Mathew Tembo is an award-winning Afro-Pop musician hailing
from Zambia in Southern Africa . He is an important ambassador of Zambian
music culture both in Zambia
where he is from and abroad.
Tembo has toured and recorded all over the world. While
touring in Europe, he produced hits including “Nelar” and “Kumalya Ndimu”, both
from his second album “Save My Soul” a reggae album which was recorded in the Netherlands in
2001. He was awarded best Afro-fusion for the song “Nandunge” from the album,
“Anthem”, his first album to feature Zambian traditional instruments, at the
2008 Born and Bred Awards in Zambia .
Originally a reggae singer only, he began playing Afro-Pop
when he had an eye-opening experience while touring Europe
in 2004. When he was doing a presentation about the music he played then at the
Rhythmic Conservatory in Copenhagen , Denmark , one of the professors from the
conservatory asked him why he played reggae and not African music when he was
from Africa . From that experience, a whole new
world of musical possibilities came to life for him. On return home that same
year, he began a self-taught exploration of traditional Zambian/African
instruments such as the silimba (a home made marimba), which he made himself, kalimba
(mbira/thumb piano), and kalumbu (a one-stringed instrument). Incorporating the
use of these instruments into his original compositions, Mathew sings mostly in
Chinsenga (language of Nsenga people) and Chichewa (music of the Chewa people) and
weaves syncopation, repetition, polyrhythm and call-and-response into his music
creating an enjoyable yet powerful style he calls Chachacha (redemption songs).
Mathew’s first musical experiences began in 1994 when he
sung in a band called
Afro-Vision. He studied Music Education at Evelyn Hone
College of Applied Arts and Commerce in Zambia
majoring in classical piano and later studied Bachelors in Primary Education
with a bias in Music at the University
of Zambia . An active
musician while in college, he played in popular reggae bands in Zambia ,
including the Bantu Roots, Waves Musical Youths, and Genesis and in his own
band which later came to be called the Dark Black Band. Mathew then went on to
study World Music Performance at the renowned School
of Music at Northern
Illinois University ,
DeKalb , IL
where he graduated in May 2013.
He has headlined at festivals such as the Millpond Music
Festival in Bishop, CA, 2013, Umoja Festival in Pittsburgh, PA, the Accacia
Festival in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia,the Evanston Ethnic Arts Festival in
Evanston, IL and the 3rd Thursdays Arts Festival in Rochester, MN.
He has shared stages with big acts such as the legendary
Oliver Mtukuzi of Zimbabwe, Mulatu Astatke and Mohammed Ahmed both of Ethiopia,
3MA, the Reggae legend Michael Rose, Stephen Marley, Pato Banton, the
Skatalites, Tosh 1, Third World and
Dr Kenneth Kaunda, the first president of Zambia . His
influences include Thomas Mapfumo and Burning Spear. The 2009 Songlines review
by Martin Sinnock referred to him as a worthy successor of both the reggae
superstar Lucky Dube and the creator of Chimurenga music Thomas Mapfumo.
www.mathewtembo.com
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