An unconventional female duo that came out of Bordeaux, France, in the 1990s,
Les Nubians offered a jazzy, sophisticated style of R&B that combined French lyrics with the influence of
Sade,
Soul II Soul, hip-hop, and African pop. The duo consists of sisters
Helene and Celia Faussart, who were born in France to a French father and a Cameroonian mother. After living in France as children, the siblings moved with their parents to the African country of Chad in 1985, when
Helene (born 1975) was ten and Celia (born 1979) was six. The sisters lived in Chad for seven years before returning to France as teenagers.
Helene and Celia had been singing most of their lives, and when they first formed
Les Nubians, they were an a cappella group that specialized in covers of R&B, reggae, and African songs. Eventually, they started working with bands and performing original material.
Helene and Celia absorbed a variety of music along the way, and they have expressed admiration for artists ranging from
Ella Fitzgerald and
Abbey Lincoln to
the Fugees and African icons
Miriam Makeba and
Fela Kuti. Their promising debut album,
Princesses Nubiennes, was released by Virgin worldwide in France, Switzerland, and Belgium in June 1998 before coming out on Omtown/Higher Octave in the U.S. in September of that year. It became America's most successful French-language album in more than a decade, and
Les Nubians also graced recordings by
Talib Kweli and
Black Eyed Peas, as well as a Red Hot tribute to
Fela Kuti, Red, Hot & Riot. Sessions for their second album brought the pair to Jamaica, Cameroon, London, and Paris, including a host of intriguing collaborators: top underground rapper
Talib Kweli, fellow Cameroonian
Manu Dibango, pianist
Ray Lema, and broken-beat maestro
IG Culture. The results appeared as
One Step Forward, released in March 2003 by Higher Octave. In 2004, they recorded the track "Going All the Way" featuring reggae star
Beres Hammond for UNITY: The Official Athens 2004 Olympic Games album. In 2005,
Les Nubians issued
Nubians Present Echoes, Chapter One, a collection of spoken word pieces by poets and hip-hop artists from the U.S., France, and Africa. The duo also covered "With or Without You," for inclusion on the compilation
In the Name of Love: Africa Celebrates U2, in 2008.
Les Nubians finally re-entered the recording studio in 2010, emerging with the EP
Nü Revolution Nubiatic in the latter part of the year and the full-length,
Nü Revolution in the spring of 2011. ~ Alex Henderson and Thom Jurek