Papa Noël Nedule
Papa Noël Nedule | |
|---|---|
| Birth name | Antoine Nedule Monswet |
| Also known as | Papa Noël |
| Born | 29 December 1940 Léopoldville, Belgian Congo (modern-day Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo) |
| Died | 11 November 2024 (aged 83) Draveil, Essonne, Île-de-France |
| Genres | |
| Occupations |
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| Instrument(s) | Guitar vocals |
| Years active | 1950s–2024 |
| Labels |
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| Formerly of |
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| Spouse | Dadie Nedule |
Antoine Nedule Monswet (29 December 1940 – 11 November 2024), known professionally as Papa Noël Nedule or simply Papa Noël, was a Congolese rumba singer-songwriter and guitarist. A seminal figure in Congolese and African popular music, he is widely regarded as one of the greatest Congolese solo guitarists. Associated with the "African Jazz School" of Congolese rumba—alongside figures such as Emmanuel Antoine Tshilumba wa Baloji (Tino Baroza) and Nico Kasanda—Papa Noël helped shape the early rhythmic and stylistic foundations of the genre. His guitar style, described by cultural historian Richard M. Shain as evoking "a rippling sound reminiscent of the Congolese thumb piano likembe", contributed to shaping the sound of modern Congolese rumba.
Born in Léopoldville, Belgian Congo (present-day Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo), Nedule began his career in the late 1950s, performing with Léon Bukasa's backing band Jazz Mango (1957), and later playing with influential groups including Rock-a-Mambo (1958), Maquina Loca (1959–1960), Les Bantous de la Capitale (1961–1963), African Jazz (1964), Orchestre Cobantou (1965), Orchestre Bamboula (1967), and TPOK Jazz (1978). In 1989, he settled permanently in France.
In 1973, the government of Zaire commissioned him to produce the Anthologie de la Musique Zaïroise Moderne, Volumes 1 and 2, which he brought together pioneering artists such as Antoine Wendo Kolosoy, Camille Feruzi, Manuel d'Oliveira, Lucie Elenga, Léon Bukasa, and Adou Elenga to record and preserve key works from the golden era of Congolese music (1950–1958). That same year, Nedule was awarded the National Prize for Merit in Culture and the Arts (Prix national de mérite de la culture et des arts), an honor he received again in 2025, conferred by the Congolese National Assembly on behalf of President Joseph Kabila.