Eyob Mekonnen

Eyob Mekonnen Yalem (12 October 1975 – 18 August 2013) was an Ethiopian reggae singer-songwriter and musician widely considered as progenitor of reggae music in Ethiopia. His songs were well known for their themes of "love, understanding, and respect".[1]

Eyob Mekonnen
እዮብ መኮነን
Eyob in 2012
Background information
Birth nameEyob Mekonnen Yalem
Born(1975-10-12)12 October 1975
Jijiga, Ethiopia
Died18 August 2013(2013-08-18) (aged 37)
Nairobi, Kenya
Genres
Occupation(s)
  • Singer-songwriter
  • Musician
Years active2000–2013
LabelsYisakal Entertainment
Associated actsZion Band

Early life

Eyob was born in Jijiga in 1975, during the start of the Ethiopian Civil War. His father, Mekonnen Yalem, was an officer in the Ethiopian Army during the Ogaden War, which was credited with inspiring him to impart peaceful messages in songs such as "Nekchalehu" and "Negen Layew".[1] He moved to Addis Ababa, when he was young, and attended school whilst maintaining an interest in music.

Musical career

He joined a five-person band called the Zion Band, which was described as having a "reggae beat with a distinctive Ethiopian cast".[2] The band became a fixture at popular clubs in Addis Ababa, performing opening acts for popular singers like Haileye Tadesse, who sung songs like "Song of the Dominions" (Hule Hule) and "Anthem of the Movement" (Kebetiye). His musical style was unique, not only mixing popular Amharic music with reggae, but also Oromo music, counting Ali Birra as one of his major influences, alongside Bob Marley.[1] In 2010, he released his first album, Man Ende Kal.[2] Although lukewarmly received by audiences at first, as it differed from the often synthesized, electronic music that had prevailed since the era of the Derg and the demise of the big bands of the Haile Selassie era.[3] Slowly, however, the album gained a following and "great national acclaim".[2]

His songs dealt with issues of and promoted "morality, love, peace and social consciousness", themes that made them popular and hard-hitting.[2] In 2010, he embarked on a campaign called "Finding Peace" to help heal rifts caused by the disputes in the parliamentary elections.

In 2012, he released one single known as "Negen Layew" and Haile Root's song as featuring named "Yalalewin". He was beginning to tour abroad, particularly in Canada, Germany, and the Netherlands.[2]

Eyob's second album Erotalehu was posthumously released in 2017.

Illness, death and tributes

On 13 August 2013, Eyob suffered an ischemic stroke brought on by atrial fibrillation and entered a coma, however he was in otherwise good health.[1] His fans and his promoter, Yisakal Entertainment, took to Facebook to post updates on his conditions and raise funds for his treatment on a page called "Let Us Pray for Eyob Mekonnen". Due to these efforts, Eyob was moved to Nairobi on 17 August, however he died on 18 August due to complications.[2] He was credited with sparking a movement towards live music and away from so called "one man bands" and furthering the popularity of reggae and roots music in Ethiopia.[1]

Discography

Album information
Man Ende Kal
  • Released: 2010
  • Singles:

"Nekechalehu" (ነቅቻለሁ)

"Negen Layew"(ነገን ላየው)

"Yene Konjo" (የኔ ቆንጆ)

"Yemeder Dershaya" (የምድር ድርሻዬ)

"Endatefash" (እንዳጠፋሽ)

"Debzezesh" (ድብዝዘሽ)

"Yezebarekalu" (ይዘባርቃሉ)

"Yewenetuan New" (የእውነቷን ነው)

"Yekunkua Felasefa" (የቋንቋ ፈላስፋ)

"Wekil Nesh" (ወኪል ነሽ)

"Rekeda" (ረኪዳ)

"Man Ende Kal" (ማን እንደቃል)

Erotalehu
  • Released: 2017
  • Singles:

"Semahuachew" (ሰማኋቸሁ)

"Tekekel Nesh" (ትክክል ነሽ)

"Anchi" (አንቺ)

"Tetereche" (ተጠርቼ)

"Yegabezkuachew" (የጋበዝኳቸው)

"Wehajira Welale" (ዋህጂራ ወላሌ)

"Wede Enate Bet" (ወደ እናቴ ቤት)

"Man Yawekal" (ማን ያውቃል)

"Tew Yalshignen" (ተው ያልሽኝን)

"Andebete Tenager" (አደበቴ ተናገር)

"Say" (ሳይ)

"Yilef" (ይለፍ)

"Zim Elalehu" (ዝም እላለሁ)

"Endet Beye" (እንዴት ብዬ)

"Erotalehu" (እሮጣለሁ)

References

  1. Getachew, Samuel. "Why the Voice of Eyob Mekonnen Mattered". Ze Habesha. Retrieved 20 August 2013.
  2. "Popular Ethiopian reggae singer Eyob Mekonnen has died". BBC. Retrieved August 20, 2013.
  3. Eyre, Banning (8 March 2008). "Francis Falceto-Ethiopia: Diaspora and Return". Lissan Magazine. Retrieved 20 August 2013.
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