The Star Malaysia - Star2

Guitar maker of Kinshasa

From a wooden hut, using basic tools, he makes the sound of a country emerge in wood.

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IN 2010, a group of Kinshasa street musicians in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, several of them left paraplegic by childhood polio, caused a sensation in Europe.

Calling themselves Staff Benda Bilili, the penurious band wowed audiences with Congolese rumba, combining pounding rhythms with scintillat­ing melodies and solos.

As unique as the group’s tale of their rise from the streets was their gritty guitar sound – all the work of a modest, self-taught Congolese luthier, Jean-Luther Misoko Nzalayala, who goes by the trade name of Socklo.

Benda Bilili wielded instrument­s in eccentric shapes and exuberant colours, their frets, bridges and nuts made from scrap metal that had been cut and bent by Socklo’s rudimentar­y tools, producing an exceptiona­l timbre.

“It was powerful, bright, fullbodied and yet as raw as an uncooked onion, fizzing with the kind of raunch that many rock guitarists have been searching for in vain since the end of the 1960s,” Andy Morgan, a specialist in African music, recorded on his blog.

As a youngster, Socklo wanted to be a football player, but he fell sick with rheumatism, “and that’s what pushed me into music”.

The notion of making a guitar came to Socklo when he was still in secondary school, and wondered if he could reproduce the instrument that he was learning to play.

“My first guitar was a joke,” he says with a laugh.

“If you put on the strings and tried to tune them, the fretboard bent – there was no way you could play it.”

The young Socklo studied a while at the Higher Institute of Applied Techniques in Kinshasa where he “did electronic­a”.

He went on to sign his guitars “Ir Socklo” – the “Ir” stands for “Ingenieur” (French for engineer) and then launched his career as a luthier in 1978.

Over the decades, thousands of instrument­s have emerged from his workshop in the rundown Lemba district of Kinshasa – a hut built of wood planks, breeze blocks and sheet iron. The floor is littered with wooden debris.

On a makeshift workbench, Socklo employs the simplest of hand tools: a saw, a plane, a few wooden chisels, and a hammer and anvil to make frets from pieces of metal.

On the wall are portraits of successive Congolese leaders: Mobutu Sese Seko (1965-1997), Laurent Kabila (1997-2001) and his son Joseph Kabila (in power since 2001). They share the space with an ageless poster of Michael Jackson.

His hair cropped short and turning white, the 57-year-old Socklo explains that he learned how to make guitars on his own. Nowadays, he is training apprentice­s as best as he can.

Pragmatist without power

Over the years, Socklo has managed to get a jigsaw and a few other electronic tools, but using them is hard because of Kinshasa’s frequent power cuts, so he is pragmatic.

“On days when I have power, I do all the work that needs electricit­y, and when there’s no current, I just get on with the rest.”

Musicians who have tried out Socklo guitars agree that they have a special sound, typically Congolese.

For the sound box, the maker uses locally produced plywood, while the fretboard can be made of wenge, a tough tropical wood that can be hard to work.

For a basic acoustic guitar, Socklo makes treble strings from brake cables that he patiently cuts to size. Bass strings come from a machine he invented that spins copper wire.

When it comes to electric guitars or electro-acoustic instrument­s, Socklo buys the pickups, “preferably European ones”, as it would be too onerous to make them in his workshop.

For Jupiter & Pepe

In all, Socklo believes he has “made and sold more than 10,000 guitars”, but the estimate is on the high side, since he also says that he turns out between two and three guitars a week. Moreover, some special orders require work that takes more time.

But one thing is certain. At prices varying from US$35 (RM147) and US$50 (RM210) for an acoustic guitar or bass and rising to between US$150 and US$200 (RM600 and RM840) for an electric or electroaco­ustic guitar, Socklo’s instrument­s are affordable even in the dire poverty that is the daily lot of most of the 10 million residents in Kinshasa.

Countless musicians in the Democratic Republic of Congo, including Jupiter Bokondji (Okwess Internatio­nal) and Pepe Felly Manuaku, have used guitars made by Socklo or his rival across town, Almaz.

In Europe, Socklo’s reputation has been spread by the likes of Belgian jazz guitarist Philip Catherine. His visitors’ book in Kinshasa testifies to a list of clients hailing from Britain, France, the United States and Venezuela.

With orders piling up, Socklo has little time left to play music himself.

“I used to play the guitar and I made people dance,” he says cheerfully, “but today, it’s my guitars that lead the dance.” – AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? Socklo in his humble guitar workshop where he trains apprentice­s ‘as best he can’, and from which emerges guitars used by top musicians.
— AFP Socklo in his humble guitar workshop where he trains apprentice­s ‘as best he can’, and from which emerges guitars used by top musicians.

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