Sep 23/06
Escaping Sudan
Many of you probably have Emmanuel Jal and Abdel Gadir Salim’s album Ceasefire already but I haven’t yet posted it on Benn loxo.
Nominated for the 2006 BBC World Music Awards, Emmanuel Jal has risen from obscurity to become one of Africa’s most well-known rappers.
He’s a good musician in his own right, but Jal’s life story makes journalists drool. He was a child-soldier in Sudan from a young age until was smuggled into Kenya by a British aid worker. In Nairobi, Jal flourished as a musician despite the aid worker dying in a car crash. He eventually started giving concerts for homeless kids as well as participating in the local hiphop scene as an MC.
For 2005’s Ceasefire Jal collaborated with Sudanese oud-playing legend, Abdel Gadir Salim. Jal raps and sings in English, Arabic, Swahili and Dinka while Salim strums it out, occasionally busting in with his own vocals. The combination of old-shcool and new-school East African sounds works really well. It’s no surprise that this album has become a success, with or without the “media-friendly-so-now” Jal bio.
You can pick up Ceasefire over at the World Music Network or at any good record shop. You might have heard Jal on the latest War Child/Help compilation, too.
ps- there won’t be any new posts until the beginning of October. Time for some time in the sun, you know.
Emmanuel Jal & Abdel Gadir Salim – Elengwen
Tags: hiphop, rap, sudan








do what you do man rapping is my life…after 2 yaers i will go buck to sudan and start my dream.holla buck man keep it real
sudan there wos a big war up there so many poeple they dont like war.in 1991 we escap from sudan to kenya i wos 1 year old.
I have been a fan of Emmanuel Jal, I have also seen a lot of his videos and what he did was inspirational and as an example. I really applaud him for being an example to all. I have visited his site The Emma Academy Project, and he is actually committing too, to build a school in Leer, Sudan, in honor of Emma McCune, who saved him from war.