Thione Seck was one of the most influential artists in West African history, fronting the iconic fusion band Orchestra Baobab during the 1970s before pioneering the Senegalese genre of mbalax music with his own band, Raam Daan, throughout the 1980s. Born in Dakar, Senegal, on March 12, 1955, he was raised by a family of Wolof griot singers and joined Orchestra Baobba's lineup in 1974. Still a teenager at the time at the time of his enlistment, Thione Seck remained with the group for more than half a decade, appearing on iconic records like 1978's Baobab à Paris Vol. 1: On verra ça and 1981's Mohamadou Bamba before leaving the group to focus on his solo endeavors. Often credited to "Thione Seck and Raam Daan," his solo albums made him one of Senegal's biggest stars during the 1980s. Thione Seck's songs presented a modernized form of mbalax music that combined native Senegalese traditions with a multitude of African and Western influences, including Bollywood film soundtracks and Congolese rumba. He began releasing his music internationally during the 1990s and 2000s, showcasing his strength as a live act with 2000's XV Anniversary Live! and earning four nominations for BBC Radio 3's World Music Album of the Year with 2005's Orientation. Legal issues involving counterfeit cash sidelined his career during the second half of the 2010s, and he succumbed to an undisclosed illness on March 14, 2021, passing away in his hometown of Dakar at 66 years old.
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