Today we learned nhai-baba-nyamaropa-tuning on Nyamaropa tuning from the Shonhai Brothers. Nhai Baba is to call the spirit in prayer. Alternate words mean scolding someone who is lazy to work in the fields. The Kushaura is like karigamombe and the kutsinhira like Mahororo. (To play recording click on the blue highlighted title, the blog might take you to a second screen where you have to click again on the title..best heard with earphones)
Renold taught us the kushaura and Caution the kutsinhira. Erica helped us sort out the basic line. Both are good teachers. Caution seemed really old. Renold brought out fresh water for everyone but we wanted Caution to drink first as he had been teaching in the direct sun.
When we sat with them after lunch to learn the singing, Caution still seemed very old. Erica later said that he and Renold are both fairly young like late 20s or early 30s.
What I noticed as they started teaching the singing is that once they started playing they would just continue on and pretty soon they were both singing and their parts interlocked so beautifully. I will try to record a little of what I learned. We couldn’t record them during the teaching session so I don’t have a good recording of this.
I don’t think they ever quit playing spontaneously together until it was time for dinner. Renold seemed very hungry. Sam always brings out a snack in midafternoon. This time it was fresh cooked corn. We were happy to see Renold enjoy it.
In the evening, we each had a turn playing with Renold and Caution. I was so nervous, I could hardly think of what to play and ended up playing nyamamusango. Renold started playing the kushaura to get me over my really panicked state. Then Denver started the hosho so I could enjoy without worrying about a mistake. I could start feeling the energy of the music coming from both sides as I was in the middle. Caution is from a village and is more traditional. I could feel that tradition seeping into me.
Being hard on myself, I went to bed thinking I could never learn songs for 14 days. I couldn’t even remember Nhai Baba.
I got up early the next morning and sat on the porch deciding to play mbira as a prayer to my mbira playing and praying for the courage to learn all these days and to fulfill my mission in Zimababwe, whatever that was to be.
While I was playing Caution walked through to the bath house and back and then he came out and sat down and asked what I had been playing so he picked up the mbira (which was mavembe) and played exactly what I had just played. He looked so young in that moment with a big smile. Renold came and listened and someone supplied him with a mavembe and he started playing around what Caution was playing.
I was so touched by their playing. They are like two voices from one spirit. Caution said that I could come to their village to learn and called me Amai and then mom.
This song nhai-baba-nyamaropa-tuning is one of my favorite from the camp and from all the songs I play. Eyal gave each of them a little gift partly of seeds. So I went to bring them each a bag of trail mix to take with them. Caution gave it to Renold as I think he lives in the city and has less food.
I hope to learn again from these two. They are lovely humans and good teachers. They are fabulous musicians. I can’t wait for the new recording of their playing.