|
Our latest two-part installment of Afropop Worldwide's vignettes brings us to the beautiful, yet complex region of East Africa. In this edition we focus attention to Tanzania, Kenya and Zanzibar. From East African taarab to Hip-Hop, there's a plentiful selection of musical styles for every music lover. KENYA:
Click here to learn more about Kenya and its famous music styles, benga and taarab! Great Kenyan musicians! Until their break-up in the early 1990s, Orchestre Virunga was one of Kenya's most exciting groups and Samba Mapangala perhaps the country's greatest talent. Eric Wainaina's wide influences include everything from ABBA and Paul Simon to Youssou N'Dour and From the mid 1970s up until the 80s, Super Mazembe was a classic, guitar driven, African urban boogie band. Brothers Wilson and George Peter Kinyonga launched the extremely successful Kenyan rumba group, Simba Wanyika. AfroFunk rises again! Sila & the AfroFunk Experience brings a funky fusion of African rhythm, American funk, Soukous, Afrobeat and reggae back into the spotlight. And if you're still hungering for more of that great Kenyan rhythm... Try these past features and CD reviews!
TANZANIA: Dar es Salaam, the "City of Peace," puts Tanzania on the map musically as well as serving as its coastal capital. Tanzania boasts a wide variety of musical styles, and though its recent governments may not have supported its scene, fans and audiences certainly do. The music scene in Tanzania is changing quite a bit: where in the past, guitar bands dominated the airwaves, young rap and reggae acts are enjoying wild popularity, and taarab's beautiful blending of Indian, African and Arab influences can still be widely heard in Tanzania and especially on the island of Zanzibar. Read more about taarab's role in the East African music scene, and get to know some of Tanzania's mainland mainstays below, by looking at some of the artists and musical styles who have made the Tanzanian music scene what it is today.
Until recently, Tanzania's airwaves and dance halls primarily played Musiki wa dansi, the guitar bands that still stand as great memories of Tanzania's musical past - and inspiration for its future, as new generations o Today, things have changed a bit on the radio in Tanzania, though the dansi sound still flourishes when the lights go down. Bongo Flava is what's hip in the big city these days; even songbird Saida doesn't resist a bit of street rap influence in her newer songs. Bongo Flava is the popular rap and reggae sound that combines influences of the United States and the Congo, while giving voice to its young performers. Read more about Tanzania's breakout Bongo Flava style from Afropop's 2004 look into Dar es Salaam. ZANZIBAR: The country of Zanzibar, also known as the "Spice Islands," is made up of two African islands: Unguja and Pemba. Long popular for it's accessible ports and bountiful offerings in spices (cloves, nutmeg, cinnamon and pepper), Zanzibar--the land and her people--have been courted and influenced by colonizers and traders from the Middle East, India and Europe. Although still a part of Tanzania, Zanzibar is an independent country fastly on the rise to developing its tourism through music & film festivals. The Sauti za Busara Swahili Music Festival, Stone Town, Zanzibar In three short years, Sauti za Busara (Sounds of Wisdom) Swahili Music Festival has firmly established itself as one of East Africa’s finest annual events. This five-day extravaganza of diverse and top-quality music, theatre and dance brings together people of all ages and backgrounds in celebration of the wealth and variety of Swahili music.
“Also, of course the festival is promoting Zanzibar, and attracting the kind of visitor who is interested in the arts, culture and history of the island and who spends money in ways that have a great impact on the local grassroots economy.” Organised by Busara Promotions, the Sauti za Busara Swahili Music Festival showcases a rich and dynamic programme including ngoma traditional music, taarab, kidumbak, rumba, muziki wa dansi, mchiriku, Swahili hiphop bongo flava, Afropop fusions, mystic and religious music, theatre, comedy, acrobatics and dance. Of the forty groups participating, most are from the Swahili-speaking region: Zanzibar, Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda, and Burundi, with six or seven specially selected groups from Swaziland, Zimbabwe, Ghana, Guinea Bissau, Mali and Europe. The festival will be back in Stone Town, Zanzibar on 9-14 February 2007.
Afropop Worldwide reports from 2004 & 2005 Zanzibar Sauti Za Busara Festival Sauti Za Busara - Sounds of Wisdom Swahili Festival, 2005
Kenyans Bury Tanzanian Music Seer’s Remains but Keep His Words DO Misiani was creative, incisive, fearless and always invoked poetic license whenever cornered by intolerant political authorities for composing and recording satirical and sarcastic songs that ‘incited the populace against the government.’ Bobastles Owino Nondih pays tribute to this Kenya-based Tanzanian musician who perished in a road accident near his home in Kisumu on May 17, 2006.
All About Zanzibar |
Afropop Vignettes: East Africa, pt. 2
Aired September 7, 2006
Back by popular demand, we take another spin around the under-recognized region of East Africa to enjoy the work of artists from Tanzania, Zanzibar, Uganda, and Kenya. Special focus will be taarab music from the Swahili speaking coast and gems from benga and musiki wa dansi bands.