Lo spent years playing what the Africans call varieté, an international mix that has changed with the times--jazz and Afro-Cuban salsa in the `60s, Congolese rumba and more salsa in the `70s, reggae and more salsa in the `80s. Lo internalized all of this, and when he invests his arrangements with these influences, he does it so subtly that you can't quite pin them down. The music really moves. It proves that good arranging rather than force or bluster is what makes a groove deep. On the flamenco flavored title track, Lo's clear, slightly rough-edged voice rises from speech into song, and the music rises with it, cooling off periodically with each repeat of the song's delightful, descending refrain.
West Africa has produced the continent's most powerful singers, and Lo easily earns a high position in the pantheon. If his keening vocal in songs like "Dokandeme" or "Cheikh Ibra Fall" suggests a spiritual bent, that's because Lo is a Baye Fall, a member of an Islamic mystical brotherhood that champions hard work and simple living. Most of Lo's themes here stem from his faith, and that sense of visionary certainty fuels the music the way Rastafarianism fuels the best of reggae. Track after track, the music's brisk levity and Lo's sensationally committed vocals make for pop that soars, transcending all confinements of genre.
Contributed by Banning Eyre for www.afropop.org