Fradreck Mujuru and Erica Azim

2016-17 MIT Sounding Series

Fradreck Mujuru assists a student during Professor Patricia Tang‘s Making African Instruments Project. Photo: James Addison.
Fradreck Mujuru assists students in Professor Patricia Tang‘s Making African Instruments Project. Photo: James Addison.
Fradreck Mujuru assists a student during Professor Patricia Tang‘s Making African Instruments Project. Photo: James Addison.
Fradreck Mujuru & Erica Azim play a sample from the MBIRA CD 3605.
Fradreck Mujuru assists a student during Professor Patricia Tang‘s Making African Instruments Project. Photo: James Addison.

Celebrating the Shona mbira tradition

About the Residency

Fradreck Mujuru and Erica Azim share their passion for traditional forms of Shona music of Zimbabwe through concerts, lecture-demonstrations and hands-on mbira (thumb piano) workshops at MIT.

Zimbabwe’s mbira “dzavadzimu,” the primary traditional instrument of the Shona people, has been played for over 1,000 years for religious rituals, royal courts and social occasions. It consists of 22 to 28 metal keys mounted on a hardwood soundboard and is usually placed inside a large calabash resonator (deze). The keys are played with the two thumbs plucking down and the right forefinger plucking up. An mbira piece consists of a basic cyclical pattern which includes numerous intertwined melodies, often with contrasting rhythms. The extensive possibilities for rhythmic and melodic variation render each performance unique. When two mbiras are played together, the interlocking parts result in rich polyphony and polyrhythm.

A traditional repertoire of hundreds of pieces is transmitted from generation to generation, and pieces popular today are known to have been played over 700 years ago. At traditional ceremonies (mapira), ancestors are called by performing their favorite songs; thus, the same pieces are retained in the repertoire over the centuries. Mbira is played in many traditional and contemporary contexts, including mapira, personal meditation, traditional healing, celebrations and ceremonies. Some of Zimbabwe’s electric pop and fusion bands also incorporate mbira in their music, and the mbira is now considered the national instrument of Zimbabwe.

Fradreck Mujuru and Erica Azim’s visit to the Institute is part of Professor Patricia Tang’s Making African Instruments Project and MIT Sounding, an innovative annual performance series that blurs the boundaries between contemporary and world music. Curated by Evan Ziporyn, Faculty Director of the MIT Center for Art, Science & Technology, the 2016-17 season of MIT Sounding integrates the avant-garde sounds of ancient instruments and traditional practices with cutting-edge composition and technology to present various visions of a new, evolving music that defies genre. 

The 2016-17 MIT Sounding Performance Series is presented by the MIT Center for Art, Science & Technology (CAST) and MIT Music and Theater Arts.

Events

Past Events

Workshop
Children’s Drum Workshop led by Lamine Touré
October 30, 2016 / 10:00am-12:00pm
World Music Room, N52-199
265 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge

Performance
Fradreck Mujuru and Erica Azim
October 30, 2016
3:00pm pre-concert talk
4:00pm concert
MIT Killian Hall, 14-W111
160 Memorial Drive, Cambridge, MA

Zimbabwean master musician Fradreck Mujuru is joined by Erica Azim in playing the healing music of the mbira, used by the Shona to connect the living with the ancestors for more than 1,000 years. Born to the largest extended family of mbira players in Zimbabwe, Mujuru has played mbira since the age of eight, and is now known internationally as an outstanding performer, teacher, and instrument maker, while continuing to play in ceremonies for the ancestors at home. Azim is America’s leading proponent of the Shona mbira tradition, who has toured with various Shona mbira masters and taught thousands of Americans to play mbira, and to support the tradition in Zimbabwe.

Class Visit
“Making African Instruments with Fradreck Mujuru/Erica Azim”
Workshop on Mbira-Making
October 2016

Collaborators at MIT

Patty Tang, Associate Professor of Music

Lamine Touré, Lecturer, World Music

Biography

Performer and master craftsman Fradreck Mujuru is widely considered the greatest living maker of the intricately designed and spiritually potent mbira dzavadzimu (‘thumb piano of the ancestors’), and Erica Azim is a respected performer and leading American teacher of Shona mbira music, an entrancing and virtuosic tradition. They began collaborating in 1994 in Zimbabwe, performing and teaching in the US from 2003-05, followed by an extensive US concert tour in 2014. They play mbira together in a wide variety of tunings, including the low-pitched Dambatsoko tuning traditionally played by the Mujuru family, the low-pitched Phrygian mode nemakonde tuning, the high pitched Dorian-mode Katsanzaira tuning and the more common nyamaropa and mavembe (gandanga) tunings.

Mujuru and Azim also support and promote traditional mbira music and culture in Zimbabwe through the non-profit organization MBIRA, which Azim founded in 1998. In a country with an estimated 70-90% unemployment rate, MBIRA provides critical support for Zimbabwean mbira makers in the daily struggle for survival.

Mujuru, who hails from the largest extended family of mbira players in Zimbabwe, has played the instrument since the age of 8. After touring Europe and South Africa in the 1990’s, he taught and performed in the US, including residencies at Grinnell and Williams Colleges in 2001, and the University of Michigan in 2012. Mujuru teaches mbira, drums and singing. At home, he plays mbira in traditional ceremonies, builds the instruments with his apprentices, hosts numerous international student musicians, and facilitates the Zimbabwe operations of two small non-profit organizations, including MBIRA. Mujuru plays the songs and the style that have been used heal the sick and call ancestors to earth to give advice to the living, from time immemorial.

California native Azim has played Shona mbira music for over 40 years. She has lived and studied in Zimbabwe, and played on commercial solo mbira recordings, as well as recording and touring with Zimbabwean musicians. She has played mbira at venues, ranging from Zimbabwean village ceremonies to the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC. Azim conducts regional mbira workshops throughout the US and Canada, and holds internationally-attended mbira camps in California, Argentina, Bali, Germany and Zimbabwe.

Learn more about Fradreck Mujuru

Learn more about Erica Azim