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Staff Benda Bilili: African disability beats hit the UK
10th November 2009
鈥淭hey were afraid I wouldn鈥檛 turn up to rehearsals on time and that I wouldn鈥檛 be able to dance. All musicians in our country have to dance as well as play.鈥
So in the spirit of if you can鈥檛 join them, beet them, Ricky took matters into his own hands.
鈥淚 spoke to some friends who sung with me in church, and we started Staff Benda Bilili, which means look beyond appearances.鈥
鈥淥ne of my wives is disabled because of polio and one is not. I met the first while we were trafficking on the river Congo.鈥
He explained that in the 70s, the country鈥檚 then president, Mobutu, lowered customs taxes for disabled people, which meant they could travel more cheaply than others across the river Congo. Some made a living by charging people to travel as their helpers and carried goods in their wheelchairs. Ricky and his now wife made a living this way.
鈥淚f I hadn鈥檛 been disabled, I may have ended up as a soldier. Who knows.鈥
Instead, Ricky is fighting for a better life for his family and the families of all the other group members, who live from hand to mouth, day to day, in inadequate housing. They got one step closer to this goal when Staff were discovered by a French film maker, who has now been documenting their progress since 2004. Subsequently, a Belgian music producer, who has worked with other big Congolese names, came on board to produce their debut album.
But this fascinating disability back story alone doesn鈥檛 fill a top class London venue. So what is their secret?
Atop the African rhythms and western style chord progressions which seem to be hot right now, the 3 main vocalists sing with passion and fabulous harmonies about polio, love and other important issues while the band鈥檚 MC dances, raps and improvises with real conviction. I'm told that the band's crutches were waved and danced with, wheelchairs were abandoned in favour of somersaults, and all of them take every opportunity to move to the music. And as if it wasn't already a visual and autible spectacle of some merit, enter Roger.
Roger is a 17 year old street kid who Staff adopted some years ago and who just happens to be an extraordinarily talented musician and the band鈥檚 other unique selling point. Throughout the show, he plays ever more extravagant solos on a 1 stringed instrument which he fashioned himself from a milk can, the frame of a fish basket and some electrical wire. The resulting sound is something between an electric guitar and a Theremin. It鈥檚 captivating.
Staff Benda Bilili鈥檚 live show is a fast, high energy, movement filled feast giving everyone in the room, even this blindy with two left feet, the urge to get up and dance, clap and be joyful. And the world music bods are right to wax lyrical about this little-known explosion of music and life. Their sound, their story and their future prospects are very, very exciting.
鈥淲e want to make things better for our families. First we will build houses for each of them and then we will make sure all of our children are well educated鈥.
鈥 The band are currently on a 9 date tour of the UK
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