Music has more than its share of forgotten stars and underappreciated figures. There have been happy endings for some, such as the backup singers in the Oscar-winning "20 Feet From Stardom" documentary or even the members of the multi-platinum Buena Vista Social Club, but most aren't so lucky.
Guitarist Siama Matuzungidi left his home in a Jesuit seminary (where his father was a chef) in the rural western part of the Democratic Republic of the Congo in 1971 at age 17. He passed through Uganda, Kenya, Japan and Dubai before coming to Minnesota with little fanfare as the husband of a Peace Corps volunteer — he was finally cleared in part after Sen. Paul Wellstone, D-Minn., wrote to the U.S. Embassy in Nairobi on Siama's behalf.
"She never told me it was cold here, and I was too excited to read about it," Siama recalled with a laugh. "We arrived here in April of 1995, and I thought it was quite nice. Then the winter of 1996 was a bad one and I was like, 'Oh, my!' "
Siama, as he's professionally known, recorded hundreds of soukous songs — a style of upbeat guitar-driven Afro-pop heard in bars and clubs across Central and East Africa — in Nairobi and even penned some radio hits in the music's golden era of the 1970s and '80s. But he didn't lead the bands, and songwriting credit often went to the bandleaders even if they didn't write the songs.
Nonetheless, Siama's nimble guitar work was strong enough to be recognized and celebrated by hard-core soukous fans from around the world and even some Kenyan immigrants here in Minnesota.
"People would meet him and remember his songs or a favorite club where he played and they would cry and call him a legend," says Dallas Johnson, a local singer and songwriter who is his collaborator and wife. "He never told me because he was too humble. He didn't have a discography of his works, so I spent dozens of hours online trying to pull it all together. It was just phenomenal what I found with the help of some record collectors who specialized in the music."
After years of playing in bands in Minnesota such as Shangoya as well as current groups Marimba Africa, Afrobilly, Socaholix and Cyril Paul, Siama's music and world have broadened.
The proof is in the upcoming release of his first album as a leader. Titled "Rivers — From the Congo to the Mississippi," the album features the 62-year-old guitarist/singer/songwriter leading a Minnesota-based rainbow coalition that includes local gospel and R&B icon J.D. Steele, Carnatic veena player Nirmala Rajasekar, Tenzin Ngawang on dranyen (Tibetan lute), classical cellist Jacqueline Ultan, pedal steel guitarist Joe Savage as well as a core jazz band.