Ruy Mingas: The Voice of Angola's Anthem
Nephew of semba's founder, he set a freedom poem to music and wrote the national anthem
Pioneers1 min de lectura2 citas
Some artists give a nation its dance; Ruy Mingas gave Angola its anthem — a semba singer whose voice became inseparable from the country's independence.[1]
Heir to a tradition
Ruy Alberto Vieira Dias Rodrigues Mingas was born on 12 May 1939, nephew of Liceu Vieira Dias, one of the creators of semba and leader of the legendary group N'Gola Ritmos.[1] Following in his uncle's footsteps as a singer, composer, and guitarist, Mingas worked squarely in the semba tradition while drawing on Angola's poetry of resistance.[1]
Monangambé and the anthem
Drawn to verse since adolescence, Mingas set music to "Monangambé" — a poem by António Jacinto whose title means "worker," evoking the forced labor of colonial Angola — creating one of his best-known songs.[1] His other classics include "Makesu" and "Birin Birin," but his most enduring work is the music of "Angola Avante," the national anthem of independent Angola.[1]
Why it matters
Mingas embodied the link between semba and Angolan nationhood; like Bonga's "Mona Ki Ngi Xica", his music turned a dance genre into the soundtrack of liberation.[2] Later a government minister and ambassador, he carried that legacy into public life until his death in 2024 — a founding voice of the music that would one day give rise to kizomba.[1]
Referencias
- 1.Ruy Mingas — Wikipedia, 2026
- 2.Portuguese-speaking Africa: 10 songs for the end of a colonial empire — Pan African Music, 2026