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Review:
The first live release from Mapfumo, recorded on his 50th birthday and featuring a stripped-down version of the Blacks Unlimited. Mapfumo's spiritual Shona pop has never sounded like this. This spacious set delivers chimurenga (struggle) music redux, and proves that less is more. Two mbiras, iron-pronged hand pianos, do most of the leg work here, aided melodically only by one of Africa's most rock-solid bass players, Allan Mwale. Mwale's limber lines marry the spidery mbira parts with Sam Mukanga's artful drumming. With no horns, guitars, keyboards or backup singers to clutter, Mapfumo delivers spare, honest renditions of classics ("Hwahwa," "Pfumvu Paruzevha") and also pillars of the traditional mbira repertoire ("Mahororo" "Nyama Musango.") Only "Chikende," a song built around guitar and horn lines, falls short in this setting. If you have ever been moved by one of Mapfumo's many recordings or concert appearances, you owe it to yourself to hear this set. This is ground zero for one of the most original and enduring sounds in African pop.
— CalabashMusic.com
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