Tag Archives: political music

From entertainment to rebellion: The various roles music has played in Tanzania’s history

The evolution of the the distinctive sounds of Tanzania

Bi Kidude performing with the the Culture Musical Club orchestra at Afrikafestival Hertme 2009 in Zanzibar. Screenshot from YouTube video, ‘Culture Musical Club & Bi Kidude – Jua Toka – LIVE at Afrikafestival Hertme 2009′ by AfricanMusicFestival. Fair use.

From traditional rhythms to modern genres, Tanzanian music has transcended mere melodies, assuming multifaceted roles that reflect the country’s diverse heritage and socio-political landscape. The rich history of music in Tanzania unveils a captivating narrative of resilience, resistance, celebration, and unity, illuminating the profound impact that music has had on shaping the nation’s past, present, and future. 

There are more than 120 ethnic groups in Tanzania, each of which developed their specific traditional musical and dance styles with corresponding instruments. Using traditional music for specific functions, they expressed aspects of human life through the human voice and instruments. There were songs for work, hunting, lullabies, battle songs, religious music, rituals such as baby-naming, therapy, weddings, processions, funerals and marching ceremonies.

Research conducted by Professor of African History Maria Suriano found that music was used for entertainment, unifying and politicizing purposes during the struggle for independence from Britain. Music was also used to criticize the British and popularize Julius Kambarage Nyerere (who became the first president of Tanzania) and other leaders of the Tanganyika African National Union, the main political party during the country’s struggle for independence. Most songs were composed and performed in Swahili, which was widely understood by the population. Suriano’s research and this YouTube video by John Kitime highlight that when the British realised how traditional music was unifying the masses, they imposed various forms of censorship on this music.

During the colonial era, popular music genres that evolved included ngoma, dansi and taarab, as noted by Suriano.

Even before colonisation, ngoma was the dominant form of cultural expression throughout the Great Lakes and Southern Africa. Ngoma is a Bantu term that encompasses music, dance and instruments. In Tanzania, it is also used to refer to significant life-changing events such as a girl’s first menstruation, births or deaths and other momentous celebrations, rituals, or competitions. 

Traditional ngoma dancing styles involve distinct hip movements and incorporate a diverse range of instruments, such as strings and horns, with drums being particularly prominent. Certain ngoma dances, like the Ambrokoi dance of the Maasai or the Ligihu of the Ngoni, may not involve any instruments. These dances typically feature energetic jumping and stomping, displaying significant movement and sometimes a more competitive element compared to those accompanied by instruments.

The main purpose of ngoma was to facilitate communication between elders and youth. It primarily functioned as a tool for educating young people and gaining insights into their lives, enabling elders to provide better guidance. However, the colonial masters, the British, viewed it as unchristian and detrimental to the “civilizing” process; as a result, it was outlawed.

Tanzanians created a new form of ngoma called Mganda with the intention of appealing to the colonial administrators. Mganda ngoma incorporated elements of Western military uniforms and attire, as well as some military instruments. This style evolved into a form of big band music, leading to the opening of the first clubs in Dar es Salaam and Tanga, where mganda ngoma bands performed. The video below shows a group of dancers performing the Mganda dance.

The Ngoma music genre gained popularity through radio broadcasts and studio recordings. 

Today, ngoma is deemed an official music genre in Tanzania by the National Arts Council (BASATA — Baraza la Sanaa la Taifa). It is performed, taught, and studied in many schools and universities.

In the early 20th century, soukous bands gained popularity in East Africa, leading to the emergence of dance clubs and music bands, especially in cities like Nairobi, Kenya’s capital, and Dar es Salaam. Tanzania began to create its distinctive fusion of soukous and rumba, known as Tanzanian rumba, now known as dansi. Bands like the Dar es Salaam Jazz Band, Morogoro Jazz and Tabora Jazz pioneered the Tanzanian rumba. 

Dansi or Muziki wa dansi is also referred to as “Swahili jazz” because of the predominant use of Swahili lyrics. The term “jazz” in Central and Eastern Africa encompasses soukous, highlife, and various dance music and big band genres. As highlighted by Music in Africa, the primary musical instruments in muziki wa dansi were three guitars, a drum set, alto and tenor saxophones, first and second trumpets, and the tumba, a variant of the conga drum.

After Tanzania’s independence in 1961, Julius  Nyerere’s government implemented a sponsorship system through which bands received financial support from government departments or other national institutions. The NUTA Jazz Band, named after its sponsor, the National Union of Tanzania, was a prominent dansi band during this period.

Dansi music thrived through the 1960s to the 1980s, marked by competitions, fan bases, and rivalries among bands. Each band developed its unique style (mitindo), often associated with specific dance moves. Mitindo played a crucial role in band identity, with musicians adapting their style when switching bands. Dansi evolved over time, incorporating European and American musical influences, transitioning from guitars to keyboards, synthesizers, and drum machines more recently.

In addition to the NUTA Jazz Band, other popular dansi bands included DDC Mlimani Park, International Orchestra Safari Sound, Juwata Jazz, Maquis Original, Super Matimila, and Vijana Jazz.

Taarab music is a vibrant fusion of pre-Islamic Swahili tunes presented in rhythmic poetic style, enriched with Arab-style melodies. It is highly popular, particularly among women, and is deeply ingrained in the social life of the Swahili people along the coastal areas, notably in Zanzibar, Tanga, Mombasa, and Malindi along the Kenyan coast. The influence of taarab has extended beyond coastal regions, reaching inland in countries like Uganda, Rwanda, and Burundi in East Africa, where Taarab groups compete in popularity with Western music-inspired groups.

Seyyid Barghash bin Said (1870–1888) is credited with popularizing taarab in Zanzibar, initiating its spread throughout the African Great Lakes region. The sultan is known to have imported a taarab ensemble from Egypt, and later, he sent Mohamed Ibrahim, a talented young musician from Zanzibar to Egypt to learn music and play the kanun. Upon Ibrahim’s return, the Zanzibar Taarab Orchestra was formed. In 1905, the Ikwhani Safaa Musical Club, the second music society in Zanzibar, was established, and it remains active. The Culture Musical Club, founded in 1958, is another prominent Zanzibar taarab orchestra.

After the music spread from the sultan’s palace to Zanzibar weddings and community events, the renowned singer Siti bint Saad  (c.1880–August 1950) became a pivotal figure in taarab music. In 1928, Siti and her band became the first from the region to make commercial recordings, as the inaugural East African artist recorded at the Bombay HMV studios. She went on to become one of the most celebrated taarab musicians in history.

Over subsequent decades, influential bands and musicians like Bi Kidude, Mzee Yusuph, Culture Musical Club, and Al-Watan Musical Club ensured taarab’s prominence in the Tanzanian scene and its global reach. Bi Kidude gained fame for challenging societal taboos, expressing explicit content in her lyrics, and demonstrating courage by singing with her face uncovered. She continued to perform until her passing at the remarkable age of over 100 years.

Kidumbak ensembles, a genre related to taarab, gained popularity, particularly among Zanzibar’s less affluent population. These ensembles typically include small drums, bass, violins, and dancers.

The 1960s witnessed the modernization of taarab by groups like the Black Star Musical Club from Tanga, which expanded its reach to countries such as Burundi and Kenya. In recent times, modern taarab bands like East African Melody have emerged, along with related “backbiting” songs for women known as mipasho.

Music has played various roles in Tanzania, from serving entertainment purposes to acting as an educational, politicizing, and unifying force. Despite the challenges encountered along the way, its distinctive sounds have not gone extinct, showcasing the value of traditional music to Tanzanians.

For a playlist featuring these singers and other music from Tanzania, see the link below, and check out Global Voices’ Spotify for more eclectic music from around the world.

This article was written by Zita Zage and originally published on the Global Voices website on 2nd of April 2024. It is republished here under the media agreement between Shouts and Global Voices.

Pushing against hateful narrative with art: an interview with Bristol musician Krantz

Take discovering acid jazz at the age of 12, then studying classical music and throw some beatboxing into the mix, and you’ll have some of the pieces visible that make up Bristol musician and activist, Krantz.

After discovering his music on X (formerly known as Twitter) I contacted Krantz to learn more about his work. It was clear that the man uses all his talents very specifically, and directly, to tackle certain political issues that belong to his proximate surroundings as well as around the globe. One of his latest tracks is a piece of emotional, moving electronica, that is created around a speech from US Senator Nina Turner, which Krantz sampled and puzzled in with the music – as if the powerful words were performed to the music.

During recent Covid lockdowns, Krantz used all of his musical talents, every Sunday, to entertain his fellow neighbors by performing music from his garden patio. Later on, other neighbors and musicians started participating, sending tones across rooftops and lifting people’s spirits.

Krantz took a moment to answer a few questions to further explain his background, music, and future projects. Read his message to the world below and check out his webpage and socials to follow his music.

Halldór Kristínarson: Thank you for taking the time to answer a few questions! First of all, who is Krantz and how did you first get into making music?

Krantz: I’m a pianist, producer, composer, songwriter and beatboxer from Bristol who has a passion for politics and wants to help those speaking truth to power by sampling their spoken dialogue from Youtube videos to create impactful and memorable songs. I want to help them reach as far and wide as possible to show that people are leading the fight against those who continue to want to divide us.

I’m a classically trained pianist and after discovering Acid Jazz at the age of 12 and teaching myself to play Jazz and Funk, I also found a love for emotive classical music after hearing Samuel Barber’s ‘Adagio For Strings’. When I began composing on the piano I started beatboxing to give each piece it’s character/ genre and this ability to beatbox and play piano at the same time has led to me supporting the likes of the Dub Pistols, Kosheen and performing at the world-renowned Boom Town Festival on multiple occasions.

My passion for many musical genres is displayed in my huge catalogue of tracks which include Classical, Post Classical, Orchestral Dubstep, Electronica, Hip Hop, Jazz, Beatbox, Funk, DnB, House, Trip Hop and World Fusion and I look forward to continue sharing as much music of varying genres as possible in the future.

HK: Did you decide from the beginning of your career to use your music and your voice for good? Or did politics and protest come into your craft at a later stage?

K: Politics and protest definitely came the more I emotionally matured and realised the good fortune and privilege I’ve had by having opportunities and choices. Before deciding to use the dialogue of truth teller’s dialogue in my tracks, my own lyrics were always very zeitgeist and addressed social, political and environmental issues so it was a natural progression and perhaps was destined to happen.

HK: Why do you think music is such an effective vessel for protest and activism?

K: Most people won’t spend the time watching a debate, an interview or even reading full articles and mostly make decisions on very little information e.g. ‘get Brexit done’. To be able to deliver the truth and the words of truth-tellers to the general public we have to be creative and find vessels that push against the [mainstream media] narrative that are entertaining, memorable through repetition and help induce introspection- you can take a horse to water but can’t make it drink. People need to be in a neutral space away from bias or influence to truly reflect and this is where art and specifically music can be most powerful. I’m creating alternative versions and remixes of multiple dance genres for every song so that the dialogue has a chance to reach as far and wide as possible and for the tracks to be used in DJ mixes online, in bars, festivals, radio and in clubs. The hope is people really enjoy the music, find the dialogue intriguing, want to find out who’s delivering the lyrics and then hopefully start following that person.

HK: You mentioned via our chat, on the medium formerly known as Twitter, that Facebook and Instagram had suppressed your posts after sharing a certain song. Can you tell me more about that?

K: I produced a song and lyric video featuring the dialogue of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (AOC) called “The Insurrection” and when trying to boost a post containing the video, Facebook responded by saying it was inappropriate and was not following the rules and regulations. Ever since that point my exposure has been incredibly small and is proving to be a massive obstacle in sharing content with people even within my own social circles let alone the wider public. Twitter is the only platform that really offers me the opportunity to share content to a wide audience and therefore the potential for increased awareness and followers.

Krantz working on ‘We Must Stand Up and Speak the Truth ft. Nina Turner’. Photo retrieved from the official Krantz Facebook page.

HK: How is the scenery around you, music and activism-wise? Where you live and work, do you feel artists are using their voices to create change?

K: I very much keep myself to myself in regards to music creation however I don’t feel enough people are using their privilege and platform for positive means. I’m incredibly lucky to be in a position where I can make a difference in people’s lives and I feel it’s now my duty to make this happen. Fear and hate are constantly being fed to the public and we need to fight against this with an abundance of art filled with messages of optimism, truth and unity.

HK: Who are some of the artists or people that have inspired you?

K: Herbie Hancock, Samuel Barber, Hybrid, Outside, James Brown, Tower Of Power, Pink Floyd, Jazzanova

HK: What do you hope to achieve with your music?

K: I hope to help inspire other artists to produce their own political/protest art, for people to listen to the songs and be inclined to find out more about the featured speaker and to help sow some seeds that lead to introspection. Even if someone initially only engages with the composition hopefully through repetition, the lyrical content will start to penetrate their thoughts.

HK: What is on the horizon for you?

K: I’m continuing to produce a vast amount of songs with alternative versions and remixes which I’ll be releasing over the coming months. The next release is a track featuring James O’Brien (LBC) called “Twaddle Is Still The Order Of The Day” which is about the collusion between politicians and the right-wing newspapers. I’m looking to release it before the end of the year. I’ll then be releasing 3 different versions of a narrative I’ve created using Nina Turner- the song is called “Many Hands Make For Light Work”. The genres are classical, Jazz and Dub.

HK: Thank you again for participating. Anything else you‘d like to shout from the rooftops?

K: Want to say a massive thanks to yourself for putting the time and effort into trying to help make a difference. It’s not easy, you have to have self-belief, believe that hope can materialize and the aptitude to be able to keep on pushing. Keep up the good work as it will pay off and we will help to implement change.

Review: 25 Years Of Music Activism

This article was originally published by Inside Indonesia and written by Julia Winterflood. You can view the original here.

The history of music, though constantly being rewritten, is inseparable from that of social movements. From revolutionary symphonies to punk rock, folk to political hip-hop, most genres feature artists who’ve created works to condemn injustice and inspire change. In Indonesia, the Bali-based rock band Navicula has spent the past 25 years tackling some of the country’s biggest social and environmental ills — corruption, human rights abuses, religious extremism, pollution, deforestation — through powerful, gritty, anthemic tracks.

It was this quarter-century milestone that inspired development expert and long-term fan of the band Ewa Wojkowska to produce and host A Soundtrack of Resistance, a podcast series exploring 12 Navicula songs and the stories of why and how they were made. Along with the band, she collaborated with other music industry members, researchers, writers, and colleagues on the project. The first episode was released in mid-2021, and a few months later A Soundtrack of Resistance reached number one on the Apple Podcast charts for music interviews in Singapore and Indonesia.

As the series’ tagline goes, it’s ‘a social history of Indonesia through the songs of Navicula, the best band you’ve probably never heard of.’ If you are among those who haven’t yet heard of Navicula, comparisons could be drawn with America’s Rage Against the Machine, or in terms of lyrical content, Australia’s Midnight Oil. Navicula’s style is influenced by alternative ‘90s rock, particularly seminal groups such as Nirvana, Pearl Jam, and Alice in Chains, while also incorporating indigenous influences and psychedelic rock. Many Navicula songs feature the elements of an anthem: a simple yet potent chorus, steady beat, and lyrics that unite those singing along at the top of their lungs — an integral part of the band’s live performances.

Navicula follows in the footsteps of Iwan Fals, a singer-songwriter who, as Rebekah Moore writes, was instrumental in defining the rock musician’s role as social activist in Indonesia. Vocalist and guitarist Gede Robi says in Episode 1, ‘As artists, I feel we have the ability to challenge the status quo. For me and my band Navicula, we love music and we care about social and environmental issues. We believe every generation has their own revolution — I think social and environmental issues are the crucial issue of our generation.’

Ewa speaks with Robi and his fellow band members — guitarist Dadang Pranoto, bassist Krishnanda Adipurba, and drummer Palel Atmoko — about their activism on and off the stage, along with the people behind the movements they support: prominent activists, academics, and development leaders. This is what makes the podcast a first in Indonesia: socially conscious musicians sharing a microphone with those who have also dedicated a large part of their lives to improving Indonesia, albeit using different methods.

Each podcast episode focuses on a particular Navicula song. Episode 4 explores Aku Bukan Mesin (I Am Not a Machine), which the band recorded in response to the terrorist bombings that shook Bali and Jakarta in the early 2000s. It’s an angry, frustrated track, with a propulsive guitar hook and erratic instrumental sections. Robi tells Ewa the lyrics were ‘just the pure reaction as a human being, as a Balinese.’ He was ‘thinking about the people who have losing (sic) their heart, losing (sic) their entity as a human to do such a cruel, unimaginable action. It just destroys everything. The effect of the destruction is affecting everybody.’ Ewa is also joined by Sidney Jones, Director of the Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict, who many consider as a ‘rock star’ of her field. She examines the role religion played in the bombings, what makes people turn to violent extremism, and whether it continues to be a threat in Indonesia.

Navicula at Soundrenaline Festival promoting the campaign to ban single use plastics in Bali / Kopernik

Episode 6 features Mafia Hukum (The Legal Mafia), one of the band’s most popular songs, which became the anthem of Indonesia’s anti-corruption movement. The episode includes a cast of heavy hitters in the civil society and development space: international development expert and former World Bank lead social scientist for East Asia and the Pacific, Scott Guggenheim; award-winning documentary filmmaker Dandhy Laksono; former deputy commissioner of Indonesia’s Corruption Eradication Commission, Saut Situmorang; and Indonesia Corruption Watch’s Sely Martini.

Reaching new audiences

Many of the topics at the heart of Navicula’s songs are also addressed by the Indonesia-based non-profit Kopernik, which Ewa co-founded in 2010. A research and development organisation, Kopernik works with diverse partners — including musicians and artists — to find solutions to social and environmental challenges across the archipelago and beyond. Recognising that music is a means to reach wider audiences and a key component of social movements, for the past six years Kopernik has collaborated with Navicula on various initiatives, the biggest of which is a campaign to reduce single-use plastic consumption. This collaboration culminated in the feature-length documentary Pulau Plastik (Plastic Island), which was picked up by Netflix in June this year. Alongside Tiza Mafira and Prigi Arisandi, the film follows Robi as he investigates Indonesia’s plastic pollution crisis and what can be done to fight it.

The Pulau Plastik campaign features in Episode 7 of the podcast, which delves into the song Saat Semua Semakin Cepat, Bali Berani Berhenti (As Everything Gets Faster and Faster, Bali Dares to Stop). Released in 2016, the gentle acoustic folk ballad is the band’s love letter to Nyepi, the Balinese Hindu annual ‘day of silence’, and an ode to the island’s bravery to continue celebrating its customs in the face of globalisation. During the episode, Ewa and Robi point out that Nyepi isn’t the only example of Bali’s bravery to buck the trend. In 2019, the province became the first in Indonesia to pass a regulation banning the use of certain single-use items including plastic bags, styrofoam, and plastic straws in restaurants, cafes, shops and markets, and inspired other locations in Indonesia to follow Bali’s example.

People power. As depicted in the documentary Pulau Plastik, thousands joined Navicula lead singer Gede Robi in a protest march in Jakarta / Kopernik

Navicula may not yet be that well known outside Indonesia, but the band’s music does connect with foreign listeners, even though most of their lyrics being in Indonesian. The band’s first major international exposure was with the song Metropolutan (Episode 2), which decries overdevelopment and pollution in Jakarta. The song took out the RØDE Rocks! International Band Competition in 2012. Their prize was a session at the legendary Record Plant Recording Studios in Los Angeles with the band’s ‘dream producer’, Alain Johannes to record its Love Bomb album. A viewer of the Metropolutan video, which Navicula submitted for the competition, commented, ‘I do not understand what you are singing, but I feel this song. I love it. Awesome voice, awesome grunge sound’.

Just as a foreign listener who could not understand a word of Indonesian was able to connect with Metropolutan, those who’ve never heard the band’s music will find much to engage with in the podcast. For those with little knowledge of the world’s fourth most populous nation, each episode is an accessible introduction to a particular period in contemporary Indonesian history, soundtracked by the band that has been at the vanguard of Indonesian music activism for much of its career. As Robi says in Episode 4, ‘As an artist, it’s really important to capture a moment. I see Navicula as a journalist using music as the medium, so it’s really important to capture the original feeling of what we feel at the time, like a historian writing a journal through music.’

Ewa Wojkowska and Gede Robi, A Soundtrack of Resistance, Podcast Series

Julia Winterflood (julia.winterflood@gmail.com) is a freelance writer, editor, and translator who has called Indonesia home since 2014. She contributed to the writing and production of several episodes of A Soundtrack of Resistance.