BIOGRAPHY.
MY JOURNEY IN MUSIC:
I was born from a Muslim mother and in a predominantly Muslim and Traditional society. I never knew that one time I would become a professional music artist. Even so, the other fact is that my family had a musical back- ground in that my mother used to sing political songs for one of the ministers who parted ways with Dr. Kamudzu Banda- the first president of Malawi. This happened after the 1964 Cabinet Crises. One of the ministers then, Dr. Masauko Chipembere, was from my area and my mother was singing political songs for him. Her brother, my uncle, who learned driving in the second World War, was one of his two drivers. Later, Dr. Masauko Chipembere went into exile to the USA and died there. In fact, the professional artist- Masauko Chipembere, is his son. In the latter years, my mother started singing political songs for Dr. Kamudzu Banda. She was leading songs for women from my district, Mangochi, formerly known as Fort Johnston. If you can come across songs by Kamudzu’s women, officially known as mbumba, from Mangochi district, most of the songs you will hear were composed and led by my mother like “Walira Koto” which means the hard or deep cry( but referring to fallen politicians- the president’s opponents). It was one of the songs that the president liked and few of the songs that he sung along during political rallies and his official visits within Malawi. My mother was a great singer. That’s part of the family Musical background. My Music Journey Continues. On the other hand, my family also had a background of traditional music. My mother was a daughter of a village headman of our village- Makwinja. Makwinja was a son of group village headman Chindamba- the first traditional head of our area- Malindi. This was the area where Dr David Livingstone described as having arrived at a place where the mountains come very close to the lake- on his last missionary trip coming from Mozambique and passing through the Southern coastal area of Malawi- someone wrote. When he arrived in my area, he met my great grandfather- Chindamba- the father of my grandfather- Makwinja and he was a Muslim. My journey in music continues- I am talking about the traditional background. Dr David Livingstone conducted a Sermon and my great grandfather, Chindamba, attended with his counselors but he never got converted to Christianity but one of his subjects and I am a pastor- of the fourth generation from him and that event- the traditional part. In a letter to Arthur Tidman of the London Missionary Society, David wrote, “I hope to be able to work as long as I live beyond other men’s line of things, and plant the seed of the gospel where others have not planted. My great grandfather never got converted after his Sermon but his great grandchild is the pastor-me today. I want the world to know this but I am talking about my journey in music and in reference to my family’s traditional musical background. The bolder he used during that Sermon is embedded into the western wall of the St. Martins Anglican Church in my area. In fact, he was my great grandfather, Chindamba, who sold the entire area that the Anglican missionaries occupied in my area and built a college, now St. Michael’s girls secondary school, built a hospital, primarily school and other infrastructures followed in latter years. So he sold the land to the Anglican missionaries between £2-3 in the late 19th century. My Journey in music continues. Because of that traditional back-ground, many traditional activities in my village took and still, take place right in our compound. One of the identities of these activities is traditional music- Yao. Makwinja, my grandfather, conducted boys initiation ceremonies and his wife, my grandmother, conducted girls initiation ceremonies and Litiwo- for pregnant women. When she conducted Litiwo, I was set apart to tie beads around the necks of pregnant women during that special ceremony as all men were told to stay away from our home. In both the jando-boys initiation; Mzondo- girls initiation and Litiwo-a ceremony for pregnant women, one of the main components added was great SINGING- with drums, sticks but also- Acapella and clapping of hands- you can imagine my musical background. It’s already great. I did observe that if guitars and drums plus trumpets were added to the songs sung during the boys -initiation ceremonies, for the Yaos, the exact genre that could come up or be produced, would be Reggae. So from the beginning, within and towards the end of these ceremonies, SINGING or MUSIC is the main component or identity- well composed songs and backed up with traditional instruments and sometimes, the clapping of hands and dancing. During the boys ceremony- Jando- they normally use NGWASALA. Young boys line up with dry sticks and striking a long dry bamboo. So the sound of the sticks backed up by the drum- beating and the beautiful singing go along exactly like Reggae rhythm. My journey in music continue. On the other hand, many men in our district used to travel and work in South Africa. When they came back, some brought back Sound boxes to play vinyl records and many of the songs in the vinyls were from East Africa and Zimbabwe. The popular genre from East Africa was -Kanindo. A type of music named after the popular Kenyan musician- Oluoch Kanindo- who happens to be it’s founder before it was done by local artists. So my community was full of such musical activities -music from East Africa and Zimbabwe.I still remember some Artists, songs and stanzas and chorus of popular songs of those days- in the 70s. We also used to sing along those songs. One of my memory was- Sina Makosa. Lastly, being born from a Muslim mother and my father being a Catholic, by our tradition, I was to follow the religion of my father- Christianity. In those years, there was no Catholic Church in my area. The biggest and most prominent denomination was the Anglican Church brought by the UMCA missionaries. So my mother sent me to the Anglican Church and some elderly Anglican women helped me in my Christian life. It was my joining of the Anglican Church that molded my Christian music as I sung in the the youth group up to being a choir master- when I moved from my home district to Blantyre, Malawi’s commercial city. From here, I begun my professional music journey where I later travelled to Johannesburg, South Africa, to record my second album. When I came back home, I became the vice chairman of Musicians Association of Malawi, for the Southern chapter and putting together that organisation until it’s called the Musicians Union Of Malawi now. Apart from music, I am also a full- time Pastor- Cross Victory Church and a Christian Author.
DISCOGRAPHY
I haved recorded 4 music albums to my credit. The first one with my first band, The Zion Ambassadors, tittled- WE WANNA GO TO ZION. It has songs like Messiah’s Come, We Wanna Go To Zion, Refugee Repatriation, Let Young men rule, Nepotism and more. The second one was recorded in South Africa tittled- KHALE. It has popular songs like Lord Bless Africa, Kajuni, Khale, Destruction of Sodom, Man Today and other songs. The fourth is JERUSALEM with songs like, I Will Praise The Lord, Jerusalem, I Want To be With You, Never Be Afraid, Ndisaiwale Za Chikondi Chanu and some more. The lates one is- WINNER. It carries the hits: Mukafika,
Winners, Are you Ready, Yana Katema, What The Lord Has Done, Lord Bless Africa, Vol.11 and other songs.
George.
Copyright
Disclaimer
Privacy
Terms
Copyright © 2005 – 2024 ArtistPR — All rights reserved.
Showing 1–16 of 63 resultsSorted by price: high to low