Umoja Culture presents a family concert "Bantaba" at Parkteatret Scene in Oslo 1st December. Umoja Culture, with base in Oslo, comprise of artists from both East and West Africa. The group combines traditional accoustic music, dance, poetry and storytelling. The concert is also a culmination of a three days drum workshop for school kids from Grünerløkka School. "We have conducted the workshop with the aim of giving the youth the rich taste of African culture", says Abuwa Edema, one of Umoja Culture's members.
The peformance is free for the public. Members of Umoja Culture are Mary Paul Seri (Ivory Coast), Sidiki Camara (Mali), Nasibu Mwanukuzi (Tanzania), Abuwa Edema (Nigeria) and Dag Pierre (Sweden). |
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 Miriam Zenzi Makeba. Pic by Endre Dalen Miriam Makeba, the South African singer who wooed the world with her sultry voice but was banned from her own country for more than 30 years under apartheid, died after collapsing on stage in Italy. She was 76, reports Celean Jacobson of AP.The Pineta Grande clinic in Castel Volturno, near the southern city of Naples, said Makeba died early Monday of a heart attack.
Miriam Makeba collapsed on stage Sunday night after singing one of her most famous hits "Pata Pata," her family said in a statement. Her grandson, Nelson Lumumba Lee, was with her as well as her longtime friend, Italian promoter Roberto Meglioli. "Whilst this great lady was alive she would say: 'I will sing until the last day of my life'," the statement said. Castel Volturno Mayor Francesco Nuzzo said Miriam Makeba sang at a concert in solidarity with six immigrants from Ghana who were shot to death in September in the town, an attack that investigators have blamed on organized crime.
The death of "Mama Africa," as she was known, plunged South Africa into shock and mourning. "One of the greatest songstresses of our time has ceased to sing," Foreign Affairs minister Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma said in a statement. |
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