Description
Born on a Monday in 1945 in Tsévié, Togo, about 20 miles north of the capital city Lomé, to a Togolese father of Nigerian decent and a mother of Ghanaian origin, Georgette Adjoavi Bellow a.k.a. Bella Bellow is Togo’s most celebrated singer/songwriter, performing her songs in both French and Ewe.
Making her first international appearance in 1966, representing Togo at the first World Festival of Negro Arts in Dakar, Senegal, her country’s favorite singer hooked up with the ambitious Paris-based Togolese producer Gérard Akueson in 1968, who set out to position her as the next Miriam Makeba.
Akueson’s aesthetic seemed to be based on the goal of packaging African music for upmarket European audiences, with snazzy arrangements, Broadway-ready choruses and Ipi Tombi-esque exotic ambience, as heard on Akue releases such as “Bem-Bem”, “O Senye” and “Zelie”.
Bellow parted ways with Akueson in 1971 and returned to Togo, but not before she recorded some grittier sides with Manu Dibango, such as “Dasi Ko”.






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