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Songs
and Soldiers

Catherine
Fellows investigates the role played by musicians in
the December 1999 military coup in Ivory Coast.
The ever-popular Ivorian reggae musician Alpha Blondy
has been singing highly politicised songs with uncomfortable
lyrics for many years now.

Alpha
Blondy is an Ivorian national hero |
His
track 'La queue du Diable' is typical of his biting
commentary with its call for an increase in civil servants'
and workers' salaries.
They are struggling to survive, sings Blondy, "while
the government is holding conferences with champagne
and caviar .
In
another song, La Guerre Civile, Blondy predicted civil
war if an elected president ignores the people's calls
for change.
Well, it wasn't civil war, but I was as surprised as
the next person to hear of a coup in Ivory Coast - one
of Africa's more peaceful nations.
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Absolute
power corrupts absolutely. An elected
president can't be elected indefinitely.
One day or another people will want
change and then there will be civil
war |
| Alpha
Blondy 'La Guerre Civile' |
|
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|
I
was even more amazed to hear claims that the coup had
been directly inspired by music.
And
that the soldiers immediately went to the homes of their
musical heroes to celebrate what they saw as a joint
victory.
A
new generation

At
a production house in Abidjan I met a band called Sakholo.
Their name means "This is what they are" and they told
me they represent a new generation which is positive
about life and about Africa.

Rap
star Angelo - part of a new confident generation |
They
were supportive of the coup saying no-one had died and
a fresh wind was blowing through the country.
And yes, they said, the musicians had played a part.
It is usual during a coup for the military to seize
radio stations and broadcast to the nation.
In the case of Ivory Coast, the coup leader Robert Guei
chose Radio Nostalgie - the country's foremost independent
commercial music radio station.
In
the months before the coup, when the country faced a
series of student protests, the station was giving a
platform to many musicians who were singing about the
problems in society.
This
was in defiance of attempts by the government to silence
its musical critics by banning their songs and videos
from state radio and television.
Alpha
Blondy, Tiken Jah, Tangara Speed Ghoda, Fadal Dey -
all were being played on Radio Nostalgie, and the soldiers
in the barracks were listening.
At
dawn on 24th December, 1999, the soldiers burst into
the station, where themanager, Yves Zogbo Junior, was
on duty.
"To tell you the truth I wasn't really frightened,"
he said.
"I'll tell you a secret, Robert Guei was a witness at
my wedding! I said to him 'Uncle,not you!' and he said
'Yes, it's me!'. Then he sat down and gave his message
to the nation."
Shaking hands

Alpha Blondy lives in the most extraordinary turreted
fortress painted every colour of the rainbow and guarded
by huge statues of St Anthony and the Virgin Mary.
He
told me he had been terrified when the coup was announced
and surprised that soldiers had arrived at his gates
with guns.
"I hid under my bed", he told me.
His daughter then told him that the soldiers just wanted
to shake his hand.
"I told her 'this is Africa...people can change'. I didn't
want to be crucified.
"When
they say my songs inspired the coup I say no. Alpha
Blondy's strategy is to say the truth, not trying to
create a revolution but trying to make people aware
of the danger."

Tangara
Speed Godha shows off 'shells of freedom' |
In
Abobo, one of the largest ghettos of Abidjan I met Tangara
Speed Ghoda, another of the artists whose songs were
broadcast immediately after the coup.
He
told me that it is his daily observation and experience
ofthe neighbourhood's problems that gives his songs
their power.
Tangara said the soldiers had visited him on the day
of the coup and what struck him most was that when they
fired their guns it was into the air and not at the
people.
In his hand, he held six bullets. He calls them 'the
shells of freedom' and reckons they might be worth a
lot of money one day.
Tribute to Guei

Serge Kassy is one of the most politically engaged reggae
musicians in Ivory Coast.
During the previous regime several of his songs were
banned, and he was physically attacked by police. He
still has some nasty scars on his arm.
He wrote a song about Robert Guei following an incident
in 1995 when the general refused a government order
to suppress an opposition demonstration.
"I had no idea at the time that one day he would be
president," said Serge.
"It's
not every General who would refuse to obey orders to
fire on the people - it was a brave act. So since then
we have remained good friends."
Kassy has even named his forthcoming album 'Mon General'
as a tribute to Guei.
Of course, it is not just reggae artists who are challenging
the status quo in the Ivory Coast.
A distinctively Ivorian musical style known as Zouglou
is famous for its witty, satirical lyrics which grew
up alongside the student protest movement.
"Zouglou was a fighting movement for people, especially
for youth and students", said Charles Ble Goude,
general secretary of FESCI, Ivory Coast's national student
movement.

L'Enfant
Siro of Zouglou stars Poussin Chocs |
One
of Zouglou's exponents is Poussin Chocs led by L'Enfant
Siro whose track 'Tu Sais Qui Je Suis' - do you know who
I am - criticises former President Henri Konan Bedie's
attempts to define Ivorian-ness on ethnic lines.
Overt support for the new regime also comes from top-selling
duo Alan and Nicaise.
The title track of their album El Mutino presents Robert
Guei as a Father Christmas in khaki, handing out brooms
to all the soldiers so they can sweep Ivory Coast clean.
Exaggerated claims

But there is scepticism about the role played in the coup
by musicians.
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| "Look,
the musicians live among us. They know
what we are going through. They are
our messengers. They interpret what
the population is thinking." |
| Corporal
in the Ivorian army |
|
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|
Constant
Anaganou, marketing manager of Showbiz, Abidjan's largest
music production house, flatly rejects the idea that
music prompted the takeover.
"I
think it's exaggerated", he said.
"The coup d'etat had nothing to do with music. Music
can bring attention to certain things, I agree, but
music cannot be the trigger. It can be one of the factors."

Coup
soldiers share beer with reggae star Fadal Dey |
So
what do the soldiers themselves think?
Fadal
Dey, is a reggae singer whose music is supposed to have
inspired the army and over an informal beer he introduced
me to four of the soldiers who took part in coup.
"It
could have been avoided if the authorities had listened
to the musicians," one corporal told me, sitting under
a huge poster of reggae legend Bob Marley.
"One
day we just said enough is enough, the population is
suffering, we soldiers also have our problems and really
we have to do something.
"The musicians should know that their stories really
provoked the army to do this - no individual could act
so it really inspired us to get to where we are today."
Warning
against hysteria

But
it won't be all plain, uncritical sailing for the new
regime.
Soum
Bill, lead singer of one of the most successful Zouglou
groups, Les Salopards, told me his newly released solo
album is as critical as ever.
"People let themselves be carried away by hysteria.
Everyone shouted, welcoming the soldiers", he said.
"But we must speak out against the negative things happening
at the moment - particularly during this time of reconstruction.
They are cracking down on people indiscriminately.

Soum
Bil - don't get carried away |
"If
there are thieves and bandits around we are all to blame.
It's what the system produced. It's important to be
tough but not to sacrifice the correct procedure. You
musn't get carried away with hysteria."
And the last word to Alpha Blondy - the great survivor
of Ivorian music.
Walking around Abidjan with him, it is clear that he
has a huge popular following.
Some have said that if he stood for President he would
be unstoppable.
But he is clear where his priorities lie.
"I
don't want to get involved in politics>" he says.
>"I told the soldiers, if you want me to be useful,
let me be the way I am. I want to be a singer. To be
able to criticise."
Any
new songs from the man they call the Grand Frere - Elder
Brother?
"Ah
yes," he says.
"A
very beautiful one. It's called 'Digging My Way to the
French Embassy" - so next time there's a coup I
can follow the President's example and escape with my
family."
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