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WoCALLING – @ Mannenberg Print E-mail
News - Pamberi Trust
Friday, 14 May 2010 10:41
NOW ON at THE MANNENBERG
Monday 24 May 2010, 8pm

 
WoCALLING: SOLD OUT at HIFA: Missed the show?  This stunning collaboration of 8 outstanding women vocalists and 7 gifted musicians from Zimbabwe and Norway, took Harare by storm during the recent HIFA, with both performances sold out, leaving many fans disappointed, and the lucky ones hungry for more.
 
By popular demand, WoCalling will perform at The Mannenberg in Fife Ave on Monday 24 May from 8pm, with original WoCalling compositions born from this unique collaboration, together with dance and poetry, and the divas will also draw from a repertoire of famous Jazz standards which have inspired them all.
 
’Wocalling Regional’ is a local version of an extended international collaboration project, coordinated by Norwegian singer and musician Cecilie Giskemo who is currently attached to the Zimbabwe College of Music.  The production comprises the following amazing Zimbabwean and Norwegian singers and musicians, poets and dancers:
 
On vocals: Dudu Manhenga, Prudence Katomene Mbofama, Hope Masike, Fallon Richardson, Ruth Mbangwa, Kundisai  Mtero, Adiona Maboreke, Cecilie Giskemo;
 
Instrumentalists: Tor Åge Schunemann (tuba), Filbert Marova (piano), Andrew Mamvura, Hope Masike and Cecilie Giskemo (mbira), Fenton Zimba (marimba) and  Rumbidzai Tapfuma (congas); for this show joined also by Vee Mukarati (sax) and Enoch Piroro (bass).
 
Dancers: TsiTsi Tizora, Soukaina Edom, Maylene Chengerai;
 
And Poets: Aura, Dikson, Flowchyld
 
Pamberi Trust’s gender programme FLAME (Female Literary, Arts and Music Enterprise) proudly supported some of the group’s rehearsals, and welcomed WoCalling to The Book Cafe stage in April, as a sneak preview for the HIFA show.  The performance was of the highest quality, featured some of Zimbabwe’s best-loved women artists, and helped the strong network of professional women artists in Harare onto a new level of cooperation and collaboration.
 
The Mannenberg show on Mon 24 May is a special event to accommodate all those who missed the HIFA performances.  The intimate venue offers music-lovers the opportunity to get up close to the stage action and participate fully in the music of a unique collaboration of gifted artists.
 

Penny Yon
Pamberi Trust
0912 394 394
04- 253 239
 
Katiji & Pfumojena to Chimanimani Print E-mail
News - Pamberi Trust
Friday, 14 May 2010 10:16
 
Chimanimani Arts Festival
Chimanimani, Zimbabwe
21-23 May 2010
 
 
Among the many Zimbabwean groups gathering in the Eastern Highlands from 21-23 May 2010, at the annual Chimanimani Arts Festival, two outstanding young emerging artists Edith Katiji and ‘WeUTONGA’ and John Pfumojena with ‘MNANDI’ will be featuring in this years festival under the theme: ‘Youth and Culture in Harmony’.
 
EDITH KATIJI leads the group ‘WeUTONGA’ - a fresh and liberated sound that resonates with the joy of youth, yet strong on culture and relevance.  Edith’s music background stretches back to the nineties where as a teenager she played with Bulawayo bands before joining Amakhosi where she took up the bass.  Formerly known as So What?, the new-look ‘WeUTONGA’ deliver a lively and colourful repertoire of original African music led by Edith’s powerful voice, bass guitar and a backup full of energy.  The current line-up is Edith Katiji/bass, vocals, Taririo Ruzvidzo/guitar, Rumbi Tapfuma/congas, Fatima Katiji/vocals, Ishe Jere/keyb and drums.
 
 
 
 
 
 
JOHN PFUMOJENA & ‘MNANDI’ - Emerging from the Zimbabwe school system in 2008 with many awards and music experiences already under his belt, JOHN PFUMOJENA quickly rose to the public stage in Harare, where his amazing talents have been unfolding ever since.  His extraordinary vocal control and range, and his soulful delivery have attracted the attention of audiences, and fellow-artists alike.  John formed the group Mnandi in 2008 along with other talented young musicians of Harare, and has finally found a space in which his music, and the delivery of it, can be given free reign.  His style is best described as ‘young urban traditional soul’ with influences from far and wide, and yet uniquely original.
 
 
 
 Arts Development
 
Both groups have worked closely with arts organisation Pamberi Trust in Harare, Edith and ‘WeUtonga’ through the gender programme FLAME (Female Literary, Arts & Music Enterprise) and John and ‘Mnandi’ through the youth programme BOCAPA Exposure.  Pamberi Trust provided creative space for rehearsals, access to equipment, publicity and performance opportunities at The Book Café and Mannenberg Jazz Club, where they have both performed several times, including the huge youth festival ‘Nguva Yedu/Thuba Lethu/Our Time’ in Harare In March 2009.  In the course of development programmes, ‘WeUtonga’ and ‘Mnandi’ have had the chance to collaborate and work with many other young musicians which has stimulated their creativity and growth, and led to their popularity.
 
 
Pamberi Trust have supported artists to participate in the annual Chimanimani Arts Festival since 2008, and enjoyed a good and fruitful partnership with participating organisations Chimanimani Arts Festival Trust, Thulani Promotions and Global Arts as part of the growing network of cultural organisations in Zimbabwe which is bringing life and energy to the industry in Zimbabwe.
 
Penny Yon
Pamberi Trust
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
0912 394 394
04-253 239
 
Ruzvidzo Stanley Mupfudza dies Print E-mail
News - Pamberi Trust
Friday, 07 May 2010 07:55
 
Pamberi Trust joins the literary and artistic community of Harare and the Mupfudza family in mourning the passing of Ruzvidzo Stanley Mupfudza, who contributed richly to the Book Café Literary Discussions programme for the last two years.
(From www.zimbablog.com) 
 
Born in Zimbabwe in 1971, Ruzvidzo Stanley Mupfudza developed a passion for the art of story telling and a love for the written word at a tender age. Long before he was literate he would gaze with fascination at the beauty of the written word on scraps of paper, old magazines, newspapers, books, et al and by the time he was in the third grade was a passionate wide reader, whose reading material was more often than not way beyond his scope.

It was also at this time that he started writing his own stories, spurred by a vivid imagination and his already entrenched reading culture. After studying Literature in English at the University of Zimbabwe, he worked, for eight years, as a high school English Language and Literature in English teacher before moving to Zimbabwe’s national television broadcaster where he worked as Chief Producer of Social and Cultural programmes for children. After that spell, his perennial wanderlust saw him move on to the world of advertising, where he worked as a copywriter for a local advertising agency.

It was not long before he packed his creative bags and joined the mainstream print media as an Assistant Editor, specialising in feature writing and covering the arts for a Zimbabwean daily and weekly paper. He eventually became the Acting Editor of the weekly Sunday paper until its demise in 2007. There was a particularly rough patch where he survived through the benevolence of friends, his art and freelancing. In 2008 he returned to the world of advertising.

His poetry, essays and short stories have been published in Zimbabwe and abroad. His early poetry started appearing in the University of Zimbabwe English Department’s literary magazine, The Bloom, national and international magazines, as well as on the poetryinternational.org - zimbabwe website. His stories appear in the following anthologies, A Roof to Repair (Harare: College Press), Creatures Great and Small (Gweru: Mambo Press 2000), Writing Still: New Stories from Zimbabwe (Harare: Weaver Press, 2003), Writing Now: More Stories from Zimbabwe (Harare: Weaver Press, 2005), and Dreams, Miracles and Jazz: New Adventures in African Writing (Northlands: Picador Africa, 2008). A revised version of his story, “The Mender of Broken Soles” has been published online by SABLE Literary Magazine. He has also been interviewed on Conversations with Writers and Kubatana.net, and also occasionally, when the spirit moves him, blogs on www.zimbablog.com.

Sadly Ruzvidzo passed away on the 3rd of May 2010, he will be sorely missed, a great loss for Literature and Zimbabwe. May his works live on in our hearts and minds forever.



24 DECEMBER 2009
Witch's Brew by Ruzvidzo Mupfudza 

Whenever I saw the jagged pieces of a broken heart swirling in the depth of her dark soft doe-like eyes, I knew Mai Chamboko was not a witch. But many people said she was. I guess that is why there were echoes of pain in her eyes. When I asked her why her eyes were so sad, she sighed and whispered, “Ah, my little husband, perhaps it is because I yearn for understanding... and peace... things very few are willing to give.”... Full Story .


 
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