Why Mtukudzi’s Eheka Nhai Yahwe won’t make it onto top of the music shelf
It’s an assessment that some people have made. An argument. They say that Oliver Mtukudzi, like wine, gets better with age.
It’s a wrong assessment. Especially if you listen to his latest album Eheka! Nhai Yahwe (Enjoy, My Dear Friend). Its perhaps much more appropriate to say WINE, like Oliver Mtukudzi, gets better with age!
It is a very scary feeling. Frightening. Creepy. Chilling. How does a man create something that perfect? Near-faultless? Flawless?
Is it even constitutional? Allowed? legal? But Oliver does
it anyway. And we have come to expect it of him.
The album, a 12 track release is Oliver’s 65th
album.
And there’s a sad feeling one gets when you listen to it
because it feels like Oliver isn’t going to release any more albums after this.
It’s too perfect too crisp and too undying that one can’t possibly have any
more genius in him to create another similar masterpiece. Or can he?
It has a distinctly aged and mature feel to it, being more
of a serving for the mature ear than the frivolous wet-behind-the-ears music connoisseur.
The track Chori Nevamwe may prove to be the up tempo track
that people will fall in love with. It is significant in a million ways…and
one.
In it, Tuku celebrates like he has not done before since
March 15 of 2010 when he lost his only son Sam Mtukudzi. In it one can feel the
Tuku Music mourning blanket has been ripped off. For the first time in his post
2009 music, one can hear Tuku’s voice tear through the instrumentation running
unbridled like a wild horse.
There seem to be certain sections of his lungs and vocal
chords that had been shut down for of 5 years of mourning that have been
re-opened for celebration and business. Tuku can laugh again. Those crevices of
his lungs that had become coy have a sudden light in them again. And that’s
what his late son would to see of him. A happy Tuku.
One imagines a celebratory mood in his Pakasimbwi rural home,
where he invites people to come and partake of the party. Of the merry making
and feasting. His mates-anaYahwe, should come and enjoy with him. It is Tuku at
his fresh height.
In Bhiza Ramambo, Tuku brings a percussion gallop feel of
conquest and military banner-men to his message. When you are down and out,
kneel down and say a prayer, he implores the listener. A prayer is like Bhiza
Ramambo, the king’s horse. A stallion that will help you gallop to heavenly
soothing from the ultimate great physician-God-who will heal your suffering. Its
sounds like a battle victory scene out of Games of Thrones. And the horns by legendary
trumpeter bra Hugh Masekela help cement the battle hymn of the Republic nature
of heavenly horns.
Masekela brings that wizardry on the track Kusateerera as
well! The trumpeter, flugelhornist and cornetist is at his very best on the
album.
And in Ndinecha, that cough is back. And so is a laugh which
is playful in Dzivirira, a song about safety of workers in the workplace. The joy
in him is palpable.
He unleashes the instrument he has swallowed, that gritty
voice-box, on several instances in this album, letting his voice have a heart of
its own.
He is thankful too. Thank you for wishing me well and
praying for me. God bless and protect you, he sings in the track Ndinecha. What
is a Tuku album without a bit of calm meditation to the Divine after all?
Overall the album is a lyrical didactic trip down the
intellectual genius of a philosophical pen-master that is Oliver Mtukudzi.
But a sad hard truth is that owing to the beauty of the mild
tempo throughout most of the effort, few of these songs have the stamina and
energy to make it onto Tuku’s live show repertoire for the mass market. It is a
genius more for the laid back listener. The cleavage he exposes into his words
is enough to give the brilliant mind an orgasm without any physicality.
Yet Pabodzi (Together) may be a great track for the dance
element. Don’t compete with me. I’m a master of my trade and a master at my
talent. I have my gift and you have your gift he sings in the Pabodzi. Its probably
a fitting message to the youth creating bubblegum trying to equal or ‘beat’
Tuku. Calm down, we are different he tells the competition. We can all make it
in the same space. Life is not a competition. He truly is inimitable. The track
is accompanied by a percussive trance induced by the traditional Katekwe hide
skin African drum which sweetens the madness of a magical danceable track and
master by Chinembiri Chidodo.
The backing vocals aren’t the traditional strong Tuku voices
we have grown accustomed to and often pale in the shadow of Tuku’s voice, which
could annoy, but the beauty is that it makes the effort a truly Tuku album
because his voice and its nuances then loom large. Colossal even.
But he strays a bit from traditional Tuku territory by
deploring slavery openly in Hunhapwa (Slavery). In this case he talks of the
prevailing social and economic slavery induced by unfair labour and
socio-political practices and systems.
Those in power say work for me and my children while your
scrawny little ones linger at the periphery, at the fringes, starving and naked,
he says. When will this end he begs. It’s a question many in Zimbabwe currently
find themselves asking as they work for an unfeeling oppressive elite. And the
song cries along with him.
Masanga Bodo-Not a coincidence-, a track with his wife Daisy
has made waves, but it was a labour of love for Tuku, having started work on
that track over three years ago, which shows that the man creates quality not
just songs to add onto an album. That is why his music has stood the test of
time. Which explains why this album is sprinkled with re-touched oldies,
Dzikama Wakura (Pss-Pss Hello), Tamba Tamba Chidembo and Hadzivake.
Family Affair...Daisy Mtukudzi features in Masanga Bodo |
In Masanga Bodo, Tuku says everything is predestined. It is
not by coincidence that we are who we are, born where we were or born into our
totems-Nzou, Elephant for example.
In this album, the Elephant has regained his voice. Standing
large and imposing on his rear legs, Tuku fnarks and wheezes then explodes into
a loud Bull Elephant’s trumpet.
This could have passed for the top of every music rack…except
the top is not high enough!
By Robert Mukondiwa
By Robert Mukondiwa
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