When the history
of in Zimbabwe is written, when its Hall of Fame beckons its most priced
spiritual ambassadors, pioneering liberators and national heroines,
HSM Stella Rambisai Cheweshe will command a special place in that universe.
Rarely is any country blessed with the citizenship of Stella Chiweshe’s
mbira and spiritual evangelism.
For almost forty years and counting, Her Spiritual Majesty, Stella Rambisai
Chiweshe has steadfastly blazed a trail along which many other women
have followed. Refusing to be relegated to an mbira spectator, Chiweshe
was driven from within to convince his uncles and grandparents to teach
her how to play the mbira. Not only did she fight the colonial mentality
that prohibited indigenous worship, mbira playing and any activity that
honors ancestors, but she also had to break a gender barrier that accorded
the mbira playing privilege to men only. After two years to persuading
his uncles to teach her without success, Stella finally got instruction
from one of her uncles.
Florian Hertz quotes
her follows:
"I first learned mbira in 1966, in Harare
and Mhondoro. I was taught by my uncle. But he doesn’t play any more
because his fingers have become stiff. I last saw him in 1974. He was
a full time player, a very old man who just sits at home and plays.
He saw I very much wanted to learn. Saw me trying to find someone to
teach me. He said come and sit next to me and I will show you how to
do it. He was very kind. Other people thought they cant teach a woman
to play, because mbira’s not a woman’s instrument, its meant to be played
only by men. They say if you play mbira you’ll not be able to do women’s
work, you’ll always be on the men’s. It is very painful to play mbira.
Maybe they feel sorry for a woman to do such a painful thing. Women
are also not meant to play the drum because it’s a man’s instrument.
If a woman is playing it, it shows no respect for tradition, but I play
it because I wan to. When my uncle showed me how to play, I had a burning
lump in my chest a pain like when a close person dies. But when he
said ‘come learn’, the pain started to go [away] and I felt good. It
didn’t take a long time to learn which keys to play. What takes a long
time is how to play for a long time. It is like the wheel goes round
and round. At a ceremony you must be able to play for the whole night.
You get blisters on the fingers. But you must care and feel for the
music, you must play hard for the people to hear because mbira [in its
indigenous setting] is not amplified"
After Zimbabwe independence
in 1980, Chiweshe participated in the National Dance Company of Zimbabwe
a choreographer, dancer, musician and many other roles. However her
most prominent role has been pioneering roles traditionally reserved
for men and thereby empowering women to bring their artistic abilities
on the national stage.
In another eyebrow
raising phenomenon, in the spirit of personal and spiritual liberation,
Chiweshe experiemented and successfully integrated marimba music with
mbira, a groundbreaking event in the development of Shona music. In
the early days, her critics suggested she was dishonoring the mbira
tradition, however the very act of integration the two, Chiweshe was
able to persuade young people to listen to mbira music more than they
did before. At a time when the Zimbabwean youth where totally disoriented
from years on colonial and religious disinformation, the integration
of marimba with mbira brought a lot of young people closer to their
heritage.
Sporting her latest
recording, “Talking Mbira Spirits of Liberation”, Chiweshe
demonstrates her versatility from hauntingly powerful songs like “Musandifungise”
to high energy marimba/mbira combinations like “Manja”. Here
is how Bob Tarte of Amazon.com reviews the latest release from Stella
Chiweshe:
Plenty
of artists claim to play "trance music," but Zimbabwe's Stella
Chiweshe delivers the genuine article. Portions of her repertoire
come straight from the religious rituals of the Shona people, and audience
members at her concerts have claimed spontaneous healings or visits
from spirits in response to the beautiful melodies she coaxes from her
mbira "thumb piano." Even if you don't experience supernatural
effects, a few moments of Chiweshe's delicate but powerful playing will
surely raise your bliss levels by a factor of 10. She pioneered the
practice of blending mbiras and marimbas in ensemble performances and
is the most famous woman band leader in Zimbabwe. Talking Mbira shows
her in full command of her talents. The nicely balanced blend of material
ranges from the tradition-based opening song "Ndabaiwa" to
modern fare like "Chachimurenga," a chimurenga liberation
song that gets a "Future Mix" dub-style treatment courtesy
of Hijaz Mustapha of the 3
Mustaphas 3. Inspired by dream visits from her late brother, Elfigio,
Chiweshe layers her meditative mbira on "Ndangariro" for a
densely interwoven sound more intricate than a tapestry. "Paite
Rima," a plea for world peace addressed to potent lion spirits,
eschews instrumentation for stirring vocal harmonies reminiscent of
Zulu songs, while "Tapera" uses deeply textured mbira and
a distant chorus to lament the natural disasters and political turmoil
of her home country. --Bob Tarte.
It is with the hope
for peace, spiritual liberation and support for indigenous cultures
and religions that Chiweshe embarks on a rare visit of a spiritual dimension
to Boston and New England. Don't miss a legend.