Mau a Malawi

 

Mau a Malawi (translated voices of Malawi) speaks for a country’s people, tells their stories and highlights the emotional kaleidoscope of AIDS. Co-produced by American fiddler Andrew Finn Magill and Malawian “afro-vibes” legend Peter Mawanga, Mau a Malawi is a cocktail of dynamic African music that will leave your heart both pounding and moved.
 
“The inspiring cross-cultural performances on this beautiful album “Mau A Malawi: Stories of AIDS” remind us of the human cost of this disease as well as the imperative to unite in creating an AIDS-free generation.” –US Global AIDS Coordinator Eric Goosby

 

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Mau a Malawi: Stories of AIDS (SOA) is a concept album launching simultaneously in the United States and in the Southeast African country of Malawi in October 2011, to raise funds for new programs that will keep orphaned and vulnerable children in school and prepare them for successful careers in the arts. Produced and recorded in Malawi – which has one of the highest AIDS rates in Africa – the album is a collaboration between North Carolina-native Andrew Finn Magill a traditional Irish and American fiddler and acclaimed Malawian singer-songwriter, Peter Mawanga. 

Magill received a Fulbright-mtvU fellowship in 2010 to create this album, which uniquely fuses Mawanga’s traditional Malawian sound with Magill’s classical, Southern, and Irish influences. The ten-track album, which brings together more than 20 Malawian and American musicians such as Ellis Paul, uses real stories to infuse the discourse of AIDS with a message of hope, in an effort to dissipate some of the more negative depictions that dominate western perceptions of this deadly disease. Each song is inspired by interviews Magill and Mawanga conducted during a six-month tour of the country.
 
Weaving together real-life quotes from the narratives and lyrics in both Chichewa – Malawi’s native language – and English, Magill and Mawanga sought to musically capture the story and personality of each individual profiled. The album provides the listener with a more holistic understanding of the diversity of social issues and oft- complicated nuances that comprise Malawi’s AIDS epidemic.
 
“This album has the unique power to provide a voice to what has long been a voiceless epidemic, drawing upon the transformative power of music to tell stories of real life courage and hope,” said Andrew Finn Magill, musician and co-producer of Stories of AIDS.“Beyond transcending stigmas and promoting images of positivity in communities across Africa, this album is also helping to introduce children affected by this devastating disease to a world of opportunity, where music can not only lead to economic sustainability, but can change lives for the better.”
 
“The international imagery surrounding Africa’s AIDS epidemic is overwhelmingly negative, with statistics and numbers taking precedence over the individual stories of the incredible people living and surviving with the virus day-to-day,” said Peter Mawanga, Malawian musician and co-producer of the album. “Through the storytelling power of music, this album truly transcends borders and strives to promote a positive illustration of hope in what is far too often portrayed as a hopeless fight.”
 
“Our goal is simple: tell a story of hope, of people, of life and living. Africans do not define themselves by this disease, so why should we?” said Jon Haas, director of the documentary, If My Eyes Could Sing, which chronicles the making of the album. “The fight is far from over, but we must recognize both the incredible struggle and exciting progress being made. They come hand in hand; if we can influence the dialogue in this country, even in the slightest, we’ve done our job.”

Fundraising Cause: Supporting orphans economically and artistically
 
Profits from the album will go to Talents of the Malawian Child (TOMC), a nonprofit organization founded by album co-producer, Peter Mawanga. TOMC strives to provide tangible economic opportunities to AIDS orphans and vulnerable children, by giving them both the hands-on skills training and self-esteem to prepare them for a sustainable career working in the arts.
Talents of the Malawian Child is a non-governmental organization registered with the government of Malawi as a tax-exempt charitable trust. It was founded and is led by Peter Mawanga and governed by a board of directors. TOMC seeks to empower underprivileged children through the arts.
 
Under TOMC, Plan Malawi, and UNICEF Peter Mawanga led music workshops with underprivileged children, which led to the production of three professional quality studio albums: Ana a Saso (2005), Vingoma nsa Visekese (2006) and Sounds of Lilongwe (2008). The sales of these albums go toward paying the children’s school fees.
 
Stories of AIDS will support TOMC in a range of new projects including a national radio play being developed with Malingunde School for the Blind; a music program for young men at the Mpemba Reform School in Blantyre; Malawi’s first national children’s music festival; and a 4-week music arts skills training camp in Lilongwe, which will bring together Malawi’s premier talents in music performance, sound engineering, and band management to teach children marketable long-term skills in the music industry. All of these activites are contingent upon the children’s continued enrollment in school paid for by TOMC.
 
About “Mau a Malawi: Stories of AIDS” (SOA)
 
Mau a Malawi: Stories of AIDS is foremost a piece of art, exploring complex issues of stigma, loss, and perseverance. Its aim is to inspire a cross-cultural dialogue about AIDS, one that is ultimately hopeful. Each song is a musical reflection of a real person and their personal story, pioneering a new way to communicate the human experience of AIDS.
 
The album brings together ten of Malawi’s most talented musicians with eight of America’s top singer-songwriters such as Cathie Ryan and Ellis Paul, each carefully matched to the Malawian individual profiled. The ten tracks weave together real life stories of hope, drawing upon the strength and courage of those touched by AIDS, in an effort to dispel some of the more negative depictions that dominate western perceptions of this deadly disease.
 
International Launch
 
A subsequent U.S. release is planned for October 14, 2011 with an event at Memorial Hall on the campus of Magill’s Alma mater, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The event is supported by the Office of the Executive Director for the Performing Arts and the UNC Institute for Global Health & Infectious Diseases.
 
About the documentary “If My Eyes Could Sing”
 
The full-length feature documentary If My Eyes Could Sing explores the sounds and stories behind the album, Stories of AIDS, while helping to bring to life some of the realities faced by those living with HIV/AIDS. Created by filmmaker and North Carolina-native, Jon Haas, the documentary follows the making of the album and will premier in Fall 2011. View the trailer here
 
For more information, please visit http://www.ifmyeyescouldsing.com/
Also, visit please visit http://www.storiesofaids.com/

Raves and Reviews - Mau a Malawi


UNC student's dream project unites musical cultures and a mission

 

Irish fiddler Andrew Finn Magill dreams big. Back in August 2008, when he was still a senior at UNC-Chapel Hill, he conjured a massive, multimedia arts project that could change the public discourse on HIV and AIDS in Africa. "I just think about what's feasible. And I think that's feasible. I love big, complicated projects," says Magill.
 
It came to him, literally, while he was sleeping.
 
"I was thinking about what projects to do after college where I could merge public health and music. This came to me one night, and I started furiously scribbling ideas in a journal," Magill recalls.
 
Now, the sketches of that ambitious dream are about to become a reality. During the past three years, Magill travelled to Malawi to collect dozens of hopeful and inspiring testimonies from people living with the disease, and then set them to music on a concept album co-written with Malawian musician Peter Mawanga titled Mau a Malawi: Stories of AIDS. Magill's journey across two continents to produce the album is also the subject of a documentary film, If My Eyes Could Sing, by fellow UNC alumnus Jon Haas.
 
The CD's international release on Oct. 14 will be celebrated in UNC's Memorial Hall with a free, 90-minute live performance, at which donations will be collected for Mawanga's arts-based charity, Talents of the Malawian Child. The global premiere includes clips from Haas' film, an eight-piece band made up of local and Malawian musicians, a string quartet, a choir, dancers and actors who will bring to life the stories of 10 people Magill interviewed.
 
So how does a dream like Magill's come to fruition? First, he won funding from various sources, including a Fulbright-mtvU Grant, a travel grant from the UNC Chancellor's Office and a small business grant from IdeaBlob.com. Many fundraisers by friends and supporters helped cover the premiere's expenses, which included travel costs to fly in musicians from Malawi, New York and California. The show is sponsored in part by UNC's Institute for Global Health & Infectious Diseases, which has been working in Malawi and helped Magill develop contacts there.
 
"It was actually a music producer and social entrepreneur, Benjamin Cobb, who put the idea in my head to go to Malawi," Magill says. "He gave me a lot of musician contacts. He started PromoteAfrica.org and worked on the documentary Deep Roots Malawi, which Peter Mawanga is featured in. Then I met with the founder and director of UNC Project Malawi at the school of medicine, Irving Hoffman, and Irving put me in touch with Peter."
 
Mawanga, who lectured last year at UNC on Malawian music and children's advocacy work, is in Chapel Hill helping Magill prepare for the premiere, which involves about 40 volunteer cast and crew members.
 
"It's really exciting in rehearsals," Mawanga said on the UNC campus last week. "It's turning into a musical. I was really blown away." Mawanga jumped at the chance when Magill first approached him with the idea of recording an album that would give voice to the voiceless—those who are discriminated against in Malawi for having HIV and AIDS but who are breaking the silence and transforming their society. "Mau a Malawi" means "voices of Malawi," and the narratives that form the basis of the songs include those of community activists and cabinet ministers, sex workers and ordinary villagers.
 
"I just caught Peter at a good time with this project," Magill recalls. "He was already thinking about doing some kind of fusion piece with a social message, so this was perfect timing."
 
Mawanga calls his own style of music "afrovibes," a fusion of modern African music with traditional Malawian instruments such as marimba and the seed-filled chisekese, a form of shaker. At the concert, he'll play a custom-made acoustic guitar with nylon strings.
"I call it a 'Jozi' [after the person who made it for me]," he says. "I wanted an acoustic guitar which is very thin, because by having smaller dimensions in the body, and nylon strings, it would create a sound which is closer to the original banjo which was found in Malawi." On the album, Mawanga plays guitar and percussion, while Magill plays guitar, fiddle and Irish low whistle. Singers recorded vocals in English and Chichewa, the languages spoken in Malawi.
 
As it turns out, Magill almost didn't join Mawanga on the album. "Yeah, you know originally, I wasn't even going to play on it, I was just going to be the co-producer," Magill says. "But Peter really loved the idea of musical fusion, and when I got there, he was like, 'No no no, we need you performing on this record.' He insisted, so I ended up writing a lot of material and performing."
 
Jamming together in Mawanga's home studio, the two created a new sound that goes beyond both "afrovibes" and Irish fiddle music. "It's a very different musical experience that we've created," Mawanga says. "His timing is different from my timing. My traditional beat is very different from his Irish traditional as well as American beat. A violin is not our instrument in Malawi; it's a strange instrument. But the fact that he could bring that to my music, and I could bring my chisekese, my rhythm, into what he's playing, is what created this album, basically."
 
Ultimately, the two want their music to send a message of hope and to combat negative stereotypes about Africa and HIV and AIDS.
 
"What you get from all the sources here is the idea that the epidemic is something wholly negative, which it's not. It's actually a tremendous source of hope and inspiration for a lot of people," Magill says. The whole idea behind this project is to show some of those stories of hope and courage."

 

Sylvia Pfeiffenberger, Independent Weekly

Bringing Dreams to Life Through a Fellowship

Stories of AIDS literally came to me in a dream. I remember jumping out of bed and emptying dozens of ideas onto the page -- a performance piece about AIDS... music...t elling the human story through music... wait, what if there was film? I was so excited I didn't go back to sleep.

So what is Stories of AIDS? Mau a Malawi: Stories of AIDS is a concept album that I wrote with one of Malawi's busiest musicians, Peter Mawanga, with two goals: to raise awareness and kick-start some programs for vulnerable youth affected by AIDS through album sales. Both of us had heard plenty of misinformation about AIDS and Africa and I was frankly ready for a new kind of discourse. Everything seemed to be statistics, no human faces-no stories. Our idea was to collect stories from everyone - cabinet ministers, sex workers, orphans, grassroots activists - and write songs that were the musical interpretations of each personality, their emotions, and story.

With the help of a Fulbright-mtvU grant, I was afforded the opportunity to travel to Malawi and record a ten track album featuring more than twenty musicians from there and the U.S. We were fortunate enough to have a first class studio in Malawi but recording remained a challenge. Imagine having the power cut repeatedly in the middle of a great track by the national power company, always strapped for energy. "We better go get a generator," suggested our fearless engineer Tristram. So the next day we got permission to use the studio's generator but wait...no gasoline. There was a national petrol shortage. So we finagled a truck to transport a diesel generator but it of course broke down on the road en route, as it ran out of fuel.

Considering the unpredictable power, it's amazing we even got to lay down some tracks, much less some intricate and beautiful arrangements. The songs were inspired by narratives I recorded and transcribed. That was a project in and of itself. We got more than 25 narratives, which sometimes meant 13-hour bus rides to remote parts of Malawi to fetch what sounded like an amazing story. I was something of a "story-chaser."

From that sleepless night three years ago when the project first made its introduction to me in my brain, we are on the cusp of the project's international launch. Mau a Malawi: Stories of AIDS will premiere on Friday, Oct. 14, 2011 at Memorial Hall in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, at which point it will be available online for purchase. Jon Haas, a friend from college ended up coming over for five months to shoot a documentary film on the "making of" and this show will be the pinnacle moment of that film. We are merging his film footage with dramatic monologues taken from the original narratives, dance, and live music by the Malawian musicians themselves. The evening's performance will be one seamless multimedia show featuring the voices and faces that constitute our album.

It's odd how things come full circle. We're about to launch the exact show that overwhelmed my dreams.

For more on the Fulbright-mtvU fellowship, check out fulbright.mtvu.com.

 

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Andrew Magill

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