Two years ago, Papa Ricky slept in the streets of the Democratic Republic of Congo’s capital, but an album by a band he leads has opened the way to wealth for some handicapped Congolese musicians.
“Now I have a home of my own!” says Papa Ricky in the house being built for him in Kinshasa. Papa Ricky Likabu, 58, heads Benda Bilili, which has gone in a few years from being a street group of handicapped people to a touring band with a successful first album, Tres, tres fort! (Very, very strong/loud!)
Five handicapped performers and the rest of the group, three other musicians from the poorest parts of Kinshasa, returned to the DR Congo at the end of last year after a tour that took them to Europe and Asia.
Photo: AFP
They now own land, vehicles and clothes that they never dreamed of possessing, until the day the band attracted attention with its lively, funky rumba style and also drew a couple of movie makers.
The “miracle” of Benda Bilili has been followed and filmed by Renaud Barret and Florent de La Tullaye in a documentary named after the group, which was selected for the prestigious Cesar awards — France’s version of the Oscars — last month, but did not win.
“My life has completely changed. Today I eat copiously and I wear designer clothes. I have become a totally different person,” says Roger Landu, a former street kid who deftly plays a kind of lute he fashioned out of a string and a tin can.
He is clad in a tuxedo and a white hat, with leather shoes.
“With my wheel chair, I spent two hours at the bus stop,” recalls Kabose Kasungo, a 37-year-old singer in Benda Bilili. “Many drivers refused to stop when they saw that I was handicapped.”
However, now he is seated in a large green limousine, the door ajar with a pair of crutches attached to the handle. Kabose combines his singing job with that of a used car salesman. He owns four vehicles himself and employs two people, one of whom is also handicapped.
“I’m a boss, people are interested in me these days. Unfortunately, it’s often to ask me for money,” he says with a mocking smile.
Montana, the drummer who goes by one name, 35, runs a bistro and a bar in a remote part of Kinshasa.
“I’ve become a role model for a lot of people in this district,” he says, adding that he is waiting for the money from the band’s “next tour, to begin to build apartments.”
Benda Bilili are due to fly to Europe in early this month for a new tour, where they will give more than 40 concerts in two months.
“Since we came back, we haven’t been resting. We get a lot of concert invitations,” Papa Ricky says.
He too is counting on making money from the next tour to recover some of his goods currently held by customs at the port of Matadi.
The group rehearses five days a week and gives free shows on Saturdays. The rehearsals no longer take place in the street or notably in the zoo, which now is a zoo in name only. Benda Bilili performs in a small hall dubbed the Cabaret Sauvage, in tribute to their concert at a Paris nightspot of the same name.
Many expatriates join the Congolese who turn up to hear the music, which includes numbers from Tres, tres fort! and new songs that the band is working on. A second album with about a dozen songs is scheduled to come out at the beginning of next year.
“Those who mocked us have their jaws dropping now,” Papa Ricky says.
Napoleon Osorio is proud of being the first taxi driver to have accepted payment in bitcoin in the first country in the world to make the cryptocurrency legal tender: El Salvador. He credits Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele’s decision to bank on bitcoin three years ago with changing his life. “Before I was unemployed... And now I have my own business,” said the 39-year-old businessman, who uses an app to charge for rides in bitcoin and now runs his own car rental company. Three years ago the leader of the Central American nation took a huge gamble when he put bitcoin
TECH RACE: The Chinese firm showed off its new Mate XT hours after the latest iPhone launch, but its price tag and limited supply could be drawbacks China’s Huawei Technologies Co (華為) yesterday unveiled the world’s first tri-foldable phone, as it seeks to expand its lead in the world’s biggest smartphone market and steal the spotlight from Apple Inc hours after it debuted a new iPhone. The Chinese tech giant showed off its new Mate XT, which users can fold three ways like an accordion screen door, during a launch ceremony in Shenzhen. The Mate XT comes in red and black and has a 10.2-inch display screen. At 3.6mm thick, it is the world’s slimmest foldable smartphone, Huawei said. The company’s Web site showed that it has garnered more than
Demand for artificial intelligence (AI) chips should spur growth for the semiconductor industry over the next few years, the CEO of a major supplier to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) said, dismissing concerns that investors had misjudged the pace and extent of spending on AI. While the global chip market has grown about 8 percent annually over the past 20 years, AI semiconductors should grow at a much higher rate going forward, Scientech Corp (辛耘) chief executive officer Hsu Ming-chi (許明琪) told Bloomberg Television. “This booming of the AI industry has just begun,” Hsu said. “For the most prominent
PARTNERSHIPS: TSMC said it has been working with multiple memorychip makers for more than two years to provide a full spectrum of solutions to address AI demand Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) yesterday said it has been collaborating with multiple memorychip makers in high-bandwidth memory (HBM) used in artificial intelligence (AI) applications for more than two years, refuting South Korean media report's about an unprecedented partnership with Samsung Electronics Co. As Samsung is competing with TSMC for a bigger foundry business, any cooperation between the two technology heavyweights would catch the eyes of investors and experts in the semiconductor industry. “We have been working with memory partners, including Micron, Samsung Memory and SK Hynix, on HBM solutions for more than two years, aiming to advance 3D integrated circuit