What You Didn’t Know About Mose Fan Fan- Lifestyle and Career

Mose Se Sengo was born in October 16, 1945 in Kinshasa Zaire.

The master guitarist famously known as ‘Fan Fan’ started playing music when he was sent to boarding school in Kinanga.

Young Mose Fan Fan

After his studies, he joined Rickem Jazz then Revolution for low-key evening performances as featured guitarist.

Franco Luambo Luanzo spotted him playing with Revolution and invited him to join OK Jazz, with whom he stayed for several years.

Franko Luambo

Eventually, and in tandem with several fellow OK Jazz musicians including Youlou Mabiala, he left to form Orchestre Somo Somo. The name translates as ‘double dread’ and was lifted from the 1972 hit song ‘Djamelasi’, which Mose wrote for OK Jazz.

Youlou Mabiala

However, the band collapsed when Mabiala was injured in a car crash. He eventually returned to Franco while other former members of Somo Somo joined Tabu Ley and Orchestre Verve. Mose elected to leave Zaire, and set up new incarnations of Somo Somo in Zambia, Tanzania and Kenya.

During his five years in Tanzania he also worked simultaneously with Orchestre Makassy, writing songs such as ‘Mosese’ and ‘Meloma’ for them. In Kenya he met Robin Scott (the musician behind M’s ‘Pop Musik’), who encouraged him to come to London and stay with him.

Robin Scott Performing

Two albums were released, the second recorded in Paris, at which time Somo Somo collapsed once more. Back in England, he produced an album with Bana OK, featuring several veterans of OK Jazz, but the project was abandoned when the group was unable to gain a visa to play live.

Later, he worked for six months as a civil servant with the Royal Army Medical Corps, but was inevitably drawn back to music.

Mose Fan Fan

He re-emerged in 1995 with a new album, Hello Hello, recorded with members of the Quatre Etoiles – Syran Mbenza, Bopol Mansiamina, Wuta Mayi, Nyboma, Miguel Yamba, Komba Mafwala and guest stars Sam Mangwana and former colleague Youlou Mabilia.

Sam Mangwana, Franco, Le TP OK Jazz – Toujours ok

These sessions were again credited to Somo Somo.

In 2005, Mose Fan Fan released the high-riding ‘Papa Lolo’ featuring Balou Canta on the vocals, a song which has since sent Benga lovers Frenzy.

‘Papa Lolo’ hit maker died on May 3, 2019 after collapsing in Nairobi while on a recording tour.

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