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On the record ... with Mathew Tembo

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Zambian musician Mathew Tembo will host a world music festival in DeKalb featuring Afropop, Chinese, steel pan and Middle Eastern music ensembles. (Curtis Clegg - cclegg@shawmedia.com)

DeKALB – Mathew Tembo is working diligently to preserve the traditional music of his homeland, Zambia.

The musical traditions of Zambia suffered a blow from 1923 to 1964, when the southern African nation was under British colonial rule.

“It’s because of how we have been growing up,” Tembo, 39, said. “Especially during colonialism, when they said ‘you can’t use traditional instruments during church.’ We know that when missionaries came to Africa, church and education were very closely related. Churches provided education before government started doing it.”

After Zambia declared its independence in 1964, there was not a widespread revival of traditional music. Electric guitars and keyboards had caught the attention of young musicians, including Tembo, who was born nine years later.

He played reggae music until a trip to Denmark in 2004 convinced him to study traditional Zambian music and instruments. In 2007 he produced the first “Sing Our Own Song” festival in Zambia showcasing traditional music.

Tembo now plays a handmade wooden silimba, similar to a xylophone, and is studying world music performance at Northern Illinois University. He has planned a world music celebration at the House Cafe on Saturday, Sept. 22 to raise funds for his 2013 “Sing Our Own Song” festival.

Tembo sat down with MidWeek reporter Curtis Clegg to discuss the festival, his musical background and life in Africa.

MidWeek: Do you come from a musical family?
Mathew Tembo: It’s hard to tell because in Africa everybody is involved in some kind of music. I spent some time in a village where every day people would come out and dance and sing. That was the only type of entertainment. Everybody in my family did that, but nobody has done music professionally.

MW: What can you tell me about the village or city where you were raised?
MT: I spent four years in a small village, but most of my life I lived in the big city Lusaka, which is the capital of Zambia.

MW: Where on the continent of Africa is Zambia?
MT: It’s in southern Africa in the center of the continent. We have eight neighbors (neighboring countries) around us.

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