the dance may have come from the French “Quoi ça”? (what’s that?). The kwassa kwassa appeared almost two decades after the Congos became independent, but, as we see in this video, its relationship to soukous makes it feel like it celebrates freedom.