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Rise
Up by Thomas Mapfumo and the Blacks Unlimited
New
Internationalist
July, 2006
http://www.newint.org/columns/media/music/2006/07/01/rise-up/
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| Thomas
Mapfumo is a veteran musician whose chimurenga (‘struggle’)
songs were at the forefront of the fight for independence |
It
takes a special kind of music to be banned not just by one regime,
but two. From Zimbabwe, Thomas Mapfumo is a veteran musician whose
chimurenga (‘struggle’) songs were at the forefront of the fight
for independence. Now, independence gained, it’s a bettable prospect
that a slew of new songs with titles that translate as ‘Suffering
in Silence’ and ‘What Are They Dying For?’ will be like a red rag
to Robert Mugabe’s Government.
It won’t be
the first time. Like Fela Kuti in Nigeria, Mapfumo is a musician
whose music (in this case, a range of jazz, Shona influences and
the best kind of Afropop) has, by necessity, become a radical vehicle.
The passions of Rise Up, Mapfumo’s first album since 1999’s Chimurenga
Explosion, a release which was denied airplay in Zimbabwe, are acute:
HIV, poverty, the future of his country. It’s also an album that
was made in exile – Mapfumo left his homeland soon after Explosion
and now lives in Oregon – far from the powerhouse that his early
Blacks Unlimited afforded him. Even so, Rise Up shows Mapfumo still
packs a punch: these 11 songs are, for all their often gentle music,
tanked up on righteous indignation. His 14-strong band, one that
includes a sensitive brass section and some lovely weaving mbira
sounds, beats its message home beautifully: there’s still a world
to struggle for.
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