SANDRA NKAKE / “Sandra Nkaké Mixtape”

sandra nkake 17.jpg 
Sandra Nkake is from Cameroun. She was born in Yaoundé on November 15, 1973. Her mother frequently flew back and forth between Africa and Europe. Before she was walking she was flying, and before she was talking she heard both French and English.

Her mother listened to BB King while pregnant with Sandra. Years later when Sandra was carrying her child, she heard BB King and inexplicably was emotionally overwhelmed and started crying.

At the beginning of her college years she journeyed to the Sorbonne with the intentions of becoming an English teacher but then stage, film and television began to offer an alternative, music came later but you would not know it from watching her perform or by listening to her debut album.

To debut at 35 in the young-oriented music industry is a rarity and, in this case, a delightful rarity. Mansaadi (which means Little Mother) is an accomplished outing—the songs are well formed, the arrangements full of little surprises with varied textures and off-kilter touches that reward repeated listening.
sandra nkake 22.jpg 
What Sandra Nkake has is taste. She is gimmick free in that she does not over rely on any one technique. The stylistic diversity from minimalist albeit highly effective use of a horn section to subtle arrangements in setting famous poems to music (“Souffles” by West African poet Diop) makes for an album you can listen to repeatedly without boredom.

Sandra evidences wide ranging interests and understanding of the different cultural traditions and impulses that come together in her music. For example, she delves into a classic of French culture when she covers “La Mauvaise Reputation” by Georges Brassens, a World War 2-era poet and songwriter who is considered both influential and radical. But then she also does covers of material by Prince and D’Angelo (the last track, “Higher”).

Note that Ms. Nkaké is totally comfortable in either French or English, a true multi-culturalist. And her diversity goes beyond language, she is also adroit in handling diverse styles and genres of music. One second the jazz or the funk influences are evident, and then the opera and European folk elements surface, and without hesitation, all of that may be chucked aside as Sandra Nkaké employs the sounds and languages of West Africa.
sandra nkake 20.jpg 
I find it interesting that black music from the diaspora is increasingly the worldwide major music of choice for popular expression, especially among the youth and the conscious elements of a given society. Sandra Nkaké epitomizes that trend of a black-based music that reflects diverse cultural traditions and orientations.

What I most like is that Nkaké’s music is organic. The tapestry of sounds grows directly out of her life experiences rather than from some market driven effort to be different, to be other than what she actually is.

Moreover, this music celebrates the sensual while uplifting the mental. These songs offer an extraordinary union of fierce intelligence and uncompromising passion. I am particularly impressed by Sandra’s range as a performer. The album gets the full studio treatment but even her most stripped down performance—“La Mauvaise Réputation” (recorded live @ New Morning club in Paris) with just her voice and her sampler is a rich and satisfying delight.
sandra nkake 33.jpg 
I’ve included performance recordings to compare and contrast with the studio versions. Live Sandra uses a sampler to multi-track her voice, laying down beatbox and backing vocal loops and then singing and improvising atop the tracks. A number of musicians and vocalists are using this technique. Sandra is so good at it, that her vocals come off as though they were a live performance of a large ensemble.

I hope that Sandra Nkaké is able to sustain this level of innovation and complexity over the years. Time after time, we have seen artists arrive with a bang but fade without even so much as a whimper. It is not easy to maintain an edge, to keep pushing, and keep pushing, and keep on pushing.

Because of over a decade of experience performing, acting and dancing, I believe Sandra Nkaké has a great shot at becoming a major artist.

—Kalamu ya Salaam


Sandra Nkaké Mixtape Playlist

sandra nkake mansaadi cover.jpg 
All tracks are from the album Mansaadi except where otherwise noted.
01 “The Way You Walk”
02 “Happy”
03 “Happy” (recorded live @ New Morning club in Paris)
04 “I Miss My Land”
05 “I Miss My Land” (recorded live in concert)
06 “Stay True”
sandra nkake 21.jpg 
07 “Stay True” (recorded live in concert)
08 “La Mauvaise Reputation” (The Bad Reputation)
09 “La Mauvaise Réputation” (recorded live @ New Morning club in Paris)
10 “Time Healed Me”
11 “Fairy Tales”
12 “Disenchanted Son”
13 “Souffles”
sandra nkake 28.jpg 
14 “I Believe”
15 “Higher” (home recording)

This entry was posted on Monday, June 15th, 2009 at 6:47 am and is filed under Contemporary. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.


2 Responses to “SANDRA NKAKE / “Sandra Nkaké Mixtape””

R. Joyce Johnson Says:
June 15th, 2009 at 8:17 pm

This is transformative music! Got a chance to see a few videos, hear your mix and a couple of other songs on her web sites. I will download Mansaadi as soon as I get home. She’s bad to the bone.


Q Says:
June 22nd, 2009 at 10:15 am

Thanks Kalamu for this. Stay True (in Concert) is ths best. I Believe is a good second. There is a rawness and sincerity about them it even when the lyrics are in French. “…the arrangements full of little surprises with varied textures and off-kilter touches that reward repeated listening” indeed! There is some funk-undertones to her music. She sounds like a Les Nubiens older sister. 🙂 My only criticism…the songs seem too short. Almost like samplers.

B.B. King may be an influence, but Donny Hathaway keeps coming to mind.


Leave a Reply



| top |