Born: 1938, Sona-Bata, Congo Died: 1989 At the age of seven, Franco made his first guitar from a cooking oil tin and used it to entertain at the sidelines of soccer matches. He got his first real guitar at 11. In 1953, is when he got his first work as a session guitarist at the Greek-owned Loningisa studio. At this time Democratic Republic of Congo was still the Belgian Congo. In 1956, Franco officially launched OK Jazz as a six-piece unit, later became TPOK Jazz--adding TP for tout puissant or "all powerful."
Franco has been called the the godfather of African music. The government of Zaire dubbed him Grande Maître, a title usually reserved for judges and scholars, even though his lyrics got him jailed or denied permission to leave the country on more than one occasion. He managed to tour Europe and the United States in the mid-1980s.
Franco’s lyrics, in the Lingala language, were full of social, often satirical, commentary. With texts full of hidden and not-so-hidden agendas, he sang of government, fate and—his favorite topic—the eternal conflict between men and women. His epic song “Mario,” about a lazy educated man and the older woman he exploits until she kicks him out, was a sell out.
When Franco died in 1989, President Mobutu of Zaire gave him a state funeral, which was attended by other African heads of state and their representatives, and by tens of thousands of ordinary Zairians who traveled to Kinshasa to pay their respects. During the official four-day national mourning period, all the local radio stations played T.P.O.K. Jazz nonstop. More Information
Listen to Franco songs Mario, Tantine, Baneko na Ngai ya Mobali, Mamu, Layile
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