Senegal: Cheikh Lô returns with Maame after decade-long hiatus
By Alfred Tamakloe
30 Sep 2025 - 11:18
Senegalese music icon Cheikh Lô has released his first studio album in ten years, marking a significant return to the global music scene. Titled Maame, the 12-track project was issued on 26 September through World Circuit Records in LP, CD, and digital formats. The album explores themes of ancestry, unity, love, and spiritual resilience while showcasing Lô’s distinctive blend of mbalax, Afro-Cuban rhythms, and soul.
According to World Circuit Records, Maame is “an expansive and deeply personal work born from isolation, resilience, and spiritual devotion.” Named in honour of his late spiritual guide, Maame Massamba Ndiaye, who passed away in 2014, the album also pays tribute to Cheikh Ahmadou Bamba, founder of Senegal’s Mouride Brotherhood, and Mame Cheikh Ibrahima Fall, founder of the Baye Fall movement. Recorded during and after the 2021 global lockdown, Maame reflects a period of introspection and renewal for Lô, who built a home studio to work on the album alongside his son and engineer, Mame Massamba Ndigel Ndiaye Lô.
The demos caught the attention of producer Nick Gold, who helped bring the project to fruition with musicians from Senegal, Benin, Congo, the US, England, Canada, and the Czech Republic. Lô composed, arranged, and performed most of the instruments himself, resulting in a soundscape that weaves together Afro-acoustic, Afro-blues, reggae, rumba, and classical elements. Traditional African instruments such as the kora, balafon, sabar, and talking drum feature prominently, grounding the work in its cultural roots.
Beyond its musical depth, Maame carries strong social and humanitarian messages. On ‘African Development’, Lô calls for continental unity, while ‘Carte d’Identité’ addresses statelessness, echoing his advocacy as a UNHCR ambassador. Other songs reflect on personal and societal values, including kindness and dignity, alongside tender love ballads that reveal the artist’s softer side. Sung in Wolof, Dioula, Malinké, and French, the album underscores Lô’s multilingual and pan-African identity.
Born in Burkina Faso in 1955 to Senegalese parents, Cheikh Lô grew up surrounded by diverse musical influences ranging from Congolese rumba and Cuban son to West African griot traditions. His breakthrough came in 1996 with Ne La Thiass, produced by Youssou N’Dour, which introduced his signature fusion of African and Latin sounds to international audiences. Over subsequent decades, he has collaborated with legends such as Manu Dibango, Tony Allen, and Ibrahim Ferrer, earning recognition as one of Africa’s most distinctive musical voices.
Maame is available for streaming and download on major digital platforms.
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