Greetings.
Celebrating #ZimAt42 with a thread of my Top 25 Zim songs of all time.
Far too many songs to pick from. But each of these songs on my list carries a special memory of growing up in Zim for me.
(Save for # 1, not in any order)
🧵Here goes🧵
1. Simukai - Pied Pipers
Not just my fave Zim song, but just my fave song, period. Takes me back to my childhood, on the lawn, in those ridiculous adidas shorts and North Stars, Simukai playing out of the Tempest radio, eating a sherbet.
It lifts my spirits. Every time.
2. Spirit - Andy Brown
This was Andy at the top of his creative game. Two-minutes into the song, Andy delivers one of the best guitar solos of all time, by any guitarist, anywhere.
3. Wandirasa - Chiwoniso
Guys, she was 21 when she wrote this song. TWENTY ONE!
Ancient Voices is one of the best albums ever. Ever.
Did I mention she was 21 when she wrote this?
4. Ndingazviite Sei - Biggie Tembo
Bhundu Boys are my fave Zim band, and Biggie was in his element on this one. It’s that sort of song that ‘understands’ you and gives you hope when you’re down.
5. Kudendere - Harare Mambos
“Amainini mune matyira / kana iri purezha kumusha kune mabira / Kana iri mari tobike ndari / Toudza baba kuti kuno kune kakari…”
They don’t write them like this anymore. They just don’t.
6. Sarura Wako - Leonard Dembo
My number 1 song, from my number 1 artiste. The best Sungura intro ever, Shepherd Akim was imperious on bass, and Leonard’s vocals were that extra-smooth topping that makes this song ever so perfect.
7. Ndakakubereka - Tuku
My favourite from one of my faves. It holds a special memory for me; a hot day, sitting in the back seat of the car, driving down a long straight in the sugar plantations in Triangle, the song playing over the radio.
8. Ndibvumbamireiwo - Four Brothers
Depth in lyrics. Perfection on instrumentals. Never Mutare’s bass, Frank Sibanda’s lead, Alex Chipaika holding all down on rhythm. There’s a 2-minute sequence that simply defies gravity. Genius
9. Tinodanana - Mapfumo
Never has brass sounded so good. Everson Chibamu and Temba Ncube on mabhosvo, Charles Mayana on bass, Sebastian Ferado on drums, the legendary due of Jonah Sithole and Leonard ‘Pickett’ Chiyangwa on guitar. My fave Mukanya tune.
10. Zambezi to Limpopo - Midnite Magic
A song well ahead of its time, from a band well ahead of its time; Prince Tendai and Midnite Magic created this absolute gem. Oh, the bassline.
11. Umoya Wami - Lovemore Majaivana
Where does one start with this one? The deep lyrics, telling sad story of displacement? Or just the musical arrangement alone? Sometimes I just slide on the headphones to soak in the instrumentation. (Aside: Dabuka Mhlaba my # 2 Majee tune)
12. The River - Michael Lannas
Michael Lannas had many great songs. But this one, oh man, how did they even do this? It’s a pure work of art. Funny, but this song evokes memories of the aroma of Plaza Bakery bread, on sunny, chilled Saturday mornings back in the day
12. Waiting for a New Day - Edwin Hama
Struggled to pick one from my two fave Ediwn Hama songs. The other is ‘Dreams of a Home’. But this one has a special place in my heart. An uncle I loved so much loved this tune. RIP Sekuru Adie! 🙏🏾
14. Mwenza - Leonard Zhakata
He has many big ones, but this is my number 1 LKZ jam. Didn’t understand a lot of what it meant till I asked @lmakombe to translate the deep language. Brilliant.
15. Pamuchato waTobias - Admire Kasenga
Pure Sungura. The sort they don’t make anymore. Danced to this late into the night on the eve of a certain wedding, and we woke up late and the event almost went ahead without me.
I was the groom.
16. Vanondivenga- Tobias Areketa
Thank heavens he left his job as an under-utilised chanter/dancer at belcher-in-chief Mapfumo’s band.
What more can you ask for from a song? Smooth vocals? Done. Brass? There you go. Bassline? Inject it.
17. Kudakwashe - Jimmy Chimombe
A toss-up between this one, and another one called Rudo. But this one really cuts deep. Remember watching it on Ezomgido and being totally absorbed by his genuine emotion. Later learned he was singing a true life story
18. Makatukura - Zig Zag Band
A band from the country’s best town. This one is my number one from them. A cutting social commentary on the 'haves' and the 'have nots'.
(The only bad thing about Kwekwe? You have to drive through dismal Kadoma to get there)
19. Shumaira - Dr Footswitch
A song played well before I was born, some time in the 70s, but one that I feel right in the chest. Loved it so much, named my daughter after it (kind of).
20. Tshisalanga - Ilanga
When they give out lessons on how to arrange a song, they should put this one in Tutorial 101. A band so full of talent, and they displayed it best here for me. Andy’s guitar, Don’s bass and his mournful vocals. This is what good music sounds like.
21. Ndinokudai - Family Singers
Takes me back to an interesting time in my youth. What a time. Using that bassline and percussion, these guys simply broke the walls; church music didn’t need to be boring. Zim Gospel music changed forever after this.
22. Zuva Rekufa Kwangu - Chibadura
Once had a long quarrel with a comrade of mine about which of John’s two big reggae hits was best. He went for ‘Mudiwa Janet’. I said it’s this one.
We don’t speak anymore. Why should someone have a different opinion to mine, surely? Imagine.
23. Nerudo/Zvikomborero - Cde Chinx
I’ve never been able to pick which one between these two Chinx tunes hit the hardest.
Will just spin both.
24. Carry the Message - Transit Crew
Growing up, we didn't have a lot of local reggae/dancehall. Transit Crew were our icons. All I wanted to do was go to Stodart Hall, thinking I'd find Culture T there, chilling, toasting. Loved this song to bits
25. Pretend it never happened - Peace of Ebony
Can’t believe this is 30 years old. Class never fades. One of the pioneers of Zim Hip Hop.
At Cde Chinx’s funeral, someone said this:
“Nothing can carry the history of a country, through generations, better than a song"
Another round of the “white farmers in Zambia now feeding us” lie. Again: great propaganda against Zanu. But doesn’t help us learn how others have grown their yields, farming.
Fact: +90% of Zambian maize is grown by small scale farmers
🧵 With links: zimfact.org/analysis-are-e……
2/ According to FAO, Zambian small-scale farmers produce 80% of their country’s food. Give them credit, and not diminish their work just for ‘we chased away whites propaganda.
How are they doing it? Yields.
3/ Zambian farmers have better yields than Zimbabwe’s. Many reasons: but overall, Zambia invests better in farmers than we do. Example: Zambia’s fertilizer consumption and maize yield per hectare significantly exceeds Zimbabwe’s
🧵 Unpopular facts thread on lithium:
First, about Bikita, then Zim lithium in general. 1. Bikita does NOT export “lithium”, and certainly not 500 tons/day. Facts below:
Bikita exports petalite. Used in ceramics (tiles, glass, kitchenware). The petalite Bikita exports is fully beneficiated; added AS IS in manufacturing.
The company does not yet mine spodumene, which bears the lithium used for batteries
3. Now, what about “Chinese” takeover?
Bikita been mining for 50+ years. Who owns it?
74% held by African Metals Management Services & Southern African Metals and Minerals (owned by German investor Wilfried Pabst). Other shareholders are Bishop Mutendi & Dzikamai Mavhaire
🧵 Delta (Coke) vs Varun (Pepsi): Two brands slugging it out on the streets in Zim. ‘Ngoro’ at every corner as they push product straight to market.
At play? A market that loves drinking sugar. Varun reckons that a Zimbo drinks 65 bottles of fizz per year…
🧵thread
When they first tested the Zim market about 6 years ago, first thing Varun did? Undercut big brother Delta’s prices. Then in 2018 they built a plant, set up a $250m warchest. Said we want 35% of market share in 5 years and at least half the market in a decade. Bold.
Commissioning his plant in 2018, Varun head honcho Ravi Jaipuria said he was “not too concerned about profits at this stage”, but market share. Boss moves ka. And then some luck: Delta drinks shortages started soon after. Varun milked it.
[Small thread on current solar projects, and planned ones]
This is Harava, building a 20MW solar farm in Seke. Initial phase of 6MW done and company is now scaling up. According to Harava, the plant would provide power to 45 000 home
This is in Mutoko. It’s the 2.5MW Riverside Solar Power Station by Nyangani Renewable Energy. It’s one of the first independent power producers to feed solar power into the national grid. It went live in 2018
Solgas is building this solar farm at Cross Mabale, Dete, Hwange. Solgas has recently completed 5MW and has applied to build a further 10MW. This project is on a 100 hectare site, where there’s space to build up to 88MW
Pretty awesome seeing the irrigation tech being deployed at this project, Palmlife, Ivanhoe Farm, Mash East. Seems blueberry is the new gold.
How they grow them #Thread
Project started 2019. The farm is 45ha with 30ha of blueberry so far. Production this year is c100 tonnes, off the first 10ha. 600 tons expected next year off 30ha. A further 14ha will be planted in April 2021, taking total to 44ha of blueberries
Growing blueberries seems a lot. Each blueberry plant grows in its own pot. Not directly in the soil. The pots are laid out on raised mounds covered with a weed matting fabric. Yuwi 🙌🏽