NYAMI NYAMI records

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NYAMI NYAMI records moving sounds from Southern Africa

Nyami Nyami Records is a french label created by Charles Houdart and Antoine Rajon, promoting music mainly from Southern Africa. From Zambia to Zimbabwe, Mozambic to South Africa and everywhere in between Nyami Nyami Record's mission is to touch the soul and ears of the people with music made with passion, love, respect and talent. Our releases are only available via vinyl & digital, and feature u

nique recordings by some of the most fascinating musicians from the Southern African region through new productions, reissues and rare projects and collaborations.

KEXP presents Bantu Spaceship performing “Spaceships A Bantu” live at the Conservatoire de Rennes Auditorium in Rennes, ...
15/03/2024

KEXP presents Bantu Spaceship performing “Spaceships A Bantu” live at the Conservatoire de Rennes Auditorium in Rennes, France, during Trans Musicales 2023. Recorded December 8, 2023.

ULenni Okandlovu - Vocals
Joshua Madalitso Chiundiza - Synth and Electronic
The Serpant - Guitar, Vocals
Thando Mlambo - Vocals, Rythm Guitar

http://KEXP.ORG presents Bantu Spaceship performing “Spaceships A Bantu” live at the Conservatoire de Rennes Auditorium in Rennes, France, during Trans Music...

"Leur vaisseau spatial est en provenance du Zimbabwe et, à chacun de leur concert, ils ouvrent une faille spatio-tempore...
11/12/2023

"Leur vaisseau spatial est en provenance du Zimbabwe et, à chacun de leur concert, ils ouvrent une faille spatio-temporelle reliant deux musiques que la géographie sépare"
"L'énergie des Zimbabwéens du jeune collectif Bantu Spaceship et de leur afro-wave fiévreuse, un show marqué par une montée hypnotisante et un solo de guitare étincelant sur leur titre-phare Bantu Cakes"
C'était vendredi dernier aux Trans Musicales, et les caméras de France tv ont tout gardé...

Déhanchez-vous devant le live déjanté de Bantu Spaceship lors des Trans Musicales de Rennes 2023. Leur vaisseau spatial est en provenance du Zimbabwe et, à chacun de leur concert, ils ouvrent une faille spatio-temporelle reliant deux musiques que la géographie sépare. On retrouve, d’un côt....

Décollage imminent... Bi-pole Bantu Spaceship/s Trans Musicales
28/09/2023

Décollage imminent...

Bi-pole Bantu Spaceship/s Trans Musicales

https://www.lestrans.com/programmation/?fbclid=IwAR025NACl9Cb0YALJWwTEUw-XcIx2uq4d7dOg903F1gNOSm-q4uASzCrs58 #/detail/ba...
22/09/2023

https://www.lestrans.com/programmation/?fbclid=IwAR025NACl9Cb0YALJWwTEUw-XcIx2uq4d7dOg903F1gNOSm-q4uASzCrs58 #/detail/bantu-spaceship
Bantu Spaceship at Trans Musicales 2023. Best music festival in the world.

Depuis toujours, l’ATM (Association Trans Musicales) est très attentive à l’utilisation des données personnelles des publics de ses événements. L’application du nouveau Règlement Général sur la Protection des Données (RGPD)*, entré en vigueur le 25 mai 2018, nous donne l’occasion d...

Nous avons eu en 2020 la joie de sortir un disque de l'immense musicien Zimbabwéen Forward Kwenda. Deux titres de Mbira ...
19/06/2023

Nous avons eu en 2020 la joie de sortir un disque de l'immense musicien Zimbabwéen Forward Kwenda. Deux titres de Mbira habités, mystiques, à la beauté renversante... Une grande fierté, une pochette de l'espace signée Georgina Maxim, et un remix de dj oil.
https://nyaminyamirecords.bandcamp.com/album/chawapiwa
Forward Kwenda est en France pour une série de concerts. C'est rare. Courez-y.
Il sera accompagné de l'excellent Yann Dub et de Shiho Manabe
24/06 : - ateliers mbira (Paris)
- concert à la Galerie Art-Z (Paris)
07/07 : - ateliers mbira (Donnazac 81)
- Soirée Zimbabwe : projection du documentaire Kunakirwa et concert (Gaillac 81)
08/07 : - ateliers mbira à (Donnazac 81)
- concert (Donnazac 81)
13 au 16/07 : concerts au festival Rencontre au Coeur du Sacré (St Gilles 56)
- 23/07 : concert au festival Le Rêve de l'Aborigène (Airvault 79)
Pour les infos détaillées: [email protected]

Antoine Rajon Village unhu Olivier Sultan

09/06/2023

Choose your preferred music service

Huge "merci" to Banning Eyre and Afropop Worldwide for this great interview with Josh Chiundiza and myself... Everything...
19/05/2023

Huge "merci" to Banning Eyre and Afropop Worldwide for this great interview with Josh Chiundiza and myself... Everything you always wanted to know about Bantu Spaceship* (*but were afraid to ask).

Banning Eyre interviews Joshua Madalitso Chiundiza of the ZImbabwean band Bantu Spaceship about their debut album on Nyami Nyami Records.

Bantu Spaceship dans la sélection du Le Monde Afrique ... Chants Ndébélé, Chimurenga, et beats affûtés.Vinyl en édition ...
15/05/2023

Bantu Spaceship dans la sélection du Le Monde Afrique ... Chants Ndébélé, Chimurenga, et beats affûtés.
Vinyl en édition limitée ici : https://nyaminyamirecords.bandcamp.com/album/bantu-spaceship

Au Sénégal, au Nigeria et au Zimbabwe, des artistes combinent production électronique et sonorités traditionnelles pour préserver et prolonger l’héritage musical de leurs pays.

"Bantu Spaceship has released a self-titled debut album that is one of the most exciting Zimbabwean musical projects in ...
11/04/2023

"Bantu Spaceship has released a self-titled debut album that is one of the most exciting Zimbabwean musical projects in at least a generation."
Thanks you Africa Is a Country and Liam Brickhill
Lp & digital available on our Bandcamp : https://nyaminyamirecords.bandcamp.com/album/bantu-spaceship

Zimbabwe is not Mugabe, Nkomo, Mnangagwa or Chamisa. A new Afro-electronic music duo is giving the country’s complexity a soundtrack.

Mqibelo,  (A Prayer for the Weekend), is a celebration to the end of a week of hustling and bustling, featuring South Af...
27/03/2023

Mqibelo, (A Prayer for the Weekend), is a celebration to the end of a week of hustling and bustling, featuring South African rapper & poet Kwela.
This song is suspended in the air effectively leaving one in anticipation of a climax which never seems to arrive, like how you feel about the weekend on a Monday... :)

Limited LP available on : https://nyaminyamirecords.bandcamp.com/album/bantu-spaceship

Provided to YouTube by The Orchard EnterprisesMqibelo (a Prayer for the Weekend) · Bantu Spaceship · Joshua Madalitso ChiundizaBantu Spaceship℗ 2022 Nyami Ny...

02/03/2023

// PRE-ORDER //
“Past and future sounds absorbed into a beautiful now”
Bantu Spaceship’s forthcoming self-titled album will be out on March 10th.
Made in Zimbabwe// Mixed in Paris // Mastered in London at The Carvery Studio // , and proudly presented to you by NYAMI NYAMI records
Featuring Kid Fonque, Thandi Ntuli, Kwela
Listen & pre-order on our Bandcamp : https://nyaminyamirecords.bandcamp.com/album/bantu-spaceship
Available on LP & Digital

We're saddened to hear about the passing of legendary musician from eSwatini Smiles Mandla Makama.Thank you for the musi...
29/01/2023

We're saddened to hear about the passing of legendary musician from eSwatini Smiles Mandla Makama.
Thank you for the music

//RELEASE DAY//The second single from Bantu Spaceship’s forthcoming self-titled album is out! Enjoy!
20/01/2023

//RELEASE DAY//
The second single from Bantu Spaceship’s forthcoming self-titled album is out!
Enjoy!

Choose your preferred music service

"Traditional chiming guitars and gorgeous male harmony voices meet the toughest of drum machine kick drums and juddering...
17/01/2023

"Traditional chiming guitars and gorgeous male harmony voices meet the toughest of drum machine kick drums and juddering synths to create something that is both reminiscent of 1980s ‘Jit’ music and a classic electro sound with heavily compressed 808 drums gut-punching through the speakers."
Thanks to Truth & Lies for premiering "Bantu electro Sungura"
Enjoy!

The brilliantly named Bantu Spaceship have a brand new single out on 20th Jan and we are pleased to offer the PREMIERE of this unique creation that harnesses the guitars and vocal harmonies of the classic ‘Jit’ sound of 1980s Zim bands like the Bhundu Boys and throws it into the future with th

Shout out to Bandcamp for kicking off 2023 with Bantu Spaceship's "Don't Break" on their weekly playlist.The next single...
11/01/2023

Shout out to Bandcamp for kicking off 2023 with Bantu Spaceship's "Don't Break" on their weekly playlist.
The next single drops on the 20th of January

Kicking off 2023 with new cuts from Bantu Spaceship, IREKE, Casey Malone, Chunky, and special guests Me and My Friends.

// Don't Break // 1st single out! //You can now listen to "Don't Break" from the forthcoming debut album by Bantu Spaces...
09/12/2022

// Don't Break // 1st single out! //
You can now listen to "Don't Break" from the forthcoming debut album by Bantu Spaceship

Stream/download the song on all platforms : https://orcd.co/bantuspaceshipdontbreak

Bantu Spaceship invites you to get onboard, hold tight and enjoy the ride. Experience the upbeat, feel good music from village to town, and town to village. A beautiful excursion through a landscape of memories lived and futures imagined with electronic rhythms, soulful vocals and Ndebele chants from the heart of Zimbabwe.

Joshua Madalitso Chiundiza (Music Production)
ULenni Okandlovu (Lyrics, vocals and poetry)
Sam Mabukwa: Guitar
Design by Tinotenda Tagwireyi
Mixing by Nico Sacco at The Cavern Studio, Paris
Mastering by Frank Merritt at The Carvery Studio, London.
Executive Production by NYAMI NYAMI records

Lyrics:
She looked into my eyes & said look straight into my eyes love
Promise me you won’t break my heart
Please don’t break my heart please don’t break my heart.
She said, please don’t break.

Les oreilles affûtées de Julien Bouisset et de L'Obs ne s'y sont pas trompées: "Ici, toute la musique spirituelle du peu...
23/05/2022

Les oreilles affûtées de Julien Bouisset et de L'Obs ne s'y sont pas trompées:
"Ici, toute la musique spirituelle du peuple Shona est contée. Grâce au travail de recherche du savoureux label Nyami Nyami, Dumisani Maraire, le créateur phare de la musique mbira moderne renaît sur des disques oubliés. Pionnier zimbabwéen, l’homme s’est installé aux Etats-Unis à la fin des années 1960 pour tenter d’y populariser la musique traditionnelle de son peuple. Une volonté qui avait pris naissance sur son premier disque « Tichazomunona », enregistré avec sa femme Maichi et sa fille Chiwoniso dans ce Zimbabwé libéré en 1986. Un petit bijou du fondateur du catalogue Gramma Records, désormais disponible en microsillon, en réédition."
https://www.nouvelobs.com/musique/20220520.OBS58731/top-des-vinyles-de-mai-des-premiers-disques-des-who-au-coffret-ultime-de-beach-house.html -msg

Le premier projet du producteur des Cure, le folk suave de Kevin Morby, les airs cubains festifs d’Orquesta Revé, l’air cubain de l’Orquestra Revé ou le dernier disque du rappeur Tyler, The Creator… Bref la crème des vinyles par 10 avec en prime à gagner : le premier disque de Dave Allen...

05/04/2022

This beautifil record is going to be Released on the 06th of May and it can be Pre-Ordered here: https://nyaminyamirecords.bandcamp.com/album/dumi-maichi-na-chi-maraire-nyunga-nyunga-mbira
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Recorded in 1986, the album TICHAZOMUONA by Dumisani Abraham “Dumi” Maraire was a pioneering effort to promote mbira music. It is a family effort involving his wife Chengeto Linda “Mai Chi” Nemarundwe and their daughter, Chiwoniso “Chi” Maraire. Maraire was a mbira and marimba player, who taught for many years on the west coast of the United States, and was the moving spirit behind the popularity of Shona music in the USA and more widely.
Born in 1944 in Chakohwa Village in Mutambara, Eastern Zimbabwe, Dumi began learning music from family members early. In his late teens, he began to pursue music more seriously; in 1966, Dumi went to the Kwanongoma College of Music in Bulawayo and started to learn instruments like the nyunganyunga mbira and the marimba. The nyunganyunga mbira is a 15-Note kalimba (or lamellophone), named after the community from which it originated; thousands of youths learnt traditional songs on this instrument at Kwanongoma.
Before colonialism, the mbira was considered sacred; though vital to Shona culture, its importance in traditional ceremonies suffered during and after colonialism. With the arrival of the settlers, many locals converted to Christianity, where the colonialist missionaries preached that mbira music was connected to evil spirits.
The rise of pan-Africanism and patriotism in the postcolonial era brought a more tolerant and respectful stance towards musical instruments like the mbira. At independence in 1980, traditional Zimbabwean music, following heavy Rhodesian censorship, began receiving more airtime on radio and television. After independence, artists like Thomas Mapfumo, Zexie Manatsa, Marshall Munhumumwe, Jonah Sithole, and Robson Banda started performing popular guitar music that replicated the mbira’s sound.
Dumi and others, including Ephat Mujuru, Beulah Dyoko, Cosmas Magaya and Stella Chiweshe, played traditional mbira music, sometimes accompanied by the ngoma (drum) and hosho (shakers) as well. Dumi is credited with developing the 1–15 number notation used on the nyunganyunga mbira, and notating the song Chemutengure; this song is used to teach mbira learners the technique of playing the instrument.
Dumi was a visiting professor in the University of Washington’s ethnomusicology department from 1968 to 1972. Composing in Shona, he specialised in marimba, singing, dancing and drumming. He taught at The Evergreen State College in Olympia in the 1970s, giving private lessons and touring the Pacific Northwest and British Columbia with several marimba groups he founded.
After watching a young Linda Nemarundwe perform one of his mbira arrangements at a 1972 workshop in Zimbabwe, Maraire offered to teach her more, and they worked together for the rest of the conference, playing together at a final performance. Dumi eventually married Mai Chi in 1975, and she joined him in Seattle, where he continued teaching and performing Zimbabwean music, while she earned her BA in Early Childhood Education.
In 1982, the family returned to Zimbabwe; Mai Chi worked for the Save the Children Fund, while Dumi developed the ethnomusicology programme at the University of Zimbabwe. During this time, in 1986, they recorded the album TICHAZOMUONA, featuring their 10-year-old daughter Chiwoniso on the title track.
The entire recording is a masterpiece of traditional mbira playing, combining the intimate with the spiritual to fashion a genre-defining sound. When you pick up a mbira, you feel you are picking up the history of a part of Africa, a complete way of making music, a whole social system of music and religion and history. As such, it can be confusing as to who is, in fact, playing who. In Dumi’s own words:
“When a mbira player plays his instrument, he is not playing it for the world. He is not trying to please people, nor is he performing. What he is doing is conversing with a friend. He teaches his friend what to do, and his friend teaches him what to do... To me, a mbira is a lively instrument. It amazes me when I hear all these different things in my way of playing. This is not because I am playing different patterns without knowing what I am doing, but because, as I give the mbira more, I get more from it. So, in simple terms, I can say that the mbira is always in front, giving the materials to the player, and the player follows behind, emphasising these while at the same time asking for more. What more can one say of such an instrument but that it is a friend indeed?”
Indeed, this personal relationship with his instrument led Dumi to credit the Nyunganyunga Mbira separately on the original album cover (even while his daughter’s name, Chiwoniso, was slightly misspelt).
Four years later, he was back in Seattle, teaching and earning his doctorate in ethnomusicology at the University of Washington. When Dumi finally returned permanently to Zimbabwe in 1990 to take a position at the University of Zimbabwe, Mai Chi remained in the US, making her home in Portland, Oregon, where she developed her renowned love of cooking into a catering business.
Mai Chi was a multi-dimensional musician in her own right - vocalist, marimba player, drummer, dancer - who involved herself deeply with the African music community in the Pacific Northwest, sharing her musicality freely and openly until she died in 1997. Dumi himself died in 1999, having inspired thousands to explore Shona culture by providing a vivid example with his own family.
Chiwoniso also passed away in 2013 after an inspirational career of her own.
The first-ever release of Nyami Nyami Records was the song Zvichapera by Chi, which she recorded a few weeks before she passed; this song was the reason this label was created.
Dumi similarly influenced countless musicians. From his years of residence in the US as a visiting musician, Maraire catalysed a network of Americans playing Zimbabwean music across the United States, focused primarily on the West Coast in Oregon, Washington, and California, with other communities in Colorado and New Mexico.
During his years spent teaching in Zimbabwe, many important mbira players crossed Dumisani Maraire’s path, and many musicians inspired by him have worked to perform, teach, and spread Zimbabwean music around the world. Several of Dumi’s surviving children have also gone on to be musicians themselves.

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