Kutsinhira
Transcription
Kutsinhira
Kutsinhira Cultural Arts Center Dedicated to the music and people of Zimbabwe F A L L / W I N T E R 2 0 1 0 Beyond zimfest Zimfest was the culmination of our 2010 ZimbaSPECIAL POINTS bwean guest season, and a OF INTEREST: tremendous success! We love to visit and study Beyond Zimfest with the wide array of Zimbabwean, US and CaStrategic Planning nadian teachers there, and to see them enjoying one Sessions another’s company as well. Julia Tsitsi Chigamba and friends. New Fall Classes We have now bid a Photo: Mark Cohen fond farewell to our good It Takes a Village: friends Cosmas Magaya and liams College in western MasKutsinhira Youth Musekiwa Chingodza, with sachusetts. Nel Applegate and Tim With money earned on Mueller hosting a fine party this tour, Musekiwa was able for the occasion in their to purchase a corn grinding beautiful backyard. The mill which he will set up in next day, we put Musekiwa the large town of Murewa. Congratulations to the on the plane back to Zimba He thus intends to earn organizers of Zimfest 2010! -bwe, and Cosmas, a day steady income to continue It was a rousing success! later, left for his three sending his children to school month residency at Wiland meet other expenses – Marilyn Kolodziejczyk which have increased considerably in Zimbabwe since dollarization. Cosmas is putting his money towards family expenses, and also looks forward to improving his well-situated new stand, on former national reserve lands near Beatrice. He hopes eventually to create there a residential school for Zimbabwean music and cultural arts, one which will embrace all cultures in Zimbabwe and will welcome students and visitors! His dream is to welcome many Kutsinhira members there someday, as well as to support an mbira program and mbira makers, along with dance, marimba, drumming, etc. (cont. page 3) Strategic Planning session Chris Bennett Kutsinhira has grown and changed as an organization over the past twenty years. There are great opportunities available to us to be even more effective at sharing the culture and music of Zimbabwe. In order to put to use our collaborative brainpower, we are holding two participatory workshops for strategic planning, one on November 6 and one on December 4 (Saturdays). You are invited to attend both of these sessions as they build on each other. Each session will last four hours, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The sessions will be facilitated by Kutsinhira board member Chris Bennett. Please bring your opinions, dreams and an open mind, and help Kutsinhira take its next step forward. This is an important and exciting venture for us and all are welcome. Please contact Charlene Talkington by October 30 if you plan to attend (talkchar@comcast.net). PAGE 2 Jennifer Kyker. Photo Mark Cohen. I think that being entrusted with positions of responsibility in Kutsinhira, and in other organizations has influenced who I am. Young people are capable of great things, and should take responsibility for doing their fair share of the work. — Alex Weeks, Member of Hokoyo, Zimfest 2010 Lead Organizer Marilyn Koloziejczyk, Musekiwa Chingdoza, and Bud Cohen. Photo by Mark Cohen. New Mbira Class Jennifer Kyker, a PhD candidate in ethnomusicology at the University of Pennsylvania, who has studied mbira intensively with Tute Chigamba, Musekiwa Chingodza, and Cosmas Magaya, is leading a new Intermediate Mbira class at Kutsinhira this Fall. Jennifer has recorded and performed with a wide range of artists, including Musekiwa Chingodza, Mhembero, Kudana Marimba, Chris Berry and Panjea, and the Paul Winter Consort. Participants will 1) work on paired kutsinhira and kushaura parts, exploring the relationship between these parts and the hosho in order to develop an understanding of the dynamic energy of an mbira ensemble; 2) learn unique variations for many well-known songs such as Nyamaropa and Taireva, in order to extend the possibilities for improvisation and variation available to intermediate players; and 3) learn at least one new gandanga song, most likely a Tute Chigamba composition, to give players a feel for the gandanga instrument, tuning, and repertory. Additionally, Jennifer will consult with students to identify songs where a few singing lines can be introduced, to give students a feel for how singing and mbira can complement each other. To sign up, please contact Barb MacWilliam at bmac@pacinfo.com or 541-689-1886. Fall Classes Welcome back to our many returning marimba and mbira students! We will miss the great talents of past teachers Mandy WalkerLaFollette and Jake Roberts, but we wish them well in their college careers! Special thanks to our returning teachers, Gary Spalter, Wanda Walker, and Bud Cohen, for continuing the journey with us. Fall Term is packed with quite a selection of classes. (Two mbira and eight marimba classes, to be exact!) We are proud to be able to offer beginning classes in marimba AND mbira this term. Bud Cohen lends his skills to the marimba class while Marilyn Mohr is teaching our new mbira students. If you are interested in getting on the waiting list for either beginning class, please contact Lynne Swift at lynneswift@comcast.net. For the more experienced player, we have added one class taught by Jennifer Kyker. She is offering an intermediate mbira class on Sundays from 3-4:30 pm. Please email Barb MacWilliam at bmac@pacinfo.com if you are interested in joining this class. Want to have a blast making music with other people? Join us for our Fall Term Marimba Jam. This will be for players of all levels. We know it will be on a Friday between 6:30 and 8:30 pm at the Center, but we haven’t picked a date yet! More information will be sent via the Kutsinhira website and listserv as it becomes available. Have a great term every -one, Barb MacWilliam Education Director Beyond Zimfest, cont. It is good to see that the financial opportunities that Kutsinhira extends to these great musicians are being used to benefit many people in Zimbabwe. On the horizon, we have two new visiting teacher residencies planned: Kurai Blessing Mubaiwa in February/March 2011, and Patience Chaitezvi later in the year (the dates have not yet been set due to uncertainty about Zimfest 2011). Kurai, whose lively solo mbira plus dancing act wowed us at Zimfest, also has a lot to offer in the way of teaching marimba and singing. He will arrive in time to attend our Annual Membership Meeting at the end of February, and stay to teach at Kutsinhira classes and private lessons through the following two weeks. We’ll arrange for some sort of performance too. Patience Chaitezvi impressed us all during her last visit to Kutsinhira in 2009. She is such a knowledgeable and hardworking teacher, eloquent in her accounts of Zimbabwean culture, expert in mbira, dance, drumming, that we knew we would want to bring her back for a longer stay! We will keep you posted on the dates of her residency as soon as we can work them out. Please contact Marilyn Kolodziejczyk at mkolo@q.com for further information about any of our past and future Zimbabwean guests. Zimbabwe community development project PAGE 3 Marilyn K, Musekiwa & Cosmas, Zimfest 2010 Photo: Mark Cohen "We learned a way to do mbira hosho from Kutsinhira created the ZCDP in 2001 with the intention of sending financial support to organizations and projects that are working to directly benefit communities in Zimbabwe with whom Kutsinhira has a close relationship. This year the decision was made to support four great projects that are making a huge difference in the lives of Zimbabweans. Ancient Ways, founded by Jaiaen Beck, has two successful projects, Nhimbe for Progress and Jangano, that have provided a wide range of services in rural Zimbabwe since 1999. www.ancient-ways.org. Tariro, founded by Jennifer Kyker in 2003, is providing school fees and educational support for over 50 girls and young women who have been orphaned by HIV/AIDS and poverty. www.tariro.org Mhondoro Frontline Medical provides funds to St. Michael's hospital and other rural clinics in the Mhondoro region to help them access necessary medical supplies. Kutsinhira's 2011 artist in residence, Patience Chaitezvi, teaches at Chinoyi High School. There are over 600 students who are orphaned and Membership It's that time of year again, when we call on your friendship and support. Your contribution keeps Kutsinhira Cultural Arts Center running in the black, helps to fund the Zimbabwe Community Development Project, and so much more! As a member of Kutsinhira you'll continue to stay informed of upcoming events, receive a generous discount on classes, workshops, t-shirts, and a great collection of CDs for sale at the Center, online and at gigs. Within you'll find the membership form. Please mail it to us with your check, or visit our web site:http:// www.kutsinhira.org/wiki/ index.php/About_Kutsinhira if you would like to use PayPal. For those of you in classes have no way to pay for the pencils and exercise books needed to be successful in school. The Chinoyi High School School Supply Fund provides these materials for as many children as possible. All four of these organizations depend heavily on small, grassroots donations. Whether you are taking classes, attending performances, joining in workshops with visiting teachers, or just purchasing a yearly membership, you can be certain you are making a difference in Zimbabwe today. Musekiwa that works better for me than other ways I was taught." "Since Musekiwa and Patience grew up in Zimbabwe, they know their culture and music even better than someone who visited, even if they visited for a very long time." Eli Calalang-LaCroix, Kutsinhira Masaisai youth group student Maggie Donahue and ensembles, you can conveniently renew your Kutsinhira membership at the Center. Thank you so much, Karen Howe Facilities Manager, Membership Coordinator Mark Cohen Zimfest 2010 Kutsinhira Cultural Arts Center P.O. Box 26111 Watch for special fundraising efforts to augment the financial support Kutsinhira can offer the 2011 recipient organizations through our Zimbabwe Community Development Project (ZCDP). The first will be a benefit concert by Eugene, OR 97402 Zvakanaka, Wanda Walker's youth Friday, October 29th, 7pm at Cozmic Pizza. Proceeds will go to purchase group. Phone: (541) 345-9454 http://www.kutsinhira.org Dedicated to the music and people of Zimbabwe. school supplies for students at Chinoyi High School who have been orphaned by HIV/AIDS and poverty. Come enjoy the show and know that your very attendance assists children in Zimbabwe. It Takes a village... Teresa Hawkes Dunyati-Long, incoming Newsletter Editor Some people have grown up in Kutsinhira. Who and what is Kutsinhira, and why is it good that kids are growing up in this “village?” Kutsinhira is a cultural arts and global aid initiative organization based in Eugene, Oregon. We are part of a larger movement throughout North America dedicated to the cultural arts of the people of Zimbabwe. Kutsinhira is part of a growing movement of local political, economic, and cultural arts organizations participating in outreach throughout the Euroamericano, Asian and African cultural complexes (google: aid organizations, cultural arts organizations, global initiative). Around the globe a new generation of children are being raised in such organizations. They are active, aware of global issues, and in close personal contact with people from diverse racial, Traditional dance. Tariro.org socio-economic, and cultural backgrounds. This new generation is taking on leadership roles in many of the organizations they have grown up in They are members of groups like Tariro and Hokoyo, both outgrowths of Kutsinhira. Tariro’s founder, Ph.D. candidate Jennifer Kyker, was 10 when she came to Kutsinhira. Tariro actively fundraises for girls orphaned by HIV/AIDS in Zimbabwe. Tariro has paid school fees, bought uniforms and study materials, and provided musical instruments. Hokoyo played many benefits for Tariro as well as other ZCDP projects. Several of Hokoyo's members took positions of responsibility within Kutsinhira (board member and webmaster) and other non-profits (Tariro and Frontline Medical). It's also pretty impressive that these young people took on the central leadership and planning for this year's highly successful Zimfest (zimfest.org), held in Corvallis at Oregon State University. Happily these vibrant young people are just at the beginning of their contributions as responsible, innovative global citizens. Hokoyo, Photo: Mark Cohen
Similar documents
KutsMtg final Program`06.indd
for marimba by Wanda Walker with assistance from Mandy Walker-LaFollette.
More informationKutsinhira Update
(www.tariro.org) and what we now term the "Mhondoro Frontline Healthcare Group" -- an umbrella term encompassing St. Michael's Hospital, Rwizi Clinic and Chikara Clinic (the 2008 ZCDP recipients). ...
More information