Ya Kid K
Ya Kid K | |
---|---|
Birth name | Manuela Barbara Kamosi Moaso Djogi |
Born | Kinshasa, Zaïre | 26 January 1972
Occupation(s) | Singer-songwriter, rapper |
Ya Kid K (born Manuela Barbara Kamosi Moaso Djogi,[1] 26 January 1972) is a Congolese-Belgian hip hop artist. Ya Kid K, besides being a solo artist, is also known for her works for the dance/house act Technotronic. Her sister is Karoline 'Leki' Kamosi.
Biography
At the age of 11 she moved to Belgium, later moving to cities in America such as Chicago (where she explored the emerging sounds of house music that was being innovated in Chicago, and hip-hop), and later moved to Dallas, Texas. After moving back to Belgium from the US, she helped form a hip hop label called Fresh Beat Productions. She was part of the dance project Technotronic,[2] which debuted with a major worldwide hit in 1989, "Pump Up The Jam", although her contribution was initially uncredited (except for her name being printed on the disc[3]).
Singles
Although she wrote the lyrics and sang vocals on "Pump Up The Jam",[4] Technotronic had the fashion model Felly Kilingi perform in the video. The second single "Get Up! (Before the Night Is Over)" was Ya Kid K's debut music video with Technotronic. In 1992, Technotronic and Ya Kid K had a hit with "Move This," another single from 1989's Pump Up the Jam: The Album.
She additionally lent her voice to Hi Tek 3, a dance project whose only single, "Spin that Wheel," appeared on the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles motion picture soundtrack.
After the single "Rockin’ Over The Beat," she had a child with MC Eric who also performed a Technotronic hit titled "This Beat is Technotronic." While Jo Bogaert hired new singers for Technotronic's third album, Body to Body, Ya Kid K returned after limited success of her own album, One World Nation. This album contained many different musical and, in particular, vocal styles.
In 1995, Technotronic re-emerged in the U.S. with Ya Kid K as its front vocalist, again with limited success of the album Recall. On the track "Are You Ready," she teamed up with Daisy Dee, who already did a cover version of "This Beat is…" with M.C. B. In 1996, a Ya Kid K single titled "Rock My World" was released. She appeared in June 2000 on Technotronic's single "The Mariachi." In 2002, she released Take a Trip on Semini Records.
In 1997, Ya Kid K also provided fresh vocals for the 2 Skinnee J's cover of "Pump Up the Jam" entitled, "BBQ". She sang "Pump up the gas grill," as the chorus.[5]
In October 2005, Ya Kid K made a guest appearance on Public Warning the debut album of female MC Lady Sovereign.
In 2011, she returned with the song "DO UC ME Standing", and on Baronic Arts, "Comes Love". In 2014 she released some new tracks and an album called "Stalled constructions". Also she worked with the German dance project Maviic for the single release "Moja Mbili Tatu"
Discography
- 1992 One World Nation (The Kids Shall Overcome) SBK/EMI Records
- 2014 Stalled Constructions (Digital Download)
References
- ^ O'Callaghan, Mary Anne (2 April 1990). "Group'beats' club music into US mainstream". The Deseret News. Retrieved 6 February 2010.
- ^ T. Jones IV, James (4 May 1990). "Pumping up the jam; House music builds on its funky beat". USA Today. Retrieved 6 February 2010.
- ^ Images for Technotronic Featuring Felly - Pump Up The Jam. Discogs.com. Retrieved on 2012-04-26.
- ^ Freedberg, Michael (29 April 1990). "You Can Dance to It, But Is It Worth a Listen?". New York Times. Retrieved 6 February 2010.
- ^ 2 Skinnee J's-BBQ. YouTube. Retrieved on 2012-04-26.
External links
- Use dmy dates from July 2013
- 1972 births
- Living people
- People from Kinshasa
- Female rappers
- Belgian female singers
- Belgian hip hop musicians
- Hip house musicians
- Naturalised citizens of Belgium
- Belgian expatriates in the United States
- Democratic Republic of the Congo emigrants to Belgium
- Democratic Republic of the Congo expatriates in the United States
- English-language singers of Belgium
- Belgian people of African descent