Chabvondoka's sound effortlessly blends Spoken Word with the sounds of Chimurenga, Jazz, Afrobeat and Hip Hop to create a sound that is at once revolutionary and immensely danceable.
Samm Farai Monro, better known as Comrade Fatso, is one of the most
explosive and controversial acts in Southern Africa today. Comrade
Fatso calls his poetry Toyi Toyi Poetry, radical street poetry that mixes
Shona with English and mbira with hip hop. It’s an art form that is an uprising against oppression.
2008 saw Comrade Fatso and Chabvondoka launch their much-acclaimed album, House of Hunger, banned in Zimbabwe but praised internationally labeled ‘undeniably alluring’ (Mail and Globe, Canada), ‘irresistably danceable’ **** (Songlines Magazine, UK) and ‘the most revolutionary album since Thomas Mapfumo's music in the 1970’s’ (Agence France Presse). House of Hunger is now on sale through different record labels in Europe and the USA. Fatso and Chabvondoka have performed extensively, having been invited to perform their riotous music at festivals in the USA, France, the UK, Portugal, Holland, Reunion, Tanzania, Kenya, Botswana, Malawi, Swaziland, South Africa and, of course, Zimbabwe. Fatso's poetry and music have appeared in print and broadcast media in over fifty countries around the world. At just 28 years old his poetry is already being studied at universities in the UK and South Africa.
En avant-première, voici le teaser du prochain clip "Au Suivant", second extrait de l'album de Grain De Caf intitulé Thomas Traoré. Sortie Prévue en Mai 2009.