Loading detailsβ¦
Loading detailsβ¦
Artist
Abraham Dumisani Maraire, known to friends as "Dumi", was a Zimbabwean musician. He was a master performer of the mbira, a traditional instrument of the Shona people of Zimbabwe. He specialized in the form of mbira called nyunga nyunga, as well as the Zimbabwean marimba. He introduced Zimbabwean music to North America, initiating a flourishing of Zimbabwean music in the Pacific Northwest that continues into the 21st century. Maraire was born in Mutare, Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe). He began learning music from family members, and later at the college of music in Bulawayo. Maraire taught from 1968 through 1972 at the University of Washington in Seattle. He remained in Washington state until 1982, teaching at Evergreen State College in Olympia, Washington, giving private music lessons, and performing in cities of the Pacific Northwest and in British Columbia with several marimba groups he founded. Maraire returned to Zimbabwe with his family in 1982 to develop an ethnomusicology program at the University of Zimbabwe in Harare. Four years later, he was back in Seattle, teaching and earning his own doctorate in ethnomusicology at the University of Washington, after which he returned again to teach at the University of Zimbabwe. He died of a stroke on 25 November 1999 in Zimbabwe. Maraire is credited for his famous 1β15 number notation used on the nyunga nyunga mbira and for notating the song "Chemutengure" on the nyunga nyunga mbira. The song "Chemutengure" is used to teach mbira

Pieces of Africa

Tichazomuona
Kronos Explorer Series

EXPLORER SERIES: AFRICA - Zimbabwe: The African Mbira / Music Of The Shona People
Voices of the World

Chaminuka: Music Of Zimbabwe

The African Mbira: Music of the Shona People of Rhodesia
Shona Spirit
Released 1985-1995 / Unreleased
Chaminuka - Music Of Zimbabwe

Dumi-Maichi-Na Chi-Maraire & Nyunga Nyunga Mbira
Beyond Fela: The Many Sounds of Africa