Kutsinhira Update
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Kutsinhira Update
Kutsinhira Cultural Arts Center Dedicated to the Music and People of Zimbabwe Fall 2009 Newsletter Kutsinhira Cultural Arts Center, PO Box 26111, Eugene, Oregon 97402 USA www.kutsinhira.org/kutsinhira.php Kutsinhira Update Lynne Swift We’ve just learned that Oregon State University in Corvallis will host the 2010 Zimfest! A Zimfest this close to home will make it easy to get involved with planning and production, such a great way to do something worthwhile and interesting with friends in the music community. From my personal experience, it’s fun, gratifying and an opportunity to be part of a very exciting event. Stay tuned for more news (www.zimfest.org) and ways you can be involved. students in the equivalent of a very high quality graduate seminar in which the teacher was willing to share her thoughts and feelings in addition to her knowledge. The 18 campers felt privileged and honored to spend this time with Patience. In the words of one camper, “The quality of the camp was very high. I have new songs, new friends, and new very fond memories.” This workshop was made possible in part through support by a Lane County Tourism Special Projects Grant. One of the most exciting musical opportunities to come to Kutsinhira is the opportunity to study with Jennifer Kyker while she is living in Eugene. If you want to deepen your marimba playing, your singing, dancing, mbira and hosho playing, and most of all your sensibilities about this music, I encourage you to take advantage of this opportunity. Maggie Donahue has written an interesting biographical article in this newsletter about the 15-year-old Jennifer who traveled to Zimbabwe by herself and is now, 15 years later, completing a doctoral dissertation on Oliver Mtukudzi, one of Zimbabwe’s most well known contemporary musicians. It’s great to have Jennifer back living in our community for a while, and we appreciate the extraordinary gift of music she is sharing with us. SAVE THE DATE! Camp PaNyanza Lynne Swift Kutsinhira’s 4-day summer mbira camp on the Oregon coast with Patience Chaitezvi was infused with water themes-- the lovely setting an inland lake at the Oregon coast, Patience’s fascinating stories of mermaids and their meaning in Shona culture, the featured mbira song, Chigwaya (a bream)…to name a few. The mornings began with a tasty breakfast prepared by Marilyn Mohr, camp food czarina (a welldeserved title earned in previous camps), and enjoyed on the deck watching the mist rise from the lake. The days were spent with Patience and teaching assistant Marian Grebanier learning mbira songs, dancing on the deck, singing, and drumming (thanks to Rosalie BrownLundh who brought enough drums for everyone). Each night after dinner, superbly prepared by Marilyn and her kitchen helpers, Patience spoke in depth about the many facets of Shona spirituality, offered insights into modern life and culture in Zimbabwe and shared personal experiences that touched us deeply. After 3 such evenings, many of us felt that we had been Kutsinhira Annual Meeting and Party Saturday, March 6, 2010 @ Guy Lee Elementary School Special Guest Musekiwa Chingodza! MUSIC & MORE AT THE CENTER Gary Spalter Be sure to stop in at the center to see the new tshirts (new colors and long sleeves!) and all the CDs we have for sale. Several new CDs are available from our friends who passed through Eugene this year. Patience Chaitezvi plays mbira with her brother on a CD that includes Marenje, Mbavarira, Taireva and Chipembere. Musekiwa Chingodza and Jennifer Kyker team up again as Hungwe on another beautiful album with powerful singing and mbira playing. Local mbira group Vakasara (Bud Cohen, Jerome Hobbs, Marilyn Kolodziejczyk, Joel Lindstrom, and Marilyn Mohr) has recorded a CD with all proceeds going directly to Kutsinhira’s Zimbabwean Community Development Project. Jennifer Kyker produced a field recording in Zimbabwe Kutsinhira Cultural Arts Center 1 of the mesmerizing and haunting sound of the chipendani played by Sekuru Muradzikwa. Two compilation CDs were produced this year as a fundraiser for Ancient Ways efforts in Zimbabwe, specifically in the Magaya and Mujuru villages. The marimba and electric music CD features songs by 11 groups including Boka, Ruzivo and Nyamuziwa. The mbira and acoustic music CD features Cosmas Magaya, Paul Prince and Beauler Dyoko, Pachi Pamwe and many others. All CDs cost $15 for members and $18 for non-members and can also be purchased online at http://kutsinhira.org. An exciting development in its early stages is a new CD recording project organized by Jake Roberts and Gary Spalter. The plan is to record each performing group at Kutsinhira to create a Kutsinhira –wide representation of the music we play. Jake and Gary are working with Thaddeus of Sprout City Studios to arrange for studio recording time. Stay tuned to hear how your group can be involved. Zim Guest Report Marilyn Kolodziejczyk Even though we did not officially sponsor a Zimbabwean guest in 2009, Kutsinhira enthusiastically hosted quite a few! Beginning in early June, the four members of Mbira dze Muninga spent a few days with us and, along with Kudana Marimba, put on a very successful concert at Cozmic Pizza. We were happy to see these friends whom we had met in 2008 and especially enjoyed their “elder,” Micah Munhemo, who has gone from being rather shy in 2008 to revealing a sparkling stage presence in 2009. At Zimfest, many of us enjoyed seeing these four musicians again as well as other musicians who would be our guests later in the summer. After many visa hassles, Bongo Love joined us in the midst of Zimfest. They came straight from their 28-hour international flight. We later enjoyed Bongo Love’s music and company as headliners at the Oregon Country Fair. One of the most popular performers at the Boulder Zimfest was Matemai (aka Newton Gwara), and we welcomed Matemai Mbira Group to spend a week with us in Eugene in late July. I was personally knocked out of my flip-flops by Matemai’s gorgeous singing. He and his protégé Simboti, with invaluable help from Jennifer Kyker on hosho, put on a dynamite concert at Cozmic Pizza (also very well attended – thanks Kutsinhira!). They taught some marimba and mbira both privately and in Joel’s class, but I thought that their singing class was a real high point. Matemai’s take on “orchestra” style mbira was also well received. We really hope to see Matemai and his group here again. Gary Spalter and friends put on a rockin’ house party for Bongo Love as they traveled south through Eugene in August – thanks as always to Alex, Jake and Michael for the great sound work they do to make all these gigs (especially at Cozmic) possible! Just one day later the delightful Patience Chaitezvi arrived to spend two weeks with us. Patience gave us a wonderful concert (again with Jennifer K., this time on mbira), and she taught mbira both in Eugene and at Camp paNyanza with quiet expertise and dedication. Her cultural and language presentations were among the best we have yet experienced, and we are seriously considering formal visa sponsorship for Patience in 2011. Thanks to Maggie Donahue for hosting Patience at her home. Now we are in the season of planning for 2010, and visa petitions. We are expecting our beloved Musekiwa Chingodza to arrive here around March 1, in time to attend the Kutsinhira annual membership meeting, and for our senior teachers Cosmas Magaya and Beauler Dyoko to arrive in late August. Kutsinhira will officially sponsor all three of these guests. Thanks for the support many of you have provided to these visitors; I encourage those of you who have not yet taken an active role in experiencing what our Zimbabwean guests have to offer to do so in the future – you will find it very rewarding, both musically and personally. Education Report Deb Olson Several of the Kutsinhira classes that met over the summer had wonderful workshops with visiting Zimbabwean teachers, Matemai & Simboti and Patience Chaitezvi. The regular classes continuing fall term are 2 youth marimba classes, intermediate and advanced intermediate marimba, as well as the mbira class. A new class for advanced beginning students will meet on Wednesdays at 5:45, taught by Wanda Walker. A brand new class for beginners will meet on Mondays at 5:45 (please contact Deborah Olson if you are interested!). Kutsinhira is extremely fortunate to have Jennifer Kyker in the community this year. She will be consulting with all Kutsinhira classes to work with them on various areas to improve their playing. Jennifer’s Friday night workshops: There will be a series of four 2 hour workshops, each one followed by an optional 2 hours of structured mbira ensemble playing. 9/25 – Hosho for mbira 10/23 – Hosho for marimba 11/20 – Chipendani 12/18 – drum/dancing The cost of the workshops is $15 each for Kutsinhira members. The separate mbira playing is $5 if one doesn’t attend the preceding workshop. Kutsinhira Cultural Arts Center 2 RENEW MEMBERSHIP NOW! Annual membership runs from September 1 to August 31 which means now is the time to renew your membership for fiscal year 2009-2010. Membership rates remain the same at $30 for an individual or $50 for a family. There are now several ways to renew your membership -- 1) as a student, you can include it in your fall term class payments, 2) you can pick up a form at the center and leave payment and form in the drop-box at the center, 3) go to http://www.kutsinhira.org/wiki/index.php/About_Kutsinhir a and pay by PayPal. If you’d like to be on the Kutsinhira listserv and you are not currently receiving announcements from Kutsinhira, make sure we have your email address by sending it to Marilyn at [email protected]. ZCDP AWARDS Lynne Swift This year, Kutsinhira’s Zimbabwean Community Development Project made donations to four recipients: Nhimbe for Progress (www.ancient-ways.org), Tariro (www.tariro.org) and what we now term the "Mhondoro Frontline Healthcare Group" -- an umbrella term encompassing St. Michael's Hospital, Rwizi Clinic and Chikara Clinic (the 2008 ZCDP recipients). The fourth project will provide school supplies to orphans in a secondary school in Chinhoyi. Nhimbe for Progress, a project of Ancient Ways, serves rural villages in Zimbabwe with a multitude of educational, health and infrastructure support services (wells, toilets, huts). Tariro provides educational support and advocacy for orphaned girls in Zimbabwe whose families have been affected by poverty, neglect and HIV/AIDS. The Mhondoro Frontline Healthcare Group is a term that reflects that these facilities constitute the first line of defense against HIV/AIDS, TB and malaria in the region Mhondoro that they serve. These are all projects that are close to us here in Eugene. Nhimbe and Tariro are headed up by longtime Kutsinhira members, Jennifer Kyker and Jaiaen Beck, respectively. Janis Weeks initiated contact with and has continued a relationship with the Mhondoro Frontline Healthcare Group. The project in Chinhoyi will be managed by Patience Chaitezvi. These projects are faced with incredibly challenging conditions and are working hard to make life better for the communities they serve. Funds for the ZCDP are raised through music gigs, donations and a percentage from the Kutsinhira general fund. We are very happy that Kutsinhira is able to contribute to the support of these projects. Jennifer In Eugene Maggie Donahue When you listen to a North American marimba band, what is it that conveys the depth and power of authenticity rather than merely providing a pleasant musical experience? The essential elements are in the rhythmic and melodic nuances that make up the musical expressions of Zimbabwe. Kutsinhira students have a rare opportunity this year to study with Jennifer Kyker who has a unique ability to convey the subtleties of African rhythms to US students. As a child, Jennifer studied marimba at Kutsinhira and learned as much mbira from visiting teachers as she could. At 15, she was the first one from the Eugene community to travel to Zimbabwe. During that first visit she became close friends with a 13-year-old girl named Blantina. Blantina taught Jennifer to speak Shona by labeling every object and writing its name in the dirt with a stick. This was a friendship that deeply affected Jennifer and ultimately lead her to found Tariro, a 501©3 nonprofit that pays school fees for young women and girls who have lost parents to HIV/AIDS and poverty. Her fluency with Shona language is a key to her ability to impart the rhythms and tonal qualities necessary to gain mastery of marimba, mbira, singing, hosho or dance. After graduating from Mount Holyoke College in 2002, Jennifer received a Fulbright Fellowship and returned to Zimbabwe to study for another year. During that and subsequent visits she studied traditional music and dance with a variety of Zimbabwean artists. She also had many opportunities to perform with well -known artists there including Tute Chigamba and Mhembero and Thomas Mapfumo and the Blacks Unlimited. Her collaboration with Musekiwa Chingodza resulted not only in two beautiful recordings, “Tsunga” and “Muronda Tsimba”, but also in introducing Musekiwa to Kutsinhira. Most recently Jennifer spent about 10 months in Zimbabwe doing research for her doctoral degree in ethnomusicology. Evidence of her brilliance is that she chose one of our favorite artists, Oliver Mtukudzi, as the subject of her research. Between interviewing him and attending his concerts, she worked intensively with the staff of Tariro to solidify the administration of that organization. A particularly satisfying accomplishment was establishing a traditional arts program for some of the girls in Tariro. “Maungira E Zimbabwe” is a compilation of field recordings she put together, which highlights this budding troupe. The traditional arts program has had the additional effect of strengthening the connection between Tariro and Hokoyo, Kutsinhira’s youth ensemble. Over the years, Jennifer has come and gone from Eugene where she grew up with her brother, Rob, her mother, Pam, who passed away two years ago, her father, Bill and stepmother, Kay. Since her teen years, she has been part of Kudana’s family, giving Eugene audiences an opportunity to watch her grow and mature Kutsinhira Cultural Arts Center 3 into a dynamic musician and performer. For now, Jennifer has set down roots in Eugene and is offering an array of classes and workshops through Kutsinhira as well as some private classes. Her natural musicality, ear for detail and strong teaching skills make her equally effective whether teaching Mbakumba dance at the WOW Hall, choral singing with Kupembera, or playing hosho to accompany mbira. If a student is focused on marimba, mbira, or singing taking any of Jennifer’s classes will deepen understanding of the art form by placing it within the rich cultural context of Zimbabwe’s musical heritage. Jennifer is offering Kutsinhira a wealth of experience. There is no way to know how long Jennifer will be here. While we have the opportunity to study with her, choose something new to study or go deeper into what you already love. See the listings of class offerings: www.zvents.com/eugene-or/events/show/88426538traditional-zimbabwean-dance-with-jennifer-kyker (email [email protected] if you’d like more info about classes) Visit these sites for more information about Jennifer’s experiences and work with Tariro (www.tariro.org) Tariro’s website. (http://tarirohope.wordpress.com/) This is a new blog Jen set up to keep people posted about Tariro. She writes about her friendship with Blantina in more detail here. Purchase CD’s at the Center or Swahili Imports in the 5th Street Market. - “Tsunga” with Musekiwa Chingodza - “Muronda Tsimba” with Musekiwa Chingodza - “Maungira E Zimbabwe” compilation of field recordings from Zimbabwe featuring Tariro’s traditional arts students. - Sekuru Compound – field recordings of a chipendani master ZIMFEST 2009 Jake Roberts If I had to choose a word to describe Zimfest this past summer, I think I'd choose unusual. Of the Zimfests I have attended, most have followed a very similar tem- plate--but not this year. The size of the venue, the registration system and the challenge of providing all the instruments for classes made this festival different. For example, Zimfest usually takes place in a small, selfcontained conference center at a university. This year, the workshop spaces, concert venue, marketplace, dorm and cafeteria in Boulder were spread throughout more than a square mile of Boulder's university district. It made for a lot of walking! The registration system was completely electronic, another change from previous festivals. And, Boulder was too far from other hubs of Zimbabwean music to justify moving sets of instruments to the festival site. As a result, Boulder organized and provided every marimba used at Zimfest. This was no small feat considering more than ten complete sets of marimbas were needed! The concerts, held in the Boulder Theater, were truly breathtaking. Extraordinary talent combined with an energetic audience and beautifully executed showmanship on the part of the performers made for some of the best concerts Zimfest has known. A Youth Showcase, featuring Hokoyo and other youthful acts from around the country, started off the festival. Later concerts featured artists familiar to the Zimfest stage, as well as new additions, such as Matemai Mbira Ensemble who filled the stage with rousing mbira and singing. Another defining feature of the concerts this year was the almost universal use of drum kits, which gave performers an especially energetic dance beat (although some may object on grounds of authenticity). The festival concerts concluded with Chris Berry's behemoth marimba band that literally filled every inch of the stage with marimbas, saxophones, guitars, drums and vocalists. The College Inn and Athens North, where most participants stayed, offered spacious dorm rooms with balconies and air conditioners (a big plus in Boulder's climate), as well as spaces for workshops distributed throughout the building. The dorms also provided a refuge from the dramatic afternoon thunderstorms that drenched those caught outside without rain protection. The marketplace was held in a beautiful grassy park by the creek that runs through downtown Boulder. On Saturday the market was incorporated into Boulder's large Saturday Market. Good food, crafts and produce, plus Zimbabwean music- what more could you want? Zimfest 2009 in Boulder demonstrated that Zimfest is not a cookie-cutter event that gets juggled around to different locations but never changes. Instead, it’s an event that evolves and transforms with the challenges of each venue, thanks to the talent and dedication of the Zimfest organizers. - Editor: Lynne Swift - Photos: Mandy Walker-LaFollette, Lynne Swift - Contributors: Marilyn Kolodziejczyk, Deb Olson, Maggie Donahue, Gary Spalter, Jake Roberts - Website: Mandy Walker-LaFollette - Technical Support: Jake Roberts Kutsinhira Cultural Arts Center 4
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