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Haunting, defiant dispatches from Zimbabwe's Chiwoniso
Eugene
Holley, Jr., Village Voice
September 03, 2008
http://www.villagevoice.com/2008-09-03/music/haunting-defiant-dispatches-from-zimbabwe-s-chiwoniso/
When
she released her debut CD, Ancient Voices, in 1997, the Washington-born,
Zimbabwe-raised singer Chiwoniso "Chi" Maraire—born
into a family of musicians and raised on r&b, rap, pop, and
Zimbabwean chimurenga music—was standing on the verge of global
diva stardom with the likes of Oumare Sangra and Angelique Kidjo.
But she had kids, and made the not terribly diva-esque decision
to concentrate on raising them. Now, Rebel Woman, her first release
in 11 years, surfaces not a moment too soon: With her homeland crippled
by hyperinflation, poverty, and political upheaval fermented by
a hero-turned-dictator, Chiwoniso's songs of love, justice, and
freedom have equal resonance from Harare to Harlem.
The furious and feather-voiced
spark plug is backed by an eclectic, pan-African lineup, featuring
guitarists Louis Mhlanga and Ivan Duran from Belize, South African
trumpeter Hugh Masekela, and Zimbabwean drummer Sam Mataure. Rebel's
12 multilingual tracks swing and sing with stinging guitar riffs,
ska hornlines, choral call-and-response, propulsively percussive
counterpoint, hypnotic mbira thumb piano, and hand-held hosho shakers.
Selections like "Vanorapa" and "Matosoti (Land of
Peace)" focus on the healing powers of traditional elders and
economics in the Shona language; English selections like the mid-tempo,
Afro-anthemic "Kurima" and the tearful title track—a
tribute to the female soldier, with the hauntingly sung line "She
took off her hat and she leaned against a tree/Her rifle by her
side, rough-worn hands upon her knee"—show that Chiwoniso
channels Sheryl Crow and Joan Baez as easily as she does artists
who prefer her ancestral tongue. To riff on Chinua Achebe, things
are falling apart in Zimbabwe. But great women always make art out
of man-made ashes.
*Chiwoniso
plays Joe's Pub September 10
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