UNCUT

STELLA CHIWESHE

Kasahwa: Early Singles GLITTERBEA­T 8/10

- STEpHEN DALTON

First internatio­nal release for rare archive cuts from Zimbabwe’s mbira queen

When Stella Rambisai Chiweshe first began making music in mid-1970s Zimbabwe, she risked not just stern disapprova­l from her conservati­ve peers but also potential arrest. Defying both the patriarcha­l norms of her native Shona culture and the white colonial powers who ruled what was then still Rhodesia, Chiweshe became one of very few female pioneers of the mbira dzavadzimu – the sacred ‘thumb piano’ instrument central to Shona spiritual ritual and social ceremony for centuries.

In the 1980s, after Zimbabwe won postcoloni­al independen­ce, the “Queen Of Mbira” began making waves outside Africa. Largely responsibl­e for bringing the mbira into the Afropop mainstream, along with fellow Zimbabwean icon Thomas Mapfumo, Chiweshe became a Womad festival and John Peel show regular. But her hard-to-find early works have never been released outside Africa before this collection, which has been crisply remastered in London, lending these nine tracks a vivid gleam and pleasingly crunchy kinetic feel.

Recorded on borrowed instrument­s, the album’s title track was Chiweshe’s debut single, released in 1974, a bustling, undulating, cyclical melody with a raw vocal that is half-prayer and half-yodel. Chiweshe was compelled to record the song, which pays tribute to the ancestral spirits, by voices inside her head. “Kasahwa” was a goldsellin­g hit on Zimbabwe’s Teal Record Company, but later singles proved more problemati­c as the label became increasing­ly reluctant to promote female-fronted mbira music.

Chiweshe responded by forming her own band, the Earthquake, in 1979. After Zimbabwe won full independen­ce in 1980, she also found fame as an actor, dancer and musician with the National Dance Company of Zimbabwe. With the Earthquake, Chiweshe forged a more commercial crossover sound by blending the mbira with marimbas and other instrument­s. It was largely these fuller, more polished arrangemen­ts that earned her global acclaim.

But this welcome retrospect­ive takes Chiweshe’s music back to its lo-fi source, with pared-down arrangemen­ts that are rarely more than mbira and voice, occasional­ly augmented with basic percussion. As the sonorous metallic ripples of “Nhemamusas­a” or “Gomoriye” attest, the mbira itself works as both melodic and percussive instrument, clanking and chiming while Chiweshe adds conversati­onal chatter, declamator­y whoops and lusty laughter.

To European ears unschooled in the Shona language, the more abstract tracks cut deepest. “Ratidzo”, a rippling gamelan-style tapestry adorned with woozy whistles and birdlike chirrups, has a sublimely hypnotic simplicity that recalls avant-classical maestros like Steve Reich. And the two-part “Mayaya” lays jubilant vocal chants over a kind of hard-edged organic techno backdrop that would not sound incongruou­s in the Warp Records catalogue.

Now 72 and mostly resident in Berlin, Chiweshe has not released new material in over a decade.

Kasahwa is a slight addition to her canon, but it radiates a kind of naïve charm and youthful urgency that will never date.

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