Mark Holdaway

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Mark Holdaway

What kalimba plays the songs on Top 40 Radio?

I’ve been jamming out on kalimba… playing along with Top 40 Radio! Click to download Tablature for the mbira song Chaminuka I was very disappointed on election night a couple weeks ago, as I am sure many of you were as well. Leading up to the election, I had taken to listening to more and more news and analysis, mostly on NPR and Democracy Now, and when I saw the writing on the wall, I decided I needed to take a huge break from the news. So now, when I drive somewhere, or when my clock radio wakes me up, I listen to a local Top 40 / variety radio

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Mark Holdaway

“Taireva” Tablature for Mbira and C Alto Kalimba

Learning this song on Alto Kalimba has put me into “Beginner’s Mind” Click to download tablature for “Taireva” played on Alto Kalimba Have you ever read the book, “Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind”?  The basic idea is that we can make great progress on our journey by approaching everything with an open, beginner’s mind, for it is in this state that we are ready to be taught, we are ready to see, and we are ready to understand.  The expert who already knows everything might not ever see the truth. While I like to think of myself as a kalimba expert, I do get knocked on my (musical) butt quite often. 

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Mark Holdaway

The System of the Mbira – Part 1

The chords and phrase structure behind most mbira music Click to download Tablature for the mbira song Chaminuka Most “primitive” music is so-called “two-phrase” music – basically a call phrase and a response phrase, or a question and an answer.  This simple musical form exists across cultures, in nursery rhymes, and in basic karimba music. Sometime between 600 and 1000 years ago in the Zambezi Valley of southeastern Africa – let’s suppose during the peak of the “Great Zimbabwe” civilization – an incredible innovation occurred: that primal two-phrase tune pattern evolved into a “four-phrase” pattern.  This innovation was momentous. Doubling the length of the original two-phrase cycle had the effect

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Mark Holdaway

The Topsy-Turvy World of Mbira Music

A close look at the inner workings of the mbira song “Taireva” reveals remarkable and quirky details Mbira music is elusive. You think you understand it, you reach to grasp it, but then it slips through your fingers. There are in truth many ways to understand mbira music – and you learn to strive to come to the place where you touch all of those understandings without holding any. In another blog post, I give away the tablature for the song “Taireva,” for both mbira and C Alto kalimba.   In this post I detail some of the more subtle aspects of traditional mbira music, using “Taireva” to help in the

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Mark Holdaway

Mbira Song “Chaminuka”

New tablature for mbira dzavadzimu, plus tabs for Hugh Tracey Alto and B flat Treble Kalimbas Click to download tablature for the mbira song “Chaminuka” Chaminuka was a real person, a renowned Zimbabwean prophet who foretold the coming of white European colonialists.  After his death, he became a popular ancestral spirit to channel.  Mbira dzavadzimu were and still are used in these ceremonies. While researching Chaminuka for the Chiwoniso article, I learned that there are at least two totally different songs by this name: “Chaminuka” for the karimba by Chiwoniso, and an unrelated song for the mbira dzavadzimu.  The mbira “Chaminuka” is the classic pattern described by Andrew Tracey in

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Mark Holdaway

Karimba Music: Chiwoniso’s Song “Chaminuka”

Free tablature for “Chaminuka,” for A-17 or F-15 instruments Click to download Tablature for the song Chuaminuka on F-15 Note Karimba We have featured the music of the late Chiwoniso before at Kalimba Magic.  Chiwoniso was a talented and charismatic singer and karimba player (which she simply called an mbira). She was also the daughter of Dumisani Maraire (Dumi), who is credited with bringing both the marimba band movement and the karimba to America, starting around 1968.  Dumi was educated about music at the Kwanangoma School of African Music in Bulawayo, Rhodesia (now called Zimbabwe). Chiwoniso grew up traveling with her father and learning African music, between Zimbabwe and Washington

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Mark Holdaway

LimbaTrip in Japan

Yohei Kisanuki plays some of the best Chromatic Kalimba in the world! When Kalimba Magic gets an order for an instrument and we ship it out, we have no idea if this kalimba will sit in its box unused for years, or if it will become the recipient’s new best friend, accompanying him or her on daily journeys and sharing beautiful music for years.  I hope the latter, of course.  It is always nice to see when someone does really well with their kalimbas. I recently learned of the great kalimba artist Yohei Kisanuki through YouTube.  I was particularly impressed by his ease in playing the Treble Chromatic kalimba, and thought

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Mark Holdaway

Panic Attacks and Kalimba Medicine

I was with someone while they had a panic attack – fortunately I had my kalimba I was visiting with a friend the other day when, out of the blue, she started to have a panic attack. I had something like a panic attack once – it was not a very enjoyable experience.  It seemed like the pressure of the entire world was pressing down on my heart and chest. I have never been with someone else who was experiencing a panic attack, and I don’t know much about them. While I immediately recognized that something was wrong, I didn’t really have a clue.  Her breath became shallow and rapid,

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Mark Holdaway

TIP: Playing “Mahororo” on the African Karimba – 5 / 5

This traditional mbira song transfers well to karimba Click to download the full PDF tablature for “Mahororo” “Mahororo” is usually played on the mbira dzavadzimu (commonly called the mbira), and is one of the classic songs that fit the chord progression described by Andrew Tracey in his seminal 1973 paper “The System of the Mbira” which studies in depth the ages-old mbira playing of the peoples he and his father Hugh studied for decades. This implies that “Mahororo” is probably one of those “old songs” – meaning it may be something like 500 – 800 years old. Ivodne Galatea pointed out that it could be played on the karimba. With

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