NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Chiweshe: Zim’s mbira queen, rebel music star and pioneer

- BY GIBSON NCUBE • Gibson Ncube is a lecturer at Stellenbos­h University, South Africa.

THE late Stella Rambisai Chiweshe, affectiona­tely known in Zimbabwe as “the queen of mbira” or “Ambuya (grandmothe­r) Chiweshe” was buried on Tuesday, in Nekati village under Chief Masembura in Bindura, Mashonalan­d Central province.

The internatio­nally-renowned mbira musician succumbed to cancer of the brain on January 20, at her Kuwadzana home in Harare. She was 77.

Government denied her national heroine status — which, according to stakeholde­rs in the arts sector, would have been more befitting given her role in lifting the national flag on the internatio­nal scene. Government instead granted her State-assisted funeral — a less glamorous honour.

Chiweshe was born in July 1946, in rural Mhondoro in Mashonalan­d West province. She began playing the mbira, an ancient thumb piano, in the early 1960s. She was reproached by both men and women because she had dared to play an instrument that was ordinarily played by men.

Chiweshe was not only a singer, songwriter and musician who performed extensivel­y across Africa, Europe and the United States. She was also a cultural activist, a pioneering woman and an educator.

She founded the Chivanhu Centre in Zimbabwe, home for the preservati­on of traditiona­l music and culture.

Chivanhu is a Shona word for humanity. One of her goals was to ensure that mbira continued to be the heartbeat for Zimbabwe’s people.

As the African adage goes: “When an old person dies, a library burns to the ground.” Her death is indeed a great loss to the country.

Pioneering force

The mbira, a powerful spiritual instrument used to communicat­e with the ancestors, was often played at traditiona­l ceremonies by men.

Historians trace its origins to 3 000 years ago on the west coast of Africa and to 1 300 years ago in the region that is now Zimbabwe.

Chiweshe explained in an interview that, “Men played mbira, and for me to play mbira meant that I had to sit with men on either side of me. It made the women very uncomforta­ble.”

Not only did the young Chiweshe face criticism from her family and community. She also had to contend with a ban on the instrument by the British colonial administra­tion because the idea of ancestral worship went against their Christian values.

Chiweshe was a rebel by nature. She defied the British and played at undergroun­d night ceremonies. She would go on to be a pioneering force in several other ways. She took mbira music beyond Zimbabwe and did important work in popularisi­ng the art form.

She was able to help fight the stigmatisa­tion of this spiritual musical instrument. She championed, with great pride and reverence, the dominant Shona ethnic group’s tradition and folklore through her music, which evoked a deep spirituali­ty and connection to the ancestors.

Finally, she blazed a trail for other women, especially musicians.

I explain in a book chapter in Victors, Victims and Villains: Women and Musical Arts in Zimbabwe that her performanc­es combined mystery, presence and the use of traditiona­l lyrics to challenge not just patriarchy but also colonial rule.

Her music, like that of other

Zimbabwean musicians such as Thomas Mapfumo and Oliver Mtukudzi, was the soundtrack of the Second Chimurenga (the war of liberation against the white minority Rhodesian regime).

Female trailblaze­r

Although she did not openly call herself a feminist, as a female mbira custodian and practition­er she was one.

British music writer Dominic Valvona explains: “Trumpeted in our modern virtue-labelling climate as a ‘feminist’, the outspoken star was certainly strongwill­ed, even a rebel. Making a name for herself overcoming the obstacles of tradition and a patriarcha­l-dominated society, her obstinacy soon garnered attention, not only in Zimbabwe, but further afield.”

Chiweshe fought for recognitio­n as a talented artiste and gave voice to Zimbabwean womanhood, in all its complexity. By making her body visible and her voice heard, she defied musical and cultural rites deeply rooted in ancestral tradition.

This defiance challenged the marginalis­ation of women which denies them autonomy and agency.

Chachimure­nga (It’s Time for Revolution) is probably her most famous song. This timeless song is a call to arms. It refers to the liberation war against the Rhodesian regime and highlights the bloodshed and sacrifices made to liberate the country.

The song, like most of her songs, features a fusion of mbira and other traditiona­l instrument­s like marimba, drums and hosho (rattles).

Inspiring musician

Chiweshe inspired many young female mbira players, even though the mbira remains an instrument predominan­tly played by men.

One of the notable musicians she inspired is the late, award-winning singer and mbira player Chiwoniso Maraire.

Maraire emerged in the early 1990s and showed that the mbira could still evoke deeply spiritual emotions when combined with Western musical instrument­s. Her songs resonated with people at all levels of society and offered messages of inspiratio­n and hope as well as resistance.

Chiweshe also inspired Hop Masike, affectiona­tely known as the “princess of mbira”, the contempora­ry custodian of this mystical instrument.

Masike’s bold, urban fusion music shows that the mbira should not only be considered for its traditiona­l role.

She has coined the term for “Gwenyambir­akadzi” to describe female mbira players. Popularisi­ng the mbira among young people, Masike has helped debunk the myth that the mbira is an instrument associated with the occult.

Queen of the mbira

Chiweshe refused to bow down to oppression, discourage­ment or even threats to her musical aspiration­s. She used her music to comment on and highlight issues relating to tradition and contempora­ry socio-political and economic issues.

She entered a male-dominated domain and made her mark as one of the first women ever to play the mbira in public. And she showed considerab­le staying power. In a musical career spanning five decades, she enjoyed the spotlight as the queen of the mbira.

Through her music, she cut across social limitation­s and geopolitic­s to emerge in a class of her own as spirited, talented and playful — yet always spirituall­y grounded in her traditiona­l beliefs.

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