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Author Topic: Oliver Tuku Mutukudzi - Ziwere MuKøbenhavn  (Read 1576 times)
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AmbroseBierce
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« on: October 14, 2008, 05:05:59 PM »

Oliver Tuku Mutukudzi
Ziwere MuKøbenhavn

Shava Music SHAVACD001-2, 1995





1. Ziwere 6:31
2. Ndiranarirei 6:06
3. Hear Me Lord 7:42
4. Ndipeiwo Zano 7:09
5. Street Kid 6:10
6. Ndikarangarira 6:57
7. Why 6:16
8. Kusaziva 5:49

Quote
Mutukudzi and his eight-man band recorded this spirited album in Copenhagen during their 1993 tour of Europe.
Ziwere MuKobenhaven is a dance album with punch but without synthesized drum machines. He utilizes the Bantu African structure of interlocking patterns, thus creating a unified sound collage that is mesmerizing. This is how the Tuku beat becomes a dancing image of the life and spirit of the township. Trance and ecstasy overtake the dancer and he or she is one with the community ritual. The music unites the bush with the city and thus ameliorates the alienation from the roots of culture, a very important matter. His lead vocals, sung in Shona and English, tell the event he's describing and the response of the chorus confirm and enhance what has been sung. Listen to him sing "Kusaziva," which means "Ignorance," and "Hear Me Lord."
It is a circle of song, of community, and mystical unity in the round. A truly mystical album with that South African danceable drive underpinning it all.

Quote
With his soul-inflected Tuku style, singer/songwriter/guitarist Oliver Mtukudzi alone rivals Thomas Mapfumo for the mantle of Zimbabwe pop's spiritual father. Mtukudzi recorded his first hits in the late `70s and remains active today. Though it includes elements of Shona and other Zimbabwean traditional music, Mtukudzi's sound also draws heavily on South African township pop and classic R&B. Mtukudzi adores Otis Redding, above all, but his own husky, mellifluous voice sounds closer to Jamaica's Toots Hibbert.
Claiming no overriding stylistic model, Mtukudzi believes in the interrelatedness of all African music, "from Cape Town to Cairo." Just the same, Oliver's winning personality pervades his sound, rendering the Tuku style instantly recognizable. Mtukudzi always packs in a dance crowd at his frequent shows in Harare's hotel/club scene. His rollicking songs and long-legged dance moves go down well, but Mtukudzi says it's his message, not the beat that sells the songs. Acting as a kind of national conscience, Mtukudzi concentrates on family stories, sensitively exploring the social issues people face in their daily lives, including new problems surrounding AIDS and the premature deaths of adults in a family.
Oliver is revered in his native land for his ability to construct thoughtful, popular songs that address Zimbabwe's struggles in a profund yet apparent way that has endeared him to the public but often put him at odds with the ruling powers.
"I have tried to combine some of the beats which are the true, free expressions of Zimbabweans in order to make a national rhythm." -- Afropop.org Senior Editor Banning Eyre

320 kbps including full scans

Code:
http://rapidshare.com/files/153839320/OTM-ZMK.part1.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/153840519/OTM-ZMK.part2.rar
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