Karin Mensah is a classically trained singer from Cape Verde, whose preferred genre is jazz and traditional music from West Africa. She is a music educator who has served as the founder and director of the Accademia Superiore di Canto in Verona, Italy, since 2004.
After her completion of school, Mensah recorded several songs in various genres including blues, chanson, funk, jazz, Latin, and the traditional morna style of Cape Verde. Some of these early releases included Morna de Cabo Verde, La vie en rose... et les plus grandes chansons françaises, "Ayo" sung in Wolof in the collection Salsa Mundo, Cabo Verde, and Souvenirs de Paris. She participated in the humanitarian project Capo Verde Terra D'Amore, which was a compilation of various artists in a series of five CDs, whose proceeds were donated to the World Food Programme. All of the artists involved in the project worked gratis so that the proceeds could go directly to African aid. Out of that project, Mensah created another album, Orizzonti, in which she sang the traditional Cape Verdean songs in Italian. In 2014, she released Lelio Swing based upon the music of Lelio Luttazzi. She worked with other Italian artists on the album, translating the French versions of songs, and adding Latin rhythms. Mensah also began teaching students and writing a book on music instruction. Her first book was called L'Arte di Cantare and was published in 2001, to address gaps in education. Many of her students had studied for decades and felt that they had never learned proper breathing and other techniques, so she collected their concerns and created lessons in her book for students of modern music. In 2004, she founded and became the director of the Accademia Superiore di Canto in Verona, Italy. The school has a cooperative agreement with the Academy of Music of Verona so that students can earn teaching credentials. In addition to traditional music courses in a variety of genres, the school also offers work with a speech therapist to improve diction. Mensah recognized the importance of these types of interdisciplinary studies because she had to struggle with learning languages and technique when she emigrated from Africa. She served as part of the jury in the Channel 5 television program Friends of Maria de Filippi, which was a program searching for new singing talent. Around the same time, she expanded her previous book and published a new edition with a different publisher. The exposure created from the television show drove sales of the book and it reached the third most sold Italian teaching manuals in 2009. She created the Verona Pop Festival in 2012.
Discography
Morna de Caboverde, Azzurra Music, 2000
La Vie en Rose & Les Plus Belles Chansons Françaises, Edm, 2001