by Emil I Mondoa, M.D.
Jacob Nguni at Social House Hall, Newark Delaware, October 23, 2009
There are people who get into music for the chicks and there are others who do it for the money or for both. Then, there are the rare ones, the real musicians who enter the field for the love of music. I have known Jacob Nguni since we were kids in Sasse. He is one of the later, and I will tell you how I know.
When Jacob took up the guitar in Form 2, he instantly knew that it was what he wanted to do as his life's work and he pursued it with a ferocity that I did not see in any other of my schoolmates, who did not really know what they wanted in life. He practiced until his hands were calloused and bruised, but he kept on practicing until he achieved what sounded to me like perfection, and he still continued to practice. He could play the popular tunes of James Brown, Jimmy Cliff and others with ease, but his benchmark was much higher, the spectacular genuises of Congolese guitar. Such names as Vata Mombasa, Ricos Kinzonga are not well known, but they were the magic fingers behind the guitar pyrotechnics of Orchestres Lipua Lipua and Bella Bella. Jacob could play the most demanding guitar licks and riffs of these giants with complete accuracy.
Parents used to be hostile to their children pursuing music, so I can only imagine the kind of hell Jacob had to confront at home, when he told his parents in no uncertain terms that he was going to be a musician. He was focused and determined and was not going to be stopped. This unusual career choice was not because he was some kind of slouch at academics, because he transitioned easily from Form 1 to Form 5, always without hitch, and always at the high end of the bell curve. Then, he decided to go professional after the second term of Form 5 and took off to Nigeria. He credits this move as the best decision in his life. There is nothing as satisfying as having one's passion as both profession and hobby.
The next time I saw Jacob was at the Cameroon Embassy in Lagos, getting travel papers. The barely teenaged Jacob was now the lead guitarist of Prince Nico Mbaraga's Rocafil Jazz and they had already released Sweet Mother, which is still the biggest hit in African pop music history. Lead guitarists are usually the most senior members of an African dance band.
In December 2004, the BBC Africa organized a poll to recognize Africa's most popular song, and Sweet Mother won hands down. James Warungu, who organized the poll was quoted as saying, "It's not just about the lyrics. There's something about the singing guitar that gets you."
What Warungu did not know is that the "singing guitar" was Jacob's and Jacob was a key partner and co-creator in the rise and stardom of Nico Mbarga. This hit me forcefully at an October 23, 2009 concert at the Social House Club in Newark, Delaware. Jacob Nguni headlined the Waza Muzik Band as singer and lead guitarist. Waza is a crack band that can handle anything from makossa to the blues; from afrobeat to rock; from Salsa to Mbolobolo with equal ease and aplomb, with the mastery of an experienced session band. That evening, the band did not present its usual eclectic mix of genres, but focused predominantly on a Nico Mbarga retrospective to the delight of the 400+ strong crowd of Cameroonians, Nigerians, Kenyans, African-Americans and people from the Caribbean. Watching and listening, it became clear that Jacob was to Nico Mbarga as Billy Strayhorn was to Duke Ellington. Jacob's contribution was a requirement for the success of Rocafil.
The show started with Christiana and ended with Sweet Mother, making detours through Aki Special, Music Line and tucked in Jacob's own rather challenging compositions such as Policier and other yet to be released numbers. Waza Muzic Band's chanteuse Zaina rendered some classic Douala songs. At the request of an audience member, the band played its rendition of the Eagles hit, Hotel California, in which Jacob performed an exact execution of Don Felder's difficult classic solo.
The audience was introduced to R&B singer, Francine
Houses are not cheap and not everyone can buy it. Nevertheless, mortgage loans was invented to help different people in such kind of hard situations.
Posted by: Lauri32Landry | February 26, 2010 at 09:54 PM
The world is often unkind to new talent, new creations. But your only limit is your soul.
Posted by: coach sale | July 14, 2010 at 04:33 AM
Excellent review Dr. Mondoa.I wished we had our version of musical Hall of Fame so that the relevance and magic work of Jacob Nguni as a musical artist can be immortalized. So that his effigy can be displayed eternally . You see, JN is a very gifted artist as in music,penmanship and njakeri/humor. Sometimes, I just feel saddened by the fact that the environment can dwarfed his potential of going universal...the man has all that it takes to be listened to and appreciated across all the peoples and cultures of the world.
Posted by: Bate Agbor-Baiyee | July 19, 2010 at 07:46 PM
I just linked this article on my facebook account. It’s an interesting read for everyone.
Posted by: Finn | September 18, 2010 at 02:01 PM
The bird wishes it were a cloud.
The cloud wishes it were a bird. O(∩_∩)O~
Posted by: UGG Classic Tall Metallic | December 18, 2010 at 02:32 AM
what would be nice to see along with the tickets sold is the allotment each school was supposed to sell. For instance I see that Minnesota sold 3,000 tickets for last year's Insight Bowl, but how many were they required to sell? Did they meat their allotment or how short were they?
Posted by: ugg outlet | December 22, 2010 at 02:04 AM
I need help. I just started a new job as EA to an executive. I will manage his TripIt account under his name. I'm trying to add accounts and continue to get exclamation marks after waiting for a long period on "we are updating your account activity" I assume the account number asked is the Mileage / Program Number and the PIN number is a PW? I cannot update old accounts or add new accounts. I'm I correct to say, if the carrier is not a partner with TripIt, I need to manually add the account and information in? I'm confused, help please!!! Thank you!!!
Posted by: coach outlet canada | December 25, 2010 at 02:55 AM
I need help. I just started a new job as EA to an executive. I will manage his TripIt account under his name. I'm trying to add accounts and continue to get exclamation marks after waiting for a long period on "we are updating your account activity" I assume the account number asked is the Mileage / Program Number and the PIN number is a PW? I cannot update old accounts or add new accounts. I'm I correct to say, if the carrier is not a partner with TripIt, I need to manually add the account and information in? I'm confused, help please!!! Thank you!!!
Posted by: coach outlet canada | December 25, 2010 at 02:55 AM
To offer a different perspective, I'm not sure that economics of transportation will ever drive us to become Locavores. Oil is but a sparse fraction of the cost of transport and distribution.
To me it is all about community and a healthy lifestyle. I would much prefer buying local even at higher cost because of the value to our community. And if we can get local volume over the threshold of economies of scale, then will be self sustaining. Unfortunately, Locavorism today is really on the fringe. In business terms, we need more market share - and then the economics will work too.
Posted by: coach coupon outlet | January 06, 2011 at 02:38 AM
DODODO.....I'VE BEEN LET YOUR DOWN.I HOPE YOUR UNDERSTAND.
Posted by: Air Jordan Shoes | January 26, 2011 at 02:12 AM
Happiness serves hardly any other purpose than to make unhappiness possible.
Posted by: Air Jordan | February 22, 2011 at 11:59 AM
You see, JN is a very gifted artist as in music,penmanship and njakeri/humor.
Posted by: ClubPenguinCheats | May 09, 2011 at 05:19 AM
Dear Jacob:
Thank you for keeping the legacy of Nico Mbarga alive. He was a great musician. You too are a wonderful musician with lots of potentials. Please, keep on doing what you are good at - making music - and always believe in yourself, and place your trust in the Lord.
Just to let you know that we treasure your musical talents.
Dr. Christopher Atang.
Posted by: Dr. Christopher Atang | September 14, 2011 at 09:30 PM
But, Did you know that the fast food and casual dining restaurants you eat in every day have secret menu items? A select few are in on the secret and now you are a part of this culinary elite. We aren't just talking about the barely secret In-N-Out Burger "hold the bread
Posted by: louboutin schaussures | October 07, 2011 at 07:49 PM