Use our pull-down menus to find more stories
  


OR subscribers use AllAfrica's premium search engine


Click here to read or make comments on this topic »

Namibia: Nama Musician Doing Wonders in Windhoek


New Era (Windhoek)
 

Email This Page

Print This Page

Comment on this article

New Era (Windhoek)

16 May 2008
Posted to the web 16 May 2008

Moses Magadza
Windhoek

A Nama musician has teamed up with other talented instrumentalists from various parts of southern Africa and has formed a jazz band that has brightened up Sunday afternoons in Windhoek.

Jonathan Goliath aka "G" is a talented drummer and the brains behind Zur Oase Jazz Band that has been drawing large crowds including top executives and tourists to Zur Oase, a watering hole in Windhoek West every Sunday afternoon with its original jazz sounds.

The self-taught Goliath describes their music as "spontaneous original fusion with a heavy jazz feeling".

"We improvise and don't sit down to compose. Every member of the band comes up with an idea and initiates a song which is then perfected," he said last week.

Goliath assembled the band of four last year and it has created numerous songs that he hopes will soon be recorded. For now, the band concentrates on instrumental music without the vocals.

"But we realise that if we have to sell we may have to include vocals," he said, adding that their first album would carry 10 songs.

The band's strength seems to be originality.

"We want to introduce something new. We want to surprise people and have them ask: 'What is this?' We can't compete with American jazz musicians, South Africans, Mozambicans and others who have made great names in the jazz field. Our strength is in innovation and originality," said Goliath.

Goliath revealed that for all his amazing drumming, he is a self-taught musician but says he was inspired by his tribe's drum beating, which he described 6/8 beat which music gurus say is jazz-related and very sophisticated.

"Mine is a God-given talent. I never got formal training to play drums. I just started by putting together cans and tins and bottles while I was a child in the southern part of Namibia. I am a self-taught drummer," he said.

He is now a widely-sought after drummer and hired by church bands to play. The diminutive drummer is a familiar sight on television, especially One Africa TV, where he appears playing with church bands.

"Practice makes perfect and that is how I improve my skills. I often play with River of Life Community Church," he said.

He studied for two years in Music Technology in Kimberley, South Africa, where he specialised in sound engineering, composing and arranging, production and entrepreneurship between 2004 and 2005. He obtained a Diploma in Music Technology (NQF).

"We just play lead, bass, drums and a keyboard for now but we are open to possibilities."

Asked where the band will be three years from now, Goliath said: "It is hard to say owing to various factors. We need financial support and someone to promote us and put us on the market. We need exposure. We need somebody to manage our band so that we can concentrate on producing music."

He said the band urgently needs good instruments. A church gave him the drums that he plays. Other band members own some of the instruments, while the rest is hired.

"Our music is very well received. We just lack exposure," he stressed, adding: "We want to penetrate more popular venues in town."

He said he was grateful to the owner of Zur Oase for giving them a venue to play every Sunday but said there was a limit to what one man could do in managing a band with so much promise and talent as his.

"He is doing his best but we want more. We need to go to the next level. This is our source of livelihood," he said.

He described the Namibian music industry as "wide open" and said musicians who can play live music in decent places can earn a living from doing so.

The band's bassist is Congolese musician Claude Tshibasu (29) who once played rhythm guitar for popular Congolese musician Kofi "Mopao" Olomide.

He has lived in Namibia for 11 years and is a sound engineer at Namcol. He says he is negotiating with his boss to allow him to use their state-of-the-art studio and record the group's first album.

He admires Mozambican musicians and says they produce "very good jazz music" and singles out Jimmy Dhludhlu, who has done well in South Africa.

Relevant Links

"I played rhythm guitar for Kofi in 1991. In 1999 I played bass guitar for Mbouta Likasu, another great musician. I was lucky. Our neighbour in DRC was a great musician and had instruments at his house. He loved cigarettes and as a young boy I would take some to him and 'bribe' him to teach me. He asked me what I wanted to play. I wanted the rhythm guitar and he taught me," he said.

Page 1 of 212


AllAfrica aggregates and indexes content from over 125 African news organizations, plus more than 200 other sources, who are responsible for their own reporting and views. Articles and commentaries that identify allAfrica.com as the publisher are produced or commissioned by AllAfrica.

 
Share this on:
Facebook
Digg
Del.icio.us
StumbleUpon
Muti


Make allAfrica.com your home page | RSS Feed

Top | Site Guide | Who We Are | Advertising | Search | Subscribe

Questions or Comments? Contact us. Read our Privacy Statement.

HOME
allAfrica.com


Relevant Links




CDVTA - Director Wins Sheila Mckechine International Award
Made in Khayelitsha, Sold in New York
Boys of Mass Destruction
Christian And Muslim Youth Share At Catholic Art Festival
Pope Urges African Churches to Revise Evangelization





Today's Most Active Stories