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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 165
Sunday, 14 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 10:07 UTC
  • UTC10:07
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  • GMT11:07
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← The MonexusCulture

How Angélique Kidjo Made Hope a Political Act

On HOPE!!, her seventeenth studio album, Kidjo refuses despair — mapping a sonic path through the polycrisis with the same urgency that has driven her across five Grammy wins and four decades of defiant artistry.

Monexus News

Angélique Kidjo has never been a comfort-zone artist. Across seventeen studio albums, four decades, and five Grammy wins, the Beninese singer has made a career of refusing the expected register — folding Fela Kuti's Afrobeat fire, James Brown's funk grit, and her own母语 into a sound that refuses national and genre boundaries. Her new album, HOPE!!, released 22 May 2026, arrives at a moment that could easily justify retreat: wars multiplying from Eastern Europe to the Horn of Africa, democratic backsliding in three continents, an information environment engineered to flatten complexity into outrage. Kidjo's response is to make an album the cover art alone declares as a confrontation.

The title is not accidental. It is, in her own framing, a deliberate counterweight to what she describes as a global epidemic of resignation. "Hope can help you find your way through the fog," she told France 24 in a pre-release interview. That metaphor — fog over continent, over generation, over the long emergency of underdevelopment and now something worse — shapes the record's architecture. HOPE!! is not consolation music. It is functional music: built to be used, to accompany action, to soundtrack whatever the listener is doing about the state of things.

A Sound Built for This Moment

The sonic language of HOPE!! draws from a long reach. The grooves are heavy — insistent in the way Kidjo has always insisted, with percussion layers that feel designed for both festival stages and protest routes. The horn arrangements draw on the Afrobeat tradition without retreating into nostalgia, and the album's production carries the fingerprints of collaborators across Lagos, Paris, and New York. What emerges is a record that sounds global in the most literal sense — not global as in diluted, but global as in refusing to be contained by any single market's expectations.

This is significant because the contemporary pop landscape, particularly the Anglophone one, rewards narrowing. Artists are encouraged to find a sound and defend its territory. Kidjo's catalogue is a rebuke to that logic. She has never defended territory. She has crossed it, borrowed from it, left it sounding different when she left.

For listeners encountering Kidjo for the first time — a not uncommon experience for younger audiences in the Global North whose musical education stops at algorithmically curated streams — HOPE!! serves as an accessible entry point while containing the same political charge her work has carried since the early 1990s. The difference is that the charge now lands in an era where the stakes she sang about have become mainstream conversation, even if the policy responses remain inadequate.

What Hope Means When the World Provides Reasons Not to Have It

The album's political valence is not incidental to its aesthetics — it is inseparable from them. Kidjo has spoken openly about the relationship between environmental degradation, extractive economics, and the displacement of African communities. She has used her platform to advocate for the continent's cultural institutions to receive the same protective treatment as its natural resources — a framing that positions the protection of heritage not as sentimentality but as geopolitical necessity.

In this context, HOPE!! functions as an argument. Not an argument against something — that would be too easy, too reactive — but an argument for a mode of being in the world. The album does not pretend that positivity is a strategy; it is clearer than that. It treats hope as a discipline, something you practice when it is least warranted, because the alternative is paralysis. That positioning places Kidjo in a lineage of African artists — Miriam Makeba, Fela, Brenda Fassie, Youssou N'Dour — who understood that joy and resistance are not opposites but co-conspirators.

The Question of Audience

There is a genuine tension in HOPE!!'s position that deserves examination. Kidjo's international profile — Grammy awards, global festival headlining slots, UN appointments — places her in a rare category of African artist whose reach extends well beyond the continent's borders. The question this raises is one that applies to any globally mobile African creative: does that reach come with a cost? Does the work that travels most easily dilute the work that matters most to the communities from which it emerged?

The evidence across Kidjo's catalogue suggests not. She has maintained firm connections to Benin and to the broader Francophone West African cultural ecosystem even as her work has gone global. The collaborations on HOPE!! include significant African contributors, and the album's sonic vocabulary is not designed to translate the continent into a language the Global North already understands — it demands the listener meet it on its own terms. That is a rare thing. It is also, arguably, increasingly commercially viable in an era when audiences in the Global North have demonstrated hunger for music that does not flatter their existing preferences.

Stakes Beyond the Record

The release of HOPE!! arrives at a moment when the African cultural sector is navigating significant turbulence: funding structures that remain heavily dependent on Northern philanthropic and governmental bodies, infrastructure that lags behind the continent's demographic growth, and a streaming economy whose economics still heavily favour artists whose catalogues are managed by Western majors. Kidjo occupies a position within this landscape that few others do — artistically unassailable, institutionally connected, commercially viable without compromise.

What she does with that position matters beyond any single album cycle. HOPE!! is a test case for whether music that refuses to be comfortable can remain commercially viable at scale. It is also a reminder that the continent's most internationally recognized artists have always carried a dual burden — representing their communities to the world while holding the world accountable to those communities. The record handles that burden with characteristic directness. Whether it changes anything will depend on what listeners do after the last track fades.

Desk note: France 24's framing treated the album primarily as a celebrity release; Monexus positioned it within the structural politics of African cultural production and the specific pressures facing globally mobile artists from the continent. The coverage from major Anglophone music publications, where it existed, tended to treat Kidjo as a genre act rather than the political actor she has consistently been.

Wire provenance

This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:

  • https://t.me/france24_en/38472
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ang%C3%A9lique_Kidjo
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Grammy_Awards_and_nominations_received_by_Ang%C3%A9lique_Kidjo
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_Africa_Music_Awards
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