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Posted by: Crown Mix« on: January 12, 2016, 12:29:41 PM »Malawi’s Zomba Prison Project band with a unique line-up may grab global success at the prestigious Grammy Awards in February. Convicted murderer Elias Chimenya, on bass guitar, burglar, Stefano Nyerenda, and prison guard Thomas Binamo who is one of the songwriters are members of the band. The AFP reports that their 20-track record “I Have No Everything Here” has been nominated in the Best World Music Album category, with the winner to be announced at a gala ceremony in Los Angeles. Musical talent at the Zomba maximum-security prison was unearthed in 2013 when US producer Ian Brennan spent two weeks working with 60 inmates and guards to make the album. Six hours of recordings were edited down into the final selection of songs, featuring 16 of the prison’s musicians, singing mainly in the local Chichewa language. Elias Chimenya, 46, who is serving a life term for killing a man in a quarrel in the 1980s, wrote and sang the haunting ballad “Jealous Neighbour”, the album’s fifth track. “I am a reformed person, and music has helped me to be cool and deal with the situation of being incarcerated for life,” he told AFP at the decrepit prison in the poor southern African nation. “(But) I hope to not die in prison, and instead to be released to take up a music career outside.” More than two years after the recording sessions, news of the award nomination came as a surprise to inmates. “We are baffled because we didn’t expect prisoners could be nominated,” said Nyerenda, the 34-year-old guitarist, who expects to be freed next year after serving a 10-year sentence for house burglary. The prison already had an all-male band that tours local schools to spread HIV prevention messages. But the Grammy-nominated album includes other inmates — and half the songs are by women prisoners living in a separate part of the jail where they have no instruments except hand drums, buckets and pieces of pipe. Among the songs on the album, which was recorded in a makeshift studio next to a noisy carpentry workshop, are tracks called “Last Wishes”, “I Am Alone” and “Don’t Hate Me”. “The nomination alone has inspired us and already made us famous both in Malawi and abroad,” said Binamo, the prison guard who wrote the lyrics for a song called “Please. Don’t Kill My Child.” “Winning an award will be the icing on the cake,” he added, as band members wearing white prison uniforms rehearsed a new song in the bare studio under a single light bulb. “We teach vocals, keyboard, drums and guitar until they become musicians. Playing music can bring relief to them,” Binawo said. “Many people have a negative attitude towards the prison authorities. They think we only punish convicts.” Brennan, who has worked regularly in US prisons, said he was amazed by how music sessions in the Zomba jail “did not have any rigid boundary between guards and prisoners.”W
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