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DUDU MANHENGA: Homecoming! Print E-mail
News - Pamberi Trust
Monday, 19 July 2010 12:34
 
DUDU MANHENGA: Homecoming!
The Book Café
Saturday 24 July 2010 - 8pm
 
 
Dudu Manhenga in FLAME
Mingas, Dudu and Mpumie in FLAME
 
AFTER A WHIRLWIND quarter year, spreading her music far and wide in the southern African region and far flung European cities, DUDU MANHENGA returns home this week, with an exciting homecoming show at The Book Café, Saturday 24 July, 8pm.
 
The music of Dudu Manhenga and Color Blu has been accurately described as ‘an afro jazz adventure’ -  a fusion of genres: afro, contemporary, Zimbabwe traditional, township, jazz, afro, latino, and a cultural cross-breed of Zimbabwe’s Manica, Mashona and Matabele rhythms and melodies, spiced with some energetic stage work, sizzling vocals, and a dignity of delivery of which all Zimbabweans can be proud. 
 
Dudu has been commanding attention of music-lovers and fellow musicians in the southern African region and abroad in the last two years.  Her performances in Serbia last week at the Exit Festival have rounded up a series of tours in which she thrilled audiences in South Africa, Mozambique and Swaziland as part of the now famous FLAME Regional Tour by Pamberi Trust, followed swiftly by participation at the famous Grahamstown Festival in South Africa, and later a wonderful open-air performance at Johannesburg’s Ella Fitzgerald Square outside the Bassline concert venue, before joining the Serbian festival in July.
 
The FLAME Regional Tour from 29 May to 6 June was an amazing artistic collaboration in which Dudu joined some of the sweetest voices of the region - the Mozambican icon Mingas, and South Africans Mpumie Twala and Ndithini Mbali (sax).  Through partnerships with African Synergy Trust in Johannesburg and others in the region, FLAME delivered stunning performances at the Centro Cultural Franco Mocambicano in Maputo, the popular Bushfire Festival in Swaziland and the Bassline in Johannesburg before winding up the tour in Harare at the beginning of June with two shows at The Mannenberg. 
 
In spite of being the youngest, Dudu was one of the livewires of the production, adding strong Zimbabwean flavours to the repertoire which included music by each artist - and the region loved them! 
 
Back home earlier in the year, Dudu took part in the Harare Jazz Festival alongside some of the great jazzists of the country and the region.  Dudu and Color Blu later performed in Harare, Lusaka and Ndola (Zambia), with the brilliant Italian jazz group under the leadership of jazz pianist Sylvia Manco, supported by the Embassy of Italy in Zimbabwe.
 
Last year, among many local and regional performances, she was well received in South Africa featuring at Johannesburg’s Arts Alive festival; collaborated brilliantly with Mozambican artist Mingas, performed alongside Italian visitors Ital-Jazz and hosted Mozambican superstar Chico Antonio in Harare.  Dudu also featured on a continental album for the campaign-against-hunger project by Action Aid International-Africa, ‘Hunger Free, Music for Freedom and Justice 2009’, which  includes two Dudu Manhenga originals, Is This the Life and Women of Africa.
 
On top of a busy family and church life, Dudu is also active in music rights and anti-piracy issues, gender and anti-violence activities, and is a major contributor to the FLAME (Female Literary Arts Music Enterprise) project, run by Harare-based arts organization Pamberi Trust.  Activities include workshop series ‘Workshops for Women Artists by Women Artists’ and international events for Women’s Day and
the ‘16 Days of Activism against Violence against Women’ campaign.
 
The Saturday 24 July show at Fife Avenues The Book Café promises to be fired up as Dudu returns from the rich experiences of the last few months, no doubt inspired and inspiring, as she celebrates as always, her homecoming.
 
 
 
 
Penny Yon
Pamberi Trust
The Book Café & The Mannenberg
Fife Ave Mall/6th St
Tel 0914 435 272
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
www.zimbabwearts.org
 
Literary Discussion: THE FORBIDDING OF MOURNING Print E-mail
News - Pamberi Trust
Thursday, 15 July 2010 14:44

Literary Discussion: THE FORBIDDING OF MOURNING
 
The writing of a "white" memoir reflecting on the war in Zimbabwe and its psychological fallout
THE BOOK CAFE, Fife Ave Mall, Harare
Thursday 22 July 2010, 5.30-7pm
 
On Thursday evening, 22 July at 5.30pm, Harare's Book Café will be hosting a literary discussion with Australian-based Zimbabwean author Jennifer Armstrong around the writing of her book Minus the Morning.

Jennifer left Zimbabwe with her parents at the age of 15 in 1984 for Australia, and a society in which she found it hard to feel at home.

As a PhD student, Armstrong studied the work of the famous Zimbabwean writer, the late Dambudzo Marechera which helped her to process her own issues of identity and belonging. In Minus the Morning‚ Armstrong reflects on the psychological fallout that is the consequence of forbidden mourning.

She speaks from a childhood perspective, and tries to come to terms with the difference between her real experiences and the identity that was attributed to her after her migration.  In an interview on the African Writers Corner on www.pambazuka.org she said "I wrote in order to figure out what was true and what wasn’t.  To understand the world around me accurately was my greatest imperative.  I wanted to know things accurately and not merely impressionistically, like before."

Her work asserts (in a variety of ways) "I am not a CATEGORY of person," and pleads for consideration for the political and psychological innocence of those who had nothing to do with the policies of Ian Smith.

"Western modes of thought tend to put people into categories of identity, and then interpret everything somebody says as if the meaning of their words was already decided by this artificially imposed idea about who they are. But such a process of giving somebody an established identity before they can speak for themselves denies them their humanity" said Armstrong.

The Thursday 22 July discussion is an opportunity for an insight into the processing of memories and memoir and an exchange of ideas with the author in the intimate environment of The Book Cafe.  Jennifer Armstrong will give a presentation which will be followed by an open discussion chaired by Jackie Cahi.

Pamberi Trust projects officer Extra-Blessings Kuchera who is organizing the discussion, said “We look forward to welcoming Jennifer Armstrong to The Book Café on Thursday 22 July with an issue which is relevant for many Zimbabweans.   The discussion will be very interesting and we invite all people to attend.  The Book Café literary events are a platform for those who love literature to come together, discuss, explore, develop and support it”, he said.  The discussion is free and all people are welcome.


By Extra-Blessings Kuchera
Pamberi Trust
The Book Cafe & The Mannenberg
Fife Ave Mall, 6th St/Fife Ave, Harare
www.zimbabwearts.org,
Office Cell-0914 435 272
 
 
‘ABSOLUTE JITI: THE BHUNDU BOYS STORY’ By Elton Mjanana Print E-mail
News - Pamberi Trust
Tuesday, 13 July 2010 08:39
PAMBERI TRUST’S HIV/AIDS PROGRAMME 
“BE TRUE”

Invites all artists to a special screening of the Zimbabwean film 

‘ABSOLUTE JITI: THE BHUNDU BOYS STORY’ By Elton Mjanana

Followed by discussion: ‘Artists and HIV/AIDS – The Reality’

WED 14 JULY, 6.30pm - The Mannenberg, Fife Ave Mall, Harare

Arguably the first Zimbabwean music group to command an international following when they broke into the UK live circuit in the mid-80s and played to over 80,000 delirious fans while supporting Madonna at Wembley for 4 nights in 1988, The Bhundu Boys are sadly remembered as a band that was wiped out by AIDS.  This documentary film by Elton Mjanana is a moving story of the career trials and tribulations of the five-member outfit, which was made up of Rise Kagona (guitar), Rodwell Marasha aka Biggie Tembo (lead vocalist), Shakie Kangwena (keyboards), David Mankaba (bass), and Kenny Chitsvatsva (drums).  

The film screening will be followed by a discussion with Elton Mjanana and HIV/AIDS activist Cleo Ndlovu, on the reality of Artists and HIV/AIDS in Zimbabwe.
 

FREE: ALL WELCOME

 
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