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Nguva yedu - Our time - Thuba lethu - The Book Café
youth festival
Pamberi
Trust
April 02, 2009
A spectacular concert
in an atmosphere of joy and freedom marked the end of the inaugural
Nguva Yedu ~ Thuba Letu ~ Our Time youth arts festival in Harare.
600 people packed the Book Café car park for the final concert
on Saturday 28 March, which presented 10 hours of outstanding poetry
and some of the southern African region's top music acts.
South Africa's
Gang of Instrumentals inspired the occasion with their tight arrangements
and rock-funk inspired hip hop. The Harare audience erupted as the
group - first time visitors but already well known to Zimbabweans
- delivered one hot song after another.
An electrifying performance
by Ugandan star Jose Chameleon had the audience on its feet, waving,
dancing, laughing and singing along, and fittingly, on the back
of his glitzy stage costume the words "Freedom . . . is
not Free".
When young Zimbabwean
reggae star MicInity appeared as the last act, waving a massive
rasta flag, the crowd was in pungwe (all night) mood. The concert
closed with visitors Riot Zungu (GI) and Jose Chameleone joining
MicInity on stage, where they delivered a free-style rendition of
a Bob Marley classic to a euphoric audience. It had been an unforgettable
happening for everyone, passionate and happy. It marked a moment
of renewal, the time of youth - our time!
It had all started
at 2pm on the afternoon of Saturday 28 March. Wave after wave of
youth acts took the stage, featuring young artists from Pamberi
Trust's youth and gender projects; it seemed never ending.
The exuberance of each act added to the sense that something wondrous
was unfolding, this was a ‘happening'; everywhere in
the audience people were amazed at the depth and diversity of young
Zimbabwean artists - professionalism, stage craft, musical and poetic
skill marked the entire event. Dudu Manhenga performed a lovely
set in her own inimitable afrojazz style, backed by the group Color
Blu, with massive stage presence, extremely comfortable on the big
stage. 19-Year-old John Pfumojena amazed the crowd with his extraordinary
vocal control and range. Zimbabwe's immensely popular afro
artist Victor Kunonga was joined on stage by Ghanaian percussionist
Yao, and amidst guitar interplay reminiscent of the great guitar
bands of the 1980s, the Ghanaian artist from the group Nomad-yi
performed one of the finest percussion and drum solos seen on a
Harare stage for some time. A poet to watch out for - Outspoken
has it all, timing, verve, voice, movement, attitude - a star
in the making, while Cde Fatso, toyi-toyi peoples' poet, has
grown in stature - his sound reaching towards chimurenga and
1980s Afro-rock - his laughter infectious and his jokes really
very funny.
Over 3 days,
the festival had featured powerful performances. The young voice
of Sam Mtukudzi is beginning to develop texture and personality,
and the audience danced until the end. Nomad-yi literally shook
the house with their hard-edged Joburg hip-hop, sung uniquely in
Wolof, French, English and siNdebele. Tomas Brickhill's gentle,
personal touch had the audience singing along ‘sokwanele baba'.
Antonio Lyons, dressed in white, managed a remarkable feat -
he drew the crowd into his poetry - and a boisterous, dancing
Book Café quietly listened and applauded in delight at each
poetic moment of reckoning.
There were dozens of other performances through the 3 days of festivities,
most memorably Bongo Love, Alexio Kawara, Edene Timbe & Fire,
Pachena Kids, Initiative Arts from Bulawayo, Afrodiziak with Q Montana
and Filbert Marova and The Other Four with Clare Nyakujara.
Mindblast: Young Zimbabweans Talk - an exploration into the
spirit of Zimbabwe had been an intense experience earlier in the
festival. An outpouring of anguish and anger at the sheer scale
of political violence and the insidious lies that have accompanied
Zimbabwe's tortuous search for its own destiny was interspersed
with moments of brilliant insight. It was confusing, chaotic, diverse,
questioning and through it all, patterns of thought began to take
shape - young Zimbabwean creative minds abhor the repression
of ‘freedom of expression', they embrace cultural diversity,
they reject the ‘paternalism' that has been a hallmark
of political nationalism, and above all they crave renewal - they
want their voices to be heard.
Arts writers from Ethiopia,
Cameroun, Kenya, Zimbabwe and South Africa under Marimba Media joined
the discussions, sharing their perspectives with Zimbabwean artists
and writers. From this came a sense that in some ways Zimbabwe's
difficult political journey has not in fact been that unique in
Africa - elsewhere youth are manipulated by the politics of
sloganeering while freedom of expression has been fraught with uncertainty.
All over the continent Africans have had to find the path towards
free expression. It has not been easy.
In a ground-breaking
Zimbabwean ‘first ever' the discussions and events were
beamed by live webcast and watched by groups of Zimbabwean Diaspora
and other interested people in Zimbabwe, South Africa, USA, UK and
as far away as Saudi Arabia, Czech Republic and Malaysia. 238 people
around the world logged into the webcast in ‘real time',
responding directly to the webcast team via live chat - applauding
the festival and wishing they were there.
The event was organised
by Pamberi Trust - Book Café in collaboration with
African Synergy, a pan-African network of African arts and festivals
with support from the Danish Centre for Cultural Development (DCCD),
the National Arts Council, as well as its many friends and partners.
Pamberi Trust says the Nguva Yedu - Thuba Letu - Our
Time festival (which had almost everyone singing and saying its
name - in songs and poetry and humour, it makes a great rap
line!) is the first of an annual youth arts festival - and
what a debut it has been!
All across Africa the youth are saying "Nguva Yedu -
Thuba Lethu - Our Time!" And now it is time for us to
listen to what they have to say. The youth are our tomorrow.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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