Féfé
Samuël Adebiyi, better known by his stage name Féfé (formerly Féniksi), is a French singer and rapper. Féfé was born in Clichy, Hauts-de-Seine, France on 18 January 1976 to Yoruba parents from Nigeria. He formed the rap group OFX with KLR in 1996 where Adebiyi was known as PHNX (also read as Féniksi). The two released the maxi Je n'ose y croire, after which a third member Vicelow joined in. The trio made a number of appearances on various compilations and mixtapes. KLR died in April 1998. OFX including Féniksi became part of a bigger formation, the hip hop collective Saïan Supa Crew, that besides OFX, included two other formations, Explicit Samouraï and Simple Spirit. After KLR's death, Saïan Supa Crew released an album titled KLR in his memory in 1999. In 2002, OFX released the maxi OVNI 2. It was followed by another OFX album, Roots in 2003. In its turn, Saïan Supa Crew would release X-Raisons in 2001 and Hold-Up in 2005. OFX eventually faded and is no longer active. Its remaining member Féfé has continued his career with solo releases like Jeune à la retraite released on Polydor on 12 October 2009, and on 20 May 2013, his second solo album Le charme des premiers jours again on Polydor. He co-wrote "Le malade imaginaire", a main song in the soundtrack of the 2002 film The Truth About Charlie, in addition to co-writing the track "Intro". In 2010, he sang the French version of "Wavin' Flag", the Coca-Cola-sponsored 2010 World Cup song. Féfé sang the French lyrics with songwriter, the Somalian-Canadian K'naan performing the English lyrics. The Féfé version credit to "K'naan featuring Féfé" reached number 2 on SNEP, the official French Singles Chart. In 2011, he performed with Aṣa in Sydney. Source: Article "Féfé" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Known For
Credits
- 2019 · Féfé et Leeroy 365 Jours Live à l'Élysée Montmartre as Self
- 2018 · Johnny made in France as Self
- 2017 · Taratata fête ses 25 ans 100% live au Zénith as Self
- 2008 · N'oubliez pas les paroles - Primes événementiels as Self
- 1993 · Taratata as Performer
- 1985 · Victoires de la musique as Self