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Mbira travels

Trip to Fradreck’s village.

Besides Patience and Jenny Muchumi, I have now met a woman mbira player, Nyarai.  I had the pleasure of playing mbira with her for 30 minutes or so before she was called to help with tea.

nyarai-at-fradrecks

Today I am remembering the trip to Fradreck’s village. We arrived after 9 sometime. We had sadza,beans, and canned tuna for dinner and arrived at bedtime at 11:00.

I slept on a mat in the kitchen storage area. I thought surely I would never sleep but I slept until 5:30 then got up to visit the outdoor potty. Difficult in the long skirt.

We went to the area where they held biras. Fradreck’s grandfather was a mhondoro spirit medium. He was executed by the freedom fighters.   I had always thought that he was executed by the Rhodesian Government for wanting peace.  He was executed because the mhondoro spirit wanted white and black people to walk side by side with equal power not one side over the other.

We stood by the spot where Fradreck watched his grandfather forge nails into mbira keys. Part of his history as an mbira maker.

Lovely kitchen with nice metal rack over the fire for cooking.

We had tea and started back in Fradreck’s car for Harare. They stopped a couple of times at road side stands for produce. We also stopped for Fradreck to point out the mubvamaropa  tree that is used for making the mbira.

Mubvamarope tree.
Mubvamarope tree.

Erica is starting a reseeding project. The trees won’t mature for 50 years. This is for our grandchildren.   Fradreck is part of the project.

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Waiting for Fradreck and Mai Pasi.

Waiting for Fradreck to pick me up. It is Monday, March 2nd. Thunder is starting again. Third day of thunder and lightning. Storms quite violent. Though not a strong wind or hail.

Confirmed flight out on Wednesday. Made me nervous. Good people here. I paid my final bill here. Very reasonable. Twenty five a night which is a special deal.

Fradreck and Mai Pasi have picked me up. There is a bad rain storm. Something is broken. The are trying to fix it under the umbrella in the rain. Mai Pasi said do not come out. So I am sitting in the car while they are fixing the fender which seems to be tied on.

Cathy calls this Africa time. When someone comes later than you expect.

The day before I leave I would like everything to be safe. And to get back safely.

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Today is our last practice day

Today is our last practice day. Great until we tried to practice in the evening and it was terrible sounding. I finally got up and said this isn’t working for me.

Tomorrow is the party. Now that I hear we are performing for the mbira teachers I find myself to be less than enthusiastic.

There is so much good in this culture. Very relational. There are the same difficulties as anywhere else. Some people drink too much.  Some people have issues with certain other nationalities and there is now a basic survival for many families. The country is very
beautiful. The people are philosophical and relational in a village sort of way. I wonder what my place. is in all of this.

I want to go back to my own space not to Ashland.

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Wednesday

Wednesday. Nice breakfast with all including Gift Rushumbwa. He called Kaia and I the word for his son’s wife. He said that they do that here. You might call someone “older brother” or mom as Caution Shonai called me. Amai he said and later mom. This is a way of acknowledging the feeling of the relationship. Like son if someone is younger and you have affection for them. It might be the word for your daughter’s husband. Someone feels like that in relation to you.  Ambuya would be grandmother.  Muzukuru would be grandson. Or you can call them friend if they are. Calling someone by their first name is very unusual.

Gift Rushumbwa, mbira teacher and maker.
Gift Rushumbwa, mbira teacher and maker.

My mbira made by Gift Rushumbwa.  Good sound, wonderful buzz.  He is prolific. Works hard, has a lot to show for his hard work. I took this one from the states and carried it to Zimbabwe. Bought it through Mbira.org.rushumbwa-mbira1

We went into Harare to try wireless. We stopped at the Apple store but the wireless didn’t work. We then went to Crown Point Hotel and bought a voucher for 30 minutes of airtime. The wireless worked but I could only post to facebook on my first voucher as Facebook loaded very quickly and my e-mail loaded very slowly into my iphone.  John and I shared a second voucher and were each able to send 1 e-mail.

apple-store-harare-zimbabwe

We then piled in the truck and went to pick up more books on the Shona language which had doubled in price since last week. So Erica was going to try another route. We bought “stuff” at the equivalent to Costco called Makro. I bought coffee one kind from Zimbabwe. When we paid in US dollars, since there is no change, if you amount was more than a round dollar amount you had to fill out the rest by getting candy. I owed 12.02 so they just let me pay 12.00 even. The coffee smells pretty stale but maybe I can mix it.

We came back for lunch and practiced our two songs. Now we are waiting for dinner. Singing tonight. I don’t enjoy the singing too much.  Maybe I’ll grow into it.  I want to because the singing adds so much to the complexity of the music.

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Bushbaby Lodge sign

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Mbira travels

Chigwaya

endie-makope

We learned Chigwaya from Endiby Makope.  This is a song that I requested.   He talked first a little bit about the meaning of the song which is played for the njuzu spirits:

Chigwaya is about the bream type of fish (has more bones) http://www.aquariumlife.net/profiles/african-cichlids/bream/100083.asp for a photo.  Used to bring the mermaid spirits in a ceremony meant for the mermaids.   Deep meaning.  Specially endowed mediums have a mermaid spirit.   They are powerful, often herbalists.  Very clean from living in the water.   There are no male mermaids.

There are specific things that happen in a water ceremony which I won’t relate here. I loved the song immediately.   Endiby is a good teacher. We learned the kushaura easily and then the kutsinhira which had nice subtle highline variations.  We worked hard until dinner learning and singing the words and then after dinner playing hosho and learning a little more of a variation in the kushaura.

I fell asleep after dinner and missed part of this.  I couldn’t sleep the night before and finally got up for coffee at 3:00 a.m.  John and Jim both had really unsettled dreams with high anxiety.  This song became very soothing.  I decided to stay at Bushbaby the next day to practice it and stay with my own water spirit which was responding well to this new song.

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Mbira travels

Shonhai Brothers

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.

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Mbira travels

Fambai Zvakanaka

Long trip indeed. Portland to Minneapolis–2 plus hours. Short trip no problems checking luggage. Security must have relaxed in the new days of Obama though maybe if you are headed out of the country, white, and older than 60 no one really cares about  assessing your potential.

With no trouble I found my new gate. I was soon on a 747 on my way to Amsterdam. My earlier feeling of going through the birth canal while heading to the Portland Airport had dispersed. Fortunately I had spent time with Nick and Megan on Sunday. They kept me busy. Trev took me to the airport and made a last minute dash to Portland Teacher’s Credit Union (now OnPoint) to get 1 dollar bills as there is very little change in Zimbabwe. I am happy that I did. Trev suggested $50. Good guess, Trev.

All of time sequences will be confused here as I am trying to text message from my phone to Nick so he can post to the blog. My e-mail doesn’t work from here near Arcturus, Zimbabwe. My call would be $4.99 a minute even if the reception were good.

While I am gazing at the night walls here at Bushbaby lodge, I am noticing the wall decorations, different sized spiders that seem like they belong to the wall and yet they move around. And yes, Rosalie, I saw one the size of a minidisc. At first I thought you were exaggerating. Ha!

Thanks to the spiders in the daylight basement in Ashland, including hobo and Black Widow spiders, I have come to accept these lovely weavers into my life. Though thanks for the warning, Rosalie, so I could call these night dwellers the weavers that they are and not call them “fear.” I will bring home photos to share.

spiderwoman

I have many more impressions from airports, Amsterdam, Nairobi, and Harare and of the wild ride thought the roads to Bushbaby lodge making 4 lanes out of 2. This reminded me of the sometimes wild rides in Europe that Trev’s dad and I took in 1971. Without Jim’s stellar driving, I wouldn’t be in Africa today.

I do believe that the trip will be life changing.

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Mbira travels

Bushbaby Lodge

bushbaby-lodge

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Mbira travels

Bushbaby lodge

I am now at Bushbaby Lodge. This is my third day here. I’m starting to get used to my Malarone for malaria though queasy in midday. If I did this again I would arrive on Thursday. Lovely place. I’m ready for action. Electricity off today. Jim coming and Eyal. Erica should arrive later with Kaia.  They have been staying with Fradreck.

I arrived first on Wednesday, February 9.  I got to pick my bed first. Lovely spot.  I had a few fights later with my mosquito net but wouldn’t have wanted to be without it.

bedroom-mosquito-net

I’ve now met Sam who is a great cook here at Bushbaby and Charles who takes care of everything else.  All this good cooking is hooked on to my waist and slow digestion. This too shall pass.