Youssou N'Dour Quotes
-
The question of modernization is central to disturbances in the Middle East and in Africa. Everyone is after modernization, no matter where they come from. But you have to be careful about it, and more importantly, you have to have sense about it.
→ -
When the slaves left Africa, they left us this music. They left us blues.
→ -
In Africa, there is much confusion.... Before, there was no radio, or other forms of communication.... Now, in Africa ... the government talks, people talk, the police talk, the people don't know anymore. They aren't free.
→ -
Western record companies haven't always dealt with African musicians in the best way. Giving them a lot of money and telling them they're going to be bigger than Phil Collins is the wrong way to do it!
→ -
When I'm in Senegal, I can't just sit in isolation making music. People need my help. And the Senegalese people helped create my music. It comes from the country itself.
→ -
In politics, sometimes you have to lie, or you make a promise that you cannot keep.
→ -
Senegal needs to free itself, to rediscover its democracy.
→ -
Politics is politics; art is art. If you play a political role, you have to stop being an artist.
→ -
In the West, you have always associated the Islamic faith 100 percent with Arab culture. This in itself is a fundamentalist attitude and it is mistaken.
→ -
My music is like a spinning ball. It can turn in one direction, and then it comes back to origins.
→ -
I think people should know more of Africa in terms of its joie de vivre, its feeling for life. In spite of the images that one knows about Africa - the economic poverty, the corruption - there's a joy to living and a happiness in community, living together, in community life, which may be missing here in America.
→ -
I grew up with reggae music.
→ -
If you come from Africa with your economic poverty and your cultural riches, and you meet someone like Peter Gabriel or a person from a big record company, and they tell you that what you are doing is marvelous, that makes you feel powerful.
→ -
I respect music, I do. I love it.
→ -
Malaria kills and its main victims are children and women. We can stop this scourge so people can live with dignity and go to work and school.
→ -
My father used to tell me about how musicians don't have respect from people and he was afraid about my future.
→ -
Islam is a peaceful religion.
→ -
Islam has been badly used by a certain ideology.
→ -
I love meeting interesting people and doing things with them.
→ -
I don't really see myself as an actor.
→ -
World music is about taking things from different places and bringing them together - which is great.
→ -
I can assure you that I have never used my media companies for propaganda, and I will never do so.
→ -
Listen, a lot of religions have fundamentalists.
→ -
Travel teaches as much as books.
→ -
I have studied at the school of the world.
→ -
Music in Africa often contains messages. Music in Senegal, and Africa, is never music for music's sake or solely for entertainment. It's always a vehicle for social connections, discussions and ideas.
→ -
I want to use my music to deliver a political message and sometimes to denounce, but I don't want to be a politician.
→ -
People need to see that, far from being an obstacle, the world's diversity of languages, religions and traditions is a great treasure, affording us precious opportunities to recognize ourselves in others.
→ -
Senegal needs a renaissance.
→ -
I'm a modern Muslim. I pray, and if I have a question, I ask someone who is more educated in the religion than me.
→