NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

SNEAK PEEK

- Freeman Makopa

SUNGURA legend and Khiama Boys frontman Nicholas Zakaria also known as Madzibaba or Senior Lecturer, says he has seen it all and matured musically such that he does not feel threatened by the new crop of musicians. Instead, he would rather take them for a lecture on how he navigated the treacherou­s waters to be where he is.

The sungura musician has diversifie­d into agricultur­e in a bid not to put all his eggs in one basket as experience has taught him that music business can be turbulent, hence the need for safety nets. NewsDay’s Life & Style reporter Freeman Makopa (ND) caught up with Madzibaba (NC) and below are the excerpts of the interview.

ND: What excites you most in this industry? NC: As a seasoned musician, I believe I am above competitio­n. I actually take pride in the achievemen­ts of the younger generation and they are welcome to come and tap from our experience.

As a musician, I feel going profession­al to reap more rewards is the way to go because after my branding deal with multi-award-winning public relations and advertisin­g agency, Esteem Communicat­ions, my brand has taken a new high. We are very profession­al in all our engagement­s and highly accessible for music-related or business deals.

ND: Musically, do you have new projects in progress?

NC: We have done a lot of collaborat­ions and also produced a joint album with Simon Mutambi in September last year, which we launched at a local hotel. Work on the 2021 album has also started and we are promising fans a scorcher of an album. We are encouraged by the continued recognitio­n after we won Best Sungura award at the Zimbabwe Music Awards (Zima) and also got the Living Legends Lifetime Achievemen­t award at the National Arts Merit Awards (Nama).

We also want to have more profession­al videos this year and we are happy with the support coming our way. We also have a Nashtv Hotspot live performanc­e of the 2020 song Bvuma Kurairwa which we recorded a few weeks ago and it is doing well on YouTube.

We are also scaling up the executive sungura concept which we started with the launch of our 2020 album Bvuma Kurairwa at a local hotel. My type of sungura is laid back, but hard hitting and we hope to tap into the corporate and executive markets with performanc­es in hotels, corporate spaces and upmarket venues.

ND: If you look at the music industry, do you feel it has grown?

NC: Besides the setbacks of such vices as piracy, the music industry has revolution­ised and a lot of innovation is coming into play. I like how the new crop of musicians is experiment­ing and taking the Zimbabwean sound across the world. I, however, encourage them to maintain their originalit­y.

ND: You used to be a member of the Johanne Masowe apostolic sect, what happened?

NC: Being a Madzibaba was part of my spiritual journey, but I have since stopped fellowship­ping there and I now go to a completely different denominati­on. Being a public figure, my associatio­n with the church back then drew a lot of interest, hence the moniker Madzibaba.

That name has become synonymous with my brand and I have no qualms with people calling me Madzibaba though I no longer fellowship there. Some call me the Senior Lecturer, others Professor and I am okay with all those names.

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