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Congo in Harlem: The Rumba Kings

  • maysles documentary center 343 Malcolm X Boulevard New York, NY, 10027 United States (map)

THE RUMBA KINGS

The Rumba Kings is screening for free in the cinema on Friday, 10/14, at 7:30pm as part of Congo in Harlem 14.

2021, 94 min , Dir. Alan Brain

USA, DR Congo French and Lingala (with English subtitles)

The Rumba Kings is a joyous exploration of the liberating power of music. In the 1950s, when the Democratic Republic of the Congo was still under harsh Belgian rule, a generation of Congolese musicians decided to use popular music to fight colonial oppression. They fused traditional African rhythms with Afro-Cuban music to create the musical genre known as Congolese rumba, an infectious groove that provided a space of freedom and resistance against the cruelty and humiliation that the Congolese were facing in subjugation. After its birth, the electrifying Congolese rumba beat never stopped. Congolese rumba carried the country through its quest for independence, producing the most famous African independence anthem ever created, conquering the entire continent with its captivating guitar sounds, and forging the identity of an entire nation. On one level, The Rumba Kings is the stunning story of how the Congolese rumba sound developed and later conquered Africa. On another level, the film is an emotional statement about how music can break barriers, heal wounds, and bring hope. Through original interviews, music recordings, archival footage, and never-before-seen live music performances, The Rumba Kings is the journey of the sound that shaped a nation and gave Africa its own musical stars such as Franco Luambo and the OK Jazz orchestra, Grand Kallé and Dr. Nico and the African Jazz orchestra, who were as popular across Africa as any famous western rock band. Sit back, press play, pump up the volume and meet The Rumba Kings. Because Congo’s real treasure does not lie underground.

The film will be followed by Q&A w/Lubangi Muniania.