Helsinki-Cotonou Ensemble

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Helsinki-Cotonou Ensemble in Montreal in 2016.

Helsinki-Cotonou Ensemble is a FinnishBeninese afrobeat and funk band. Its leading lights are the Finnish guitarist Janne Halonen and the Beninese singer, percussionist and saxophonist Noël Saïzonou.

The history of the band[edit]

The history of the band had its origins in Janne Halonen’s interest in the music of the Beninese guitarist Lionel Loueke. “I was disturbed by the fact that I did not understand that music at all. I liked the end result, but I had no ability to analyze it at all,” Halonen said to the Finnish news magazine Suomen Kuvalehti in 2015. He sought a residency in Villa Karo in Benin, and before his trip to Africa he went to Gothenburg in order to see a concert by Herbie Hancock, because Loueke played in his band. After the concert, Halonen was able to meet with Loueke in his hotel, and Loueke gave him an introduction to West African music. He also sent word to his friends in Benin that a Finnish acquaintance of his would be coming to the country. Halonen then went to Villa Karo for six weeks in 2009.[1]

On his first evening in Benin, there was a knock on his hotel room door, and he was told to take his guitar with him and follow his visitors. Outside there was a pick-up truck with a guitar amplifier at the back. “A local band invited me to the stage at a club and introduced me to the audience. I played with them through the night, just trying to tag along as best as I could.” Halonen says that that night changed the course of his life. A little later he met Noël Saïzonou in Grand Popo, who had heard that a Finnish guitarist was looking for him. Saïzonou then became his most important collaborator in Benin.[1]

In 2011, Saïzonou visited Finland in order to make music together with Halonen. They formed a band with Juha Räsänen on drums and Sampo Riskilä on bass.[2]

They soon understood that in order to run a band on two continents they could not do it in a conventional way, with a record deal and a booking agent. They had to run the band as a business enterprise, and for that reason Halonen, Riskilä and Räsänen founded a cooperative.[1] However, later they were able to secure a record deal with a record company called Bafe’s Factory.

In 2012, Halonen visited Benin again, this time together with Räsänen and Riskilä. Together with local musicians, they practised daily, played three concerts and recorded and album called Beaucoup De Piment!, which was mixed and then released in Finland the following year. After the release of the album, they went on a tour of 13 dates in Finland, playing many of the country's major festivals.[2][3]

The second album, Fire, Sweat & Pastis, was released in 2015 and the third one, We Are Together, in 2018. "After six years, the hard-working band is still going strong and on record, they are more convincing than ever… The band, which plays a fusion of afrobeat, jazz and funk, sounds more focused, once they get into the groove. Perhaps they are now more together, having a bit more pop sound than before", wrote the Finnish newspaper Helsingin Sanomat about the album.[4]

At the end of May 2019, the band acted as hosts for the World Village Festival in Helsinki.[5]

Band members[edit]

Releases[edit]

Studio albums[edit]

Live album[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Sorjanen, Axa (6 March 2015). "Hän: Janne Halonen. Paula Koivuniemen entinen kesäkitaristi perusti voodoosta rytminsä ammentavan bändin, joka menestyy maailmalla" [‘He: Janne Halonen. Paula Koivuniemi’s former summer guitarist founded a band that plays voodoo music and has success in the wider world.’]. Suomen Kuvalehti (in Finnish). Helsinki: Otavamedia. pp. 54–57. Retrieved 30 April 2019.
  2. ^ a b "Helsinki-Cotonou Ensemble on Facebook". Facebook. Retrieved 27 April 2018.
  3. ^ "Finn-Funky Vodun: Helsinki-Cotonou Ensemble Conjure Up Musical Brotherhood on Fire, Sweat and Pastis". helsinki.rockpaperscissors.biz. Retrieved 27 April 2018.
  4. ^ Uusitorppa, Harri (18 April 2018). "Helsinki-Cotonou tiivistää tyyliään" [‘Helsinki-Cotonou Ensemble getting tighter’]. Helsingin Sanomat. Sanoma. p. B 5. Retrieved 27 April 2018.
  5. ^ "World Village Festival 20: Helsinki-Cotonou Ensemble & Friends". World Village Festival. Retrieved 6 May 2019.
  6. ^ "Helsinki-Cotonou Ensemble in Discogs". Discogs. Retrieved 27 April 2018.