H Metro

Rebel Queen won’t change anything

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BLANTYRE. - Queen Sheba says she named herself after the biblical figure because Sheba was strong and powerful.

“It gives me the energy and the vibe to encourage people,” she explains.

The singer, who is from Malawi but is now based in the UK, only started her singing career in 2020 but she’s clearly been a strong person herself to get where she is today:

“I’m that kind of woman who doesn’t give up. I feel when I need something I have to push, I have to work hard to get what I need,” she said.

“I love music so I said to myself ‘why can’t I start singing?’

“No-one was there to support me, so I said to myself ‘I have to prove to people that this is what I’m doing’ and for them to love my music.

“So, I sat down and started writing songs - and I reached out to one of the musicians back in Malawi to give him the songs and he was like, ‘this amazing’.”

Queen Sheba says she was quite a wild child, going partying and modelling from a young age, much to her mother’s consternat­ion,

They came to blows and in the video for one of her songs, Zikomo Mama, Queen Sheba tells the story of how her mother once dragged her to the police station:

“Looking back I think she meant well for me so I decided to come out with something to say ‘thank you for bringing me up’.”

One song the star is particular­ly proud of is Chiwanda.

It tells the story of a woman who likes to wear revealing clothes. Queen Sheba herself often appears very scantily clad, and has received a lot of criticism because of this: “Our culture is all about covering yourself up and wearing long stuff but I’m a woman who appreciate­s myself and wants to show my body. “Women should be comfortabl­e with who they are, and accept who they are.”

Queen Sheba intends to continue wearing as little or as much as she wants:

“I’m not going to change for anybody because this is me.” - BBC.

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