Kidjo was born in Ouidah, Benin. Her father is Fon from Ouidah and her mother is Yoruba . She grew up listening to James Brown, Otis Redding, Jimi Hendrix, Stevie Wonder, and Santana.
By the time she was six, Kidjo was performing with her mother's theatre troupe, giving her an early appreciation for traditional music and dance. She started singing in her school band Les Sphinx and found success as a teenager with her adaptation of Miriam Makeba's "Les Trois Z" which played on national radio. She recorded the album Pretty with the Camerounese producer Ekambi Brilliant and her brother Oscar. It featured the songs Ninive, Gbe Agossi and a tribute to the singer Bella Bellow, one of her role models. The success of the album allowed her to tour all over West Africa. Continuing political conflicts in Benin prevented her from being an independent artist in her own country and led her to relocate to Paris in 1982.
While working various day jobs to pay for her tuition, Angelique studied music at the CIM, a reputable Jazz school in Paris where she met and married musician and producer Jean Hebrail with whom she has composed most of her music. She started out as a backup singer in local bands. In 1985, she became the front singer of the known Euro-African jazz/rock band Jasper van't Hof's Pili Pili. Three Pili Pili studio albums followed: Jakko(1987) Be In Two Minds (1988, produced by Marlon Klein) and Hotel Babo (1990). By the end of the 1980s, she had become one of the most popular live performers in Paris and recorded a solo album called Parakou for the Open Jazz Label.
She was then discovered in Paris by Island Records founder Chris Blackwell who signed her in 1991. She recorded four albums for Island until Chris Blackwell's departure from the label. In 2000 she was signed in New York by Columbia Records for which she recorded two albums.
Her musical influences include the Afropop, Caribbean zouk, Congolese rumba, jazz, gospel, and Latin styles; as well as her childhood idols Bella Bellow, James Brown, Aretha Franklin, Jimi Hendrix, Miriam Makeba and Carlos Santana.
She has been a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador since 2002. With UNICEF, she has traveled to many countries in Africa. Reports on her visits can be found on the UNICEF site. Kidjo founded The Batonga Foundation which gives girls a secondary school and higher education so they can take the lead in changing Africa. The foundation is doing this by granting scholarships, building secondary schools, increasing enrollment, improving teaching standards, providing school supplies, supporting mentor programs, exploring alternative education models and advocating for community awareness of the value of education for girls.
She has campaigned for Oxfam at the 2005 Hong Kong WTO meeting, for the their Fair Trade Campaign and travelled with them in North Kenya and at the border of Darfur and Chad with a group of women leaders in 2007 and contributed to the video for the In My Name Campaign with Will I Am from The Black Eyed Peas. She has hosted the Mo Ibrahim Foundation's Prize for Achievement in African Leadership in Alexandria, Egypt on November 26th, 2007 and on November 15th, 2008
Arouna
Angélique Kidjo Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
Oruko ni kaluku wa lo je igba was
Igba wa igba wa igba wa igba wa o igba wa
Igba wa igba wa igba wa igba wa o igba wa
haruna haru na isola aa 4x
haruna isola lo je oruko wa
Igba wa igba wa igba wa igba wa o igba wa
Igba wa igba wa igba wa igba wa o igba wa
haruna haru na isola aa 4x
e pe musiliu isola kin gbo seti,, musiliu musiliu o
E pe musiliu isola kin gbo seti,, musiliu musiliu o
musiliu musiliu mi babatundee ki o gbo ki o o to
In Angélique Kidjo's song Arouna, the lyrics are primarily repetitive and focus on the names of two individuals - Haruna Isola and Musiliu Isola. The opening lines, "Haruna Isola lo je oruko wa, Oruko ni kaluku wa lo je igba was" can be interpreted as "Haruna Isola is our name, the name of our ancestors" and "Igba wa" means "it is time" or "our time has come." This suggests that the song is about celebrating the legacy and heritage of the Isola family and recognizing that it is their time to shine.
The refrain of "haruna haru na isola" is a call and response pattern that is common in West African music. Kidjo may be using this pattern to connotate a sense of community and that everyone present is a part of the Isola family. The second half of the song changes the narrative to focus on Musiliu Isola. The lines "e pe Musiliu Isola kin gbo seti, musiliu musiliu o" translates to "Listen to Musiliu Isola and hear his message." This could be interpreted as Kidjo recognizing Musiliu's talents and calling for others to do the same.
In summary, Arouna by Angélique Kidjo pays homage to the Isola family and their legacy. By using repetitive and inclusive language, Kidjo creates a sense of community and calls for recognition of the family's contributions to African music.
Line by Line Meaning
Haruna isola lo je oruko wa
Haruna Isola eats the name. (The name is a symbol of something that is being consumed or destroyed)
Oruko ni kaluku wa lo je igba was
The name is the only thing left in the calabash. (The calabash is a symbol of something that is empty or worthless)
Igba wa igba wa igba wa igba wa o igba wa
Time after time, time after time, time after time, again and again.
Haruna haru na Isola aa 4x
Haruna is eating Isola. (This line may be a repetition of the first line, but the emphasis on the first name and the second name being eaten is significant in African culture.)
E pe Musiliu Isola kin gbo seti, Musiliu Musiliu o
Wake up Musiliu Isola, can't you hear the call? (This line is a call to action or an exhortation to be aware of something important.)
Musiliu Musiliu mi Babatundee ki o gbo ki o o to
Musiliu, my dear friend, listen and understand. (This line is an expression of friendship or loyalty, and is also an exhortation to be aware of something important.)
Lyrics © BMG Rights Management
Written by: ANGELIC KIDJO, JEAN LOUIS HEBRAIL
Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
Kwame Atoapoma Oteanankanduro
on Summertime
Awesome! Haa, I want the lyrics in the language she sang in.