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Papa Wemba, King of Congolese Rumba, collapses and dies on stage

Monday, April 25, 2016

Papa Wemba, a musician known around the world as the king of Congolese rumba, has died following a collapse on stage during a concert, officials said. He was 66.

Culture Minister Baudouin Banza Mukalay confirmed the musician’s death Sunday, calling it a “great loss for the country and all of Africa.”

Footage from the concert in Ivory Coast (Côte d’Ivoire) shows his fellow performers rushing to his side as he collapsed in front of thousands of fans. He was taken to a nearby clinic, but could not be resuscitated. The cause of death was not immediately known.

“It is a great loss for Congo and for all of Africa,” Congo’s cultural minister said. “He was a self-made man, a role model for Congolese youth.”

The musician, whose real name was Jules Shungu Wembadio Pene Kikumba, rose to fame in the Congolese capital of Kinshasa during the 1970s with the band Zaiko Langa Langa, whose guitar-based fusion of Latin and African dance styles inspired a generation of African musicians.

With a new band, Viva La Musica, Wemba moved to Paris in the 1980s and helped popularize Congolese music beyond Africa. He toured in the 1990s with British rock star Peter Gabriel and appears on his “Secret World Live” album.

Wemba had appeared to be in good health just days earlier when he met with journalists at the beginning of the music festival. Fans across Abidjan were mourning news of his death Sunday.

“My sadness is great — I wonder how such a wonderful artist can die before such a large audience,” said Mariam Cisse, 32, who lives in Anoumabo where the festival was being held.

Copyright 2016 The Associated Press

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