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'''Stewart Sukuma''', born '''Luis Pereira''' in 1963, is a [[Music of Mozambique|Mozambican]] singer.<ref>{{Cite web
{{Copy edit|date=September 2020}}
'''Luis Pereira '''(born in 1963), known as '''Stewart Sukuma''', is a Mozambican singer.<ref>{{Cite web
| title = Mozambique's Stewart Sukuma: Good musicians make good money
| title = Mozambique's Stewart Sukuma: Good musicians make good money
| work = BBC News
| work = BBC News
Line 9: Line 8:
| date = 6 June 2014
| date = 6 June 2014
| url = https://www.bbc.com/news/business-27732810
| url = https://www.bbc.com/news/business-27732810
}}</ref> His stage name – Stewart Sukuma – means 'Rise Up' in Mozambican xiTsonga and 'Push' in Swahili. He was born in [[Cuamba]], [[Niassa Province]] in Mozambique.<ref>{{Cite web
}}</ref> Sukuma's stage name means "rise up" in [[Tsonga language|Xitsonga]] and "push" in [[Swahili language|Swahili]]. He was born in [[Cuamba]], [[Niassa Province]].<ref name=allmusic>{{Cite web
| title = Stewart Sukuma – Biography
| title = Stewart Sukuma – Biography
| work = AllMusic
| work = AllMusic
| accessdate = 8 June 2014
| accessdate = 8 June 2014
| url = http://www.allmusic.com/artist/stewart-sukuma-mn0000494102/biography
| url = http://www.allmusic.com/artist/stewart-sukuma-mn0000494102/biography
}}</ref> Coming from a modest family he soon realised his passion for music and in 1977 he moved to the capital [[Maputo]]. There, he learned how to play percussion, guitar and piano. In 1982 he joined a music group as a vocalist. He won the Mozambican prize for music – Ngoma – in 1983 and soon became one of the most played singers in the national radio stations of Mozambique, being described as "Mozambique's most popular male vocalist".<ref name=broughton1999>{{cite book |title=World Music: Africa, Europe and the Middle East |last=Broughton |first=Simon |author2=Mark Ellingham |author3=Richard Trillo |page=[https://archive.org/details/roughguidetoworl00simo/page/581 581] |year=1999 |publisher=[[Rough Guides]] |isbn=9781858286358 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/roughguidetoworl00simo/page/581 }}</ref> His major works include songs such as Felizminha, Xitchuketa Marrabenta, Sumanga, Male and Why. He sings in various languages including Portuguese, English, [[Swahili language|Swahili]], [[Chuwabu language|Echwabo]], Coti, and [[Tsonga language|Tsonga]].
}}</ref> Coming from a modest family, Sukuma loved music; he moved to the Mozambican capital of [[Maputo]] in 1977, learning to play percussion instruments, guitar and piano. Five years later, Sukuma joined a musical group as a vocalist. He received a Ngoma Mozambique award in 1983, and has been described as "Mozambique's most popular male vocalist".<ref name=broughton1999>{{cite book |title=World Music: Africa, Europe and the Middle East |last=Broughton |first=Simon |author2=Mark Ellingham |author3=Richard Trillo |page=[https://archive.org/details/roughguidetoworl00simo/page/581 581] |year=1999 |publisher=[[Rough Guides]] |isbn=9781858286358 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/roughguidetoworl00simo/page/581 }}</ref> Sukuma's songs include "Felizminha", "Xitchuketa Marrabenta", "Sumanga", "Male" and "Why". He sings in Portuguese, English, Swahili, [[Chuwabu language|Echwabo]] and Xitsonga.


== Early life and career ==
== Early life and career ==


Born is a small town, he was a son of a truck driver with a modest income. He received his first guitar as a Christmas gift at a party for disadvantaged people and this was the launching pad for his professional career.
Born is a small town, Sukuma was a son of a truck driver with a modest income. He received his first guitar as a Christmas gift at a party for poor people. After Mozambique became [[History of Mozambique#Independence (1975)|independent]] in 1975, Sukuma danced for musical groups. The death of his eldest sister, who had left two children and a house in Maputo, drove him to the city in 1977. Sukuma learned to play percussion instruments, guitar and keyboards, and began singing in a band in 1982.
After independence in 1975, Stewart started as a dancer for some music bands. The death of his eldest sister, who had left two children and a house in Maputo behind her, drove him to the capital of Mozambique, in 1977. He learned to play percussion, the guitar and keyboard and started singing in a band in 1982.


When he moved to Maputo, he went to live temporarily in his sister's house, who was married to one of the most highly regarded musicians in the city: Edmundo Luis Gomes better known for Mundinho.
In 1983 he recorded a song for the national radio station – Radio Moçambique – and in the same year he was awarded with the national prize for the best up-coming artist. His songs became soon played on the radio, and he became the 'singer of the people'. He eventually worked with the band Orchestra Marrabenta Star. Later he moved to South Africa where he released his album ''Afrikiti'' in 1995.<ref name=broughton1999/>
Here, the first contact with a battery was made through his brother-in-law. Percussion instruments emerged in Sukuma's life out of necessity and passion.


With some guitar basics, he began to imitate famous international songs of the time that were consumed by the market.
Besides Orquestra Marrabenta Star, he was part of several projects and bands such as Alambique as a vocal/percussionist, Mbila as a vocalist, and Formação 82 as a vocal/percussionist.
He was persistent and with a little luck he ended up meeting other great Mozambican musicians such as Hortencio Langa, Arao Litsuri, Lisboa Matavele, Fani Pfumo, Alexandre Langa with whom he lived and learned to perfect his singing and guitar.


Before recording his first song he played in bars and nightclubs for many years. It was in these places where he had time to perfect his singing. In 1982 an opportunity arises to participate in a musical contest organized by a figure well-known for his connection with Eduardo Mondlane, former president of FRELIMO: Eddy Mondlane was the son. Stewart Sukuma won the award for best performance in this contest and records his first song backing by his band at that time, Formacao 82: Musica Quente created some excitement at the time because it was out of the market context, it was sung in Portuguese at a time when traditional languages commanded the music market and the quality was above average and it was a reggae, the first to be recorded in Mozambique .
In 1998, Sukuma moved to [[Boston]], Massachusetts where he attended [[Berklee College of Music]]. He was the first Mozambican to attend that institution.
The Africa Scholars Program said "Berklee has recruited a team of world-renowned artists and music professionals to advise and to get the word out about this program. The board members are Mulatu Astake, Richard Bona, Darius Brubeck, Angelique Kidjo, Bakithi Kumalo, Lionel Loueke, Leni Stern, Stewart Sukuma, and Eric Wainaina. With the help of our advisors, we aim to make this program open to as many talented musicians as possible". [[Berklee College of Music]]


This song earned him recognition as an emerging composer. From here on, it starts recording more often. He started to write in Portuguese but created a balance with tradition. That was the hardest part to get. With all the influences of western music Sukuma had a hard task to investigate the popular and traditional rhythms of Mozambique. The only source that existed in the 1980s was the Companhia Nacional de Canto e Danca, under the coordination of David Abilio, and the ARPAC, an institution that preserves traditional rhythms. He joined Companhia de Danca and toured extensively as a sound technician and supporting musician. It was here where Sukuma learned most of the traditional music of Mozambique.
He performed at the [[Houston International Festival]], and twice in Texas in 1998/9 with other African artists such as [[Angélique Kidjo|Angellique Kidjo]], [[Abdullah Ibrahim]], [[Oumou Sangare]] and [[Hugh Masekela]]. Since 2009, he has been touring Europe and Latin America extensively, performing in festivals such as the [[Lent Festival]] in Slovenia, Uferlos Kultur und Veranstaltungs GmbH, and the Kasumama Afrika Festival in Austria, the Festival der Kulturen in Germany, and Tom de Festa and the [[World Music Festival]] in Portugal. In Brazil, he has performed at the Itau Cultural and the famous Auditorio de Ibirapuera and SESC Pinheiros in São Paulo and Flimar in Maceio. In South Africa, he has taken part in the [[Cape Town International Jazz Festival]]. He has performed with various and acclaimed musicians around the world such as Lee Ritenour, Ivan Linz, Ana Moura, Paulinho da Costa, Luis Represas, among others.


He recorded a song for state-owned Radio Moçambique the following year, and received a Ngoma Mozambique award.<ref name="allmusic" /> After working with the Orchestra Marrabenta Star, Sukuma moved to South Africa and released ''Afrikiti'' in 1997.<ref name=broughton1999/>
== Music ==


The base acquired from the information he gathered in his research allowed him to start recording more frequently on Radio Mocambique, the only studio active in the 1980s in Maputo.
On June 7, 1997, ''Billboard'' magazine gave him the same standing as [[Papa Wemba]] and other highly acclaimed African musicians.


But he still needed more contact with experienced musicians and luck hit him once again and he was invited by the great Ghanaian saxophonist, George Lee Larnioh to join the Banda Anansi which was based in Swaziland.
Sukuma combines traditional and contemporary Mozambican music and instrumentation to create energetic, danceable music with an Afro/Pop/Jazz sound.
The melodies performed by Stewart Sukuma are a reflection of the varied ancestral influences of Mozambique, including the [[Islam]]ic influence in the north of Mozambique, frequently visited in the past by the Arabians and the inevitable inheritance of the Portuguese spread out in the whole country. In 2010 he started a new musical project to encourage the youngsters to play and listen to [[Marrabenta]], a popular/urban genre of Mozambican music.


After two years living in Swaziland and playing with Anansi, basically in hotels, he returned to Maputo on vacation and received an invitation from the great concert manager Aurelio Le Bon to join the famous Marrabenta Star Orchestra of Mozambique as a percussionist and singer. At the Marrabenta Orchestra, he toured the world and established his first contacts with the western music market and shared stages with great African musicians such as Papa Wemba, Baaba Maal, Youssou N'dour and gradually began to understand the tricks of the music market in world. While the other musicians, his colleagues, focused on their career linked to the Orchestra, Sukuma had more time to investigate the market, the ways of composing and fusing traditional music with pop music. On these tours, he bought the first CDs of the African musicians he most admired and among them Salif Keita, where he gained enormous influences in the way of composing and arranging the songs. After his experience with the Marrabenta Orchestra and influenced by the arrangements of other great African musicians, he travels to South Africa in search of more sophisticated studios and meets an old friend who had a studio: Fernando Perdigao, sound engineer and producer and musical arranger from great prestige living in Johannesburg.
=== Music Festivals & Shows ===
{{Div col|colwidth=30em}}
* MTN Bushfire 2012 - Malkerns - Swaziland
* MASA Festival 2013 - Abidjan - Ivory Coast
* Margem dos Mares 2015 - São Paulo - Brasil
* Festival de Marrabenta 2012/13/14/15 – Maputo - Beira - Moçambique
* Verao Amarelo Festival 2009 – Maputo - Moçambique
* Encontrarte Festival 2009 – Maputo - Moçambique
* Maputo International Jazz Festival 2009 - Moçambique
* Houston International Festival 1998/99 – USA
* Lent Festival 2011/12 – Maribor - Slovenia
* Schakspir Festival 2011 - Lins - Austria
* Uferlos Festival 2011 – Freising - Germany
* Kasumama Festival 2011/12 – Moorbad Harbach - Austria
* Salzkammergut Festwochen Gmunden 2011/12 – Austria
* Festival der Kulturen 2010 – Berlin - Germany
* Tom de Festa 2009 – Tondela – Portugal
* World Music Festival 2009 – Lisbon, Portugal
* Seminario Antidoto 2009 – Itau Cultural – SP - Brasil
* Flimar Festival 2011 – Maceio - Brasil
* Cariri das Artes 2009 – Nova Olinda - Brasil
* Cape Town International Jazz Festiva 2009 – SA
* Luanda International Jazz Festival 2012 – Luanda - Angola
* Selam Festival 2012 – Addis Ababa - Ethiopia
* Warakdza 2015 - Nova Olinda - Brasil
* Teatro Ibirapuera 2014 - São Paulo - Brasil
* City Hall Sessions 2013/16 - Cape Town - SA
* Festival da Lusofonia - Macau 2013 - China
* Jazzing 2015 - Luanda - Angola
* Coliseu dos Recreiros 2014 - Lisboa - Portugal
* Azgo Festival - Maputo 2012 - Moçambique
* Grandes Concertos do Casino Estoril 2016 - Lisboa - Portugal
* Selam Festival - Stockolm 2016 - Sweden
* Festival Marrabenta - Maputo 2017 - Mocambique
* Festas do Mar - Cascais 2018 - Portugal
* Festival da Lusofonia - Macau 2018 - China


Together, they decide to record the first and one of the most important CDs of the new generation of musicians from Mozambique in the 90s: Afrikiti! Fernando Perdigao and his partner at the time, Cedric Samson, at Treehouse music studio in Johannesburg, will be the producers of this first CD and invited great figures in South African and Mozambican music scene to play songs previously written by Sukuma. Bass players Fana Zulu and Peter Sclair, pianist Paul Hanmer, guitarist Jimmy Dludlu and percussionist John Hassan team up with Stewart Sukuma to materialize Afrikiti. Then later, Mauritz Lotz, Kanyo Maphumule, Kululiwe Sithole and others. Hugh Masekela and George Lee are keen to record this album after listening through the producers.
'''with Orchestra Marrabenta Star of Moçambique:'''
* Maison des Culture du Monde - Paris
* The Frontline Children Festival - Harare
* Jazzhus Montmartre - Copenhagen
* Hackney Empire - London
* Beat Apartheid Road Festival - Germany
* Roskilde Festival - Denmark
{{div col end}}


After the recording Stewart Sukuma has two proposals on the table, one by Sony Music SA led by Lindelani Mkhize and the other by EMI SA led by Sean Watson.Sony Music asked to wait six months until Lindelani, newly admitted, became familiar with the market. Stewart didn't want to wait with such anxiety and signed with EMI/CCP Records. Afrikiti was launched in Maputo, at Hotel Polana, in an unprecedented ceremony in Mozambique with the presence of the Minister of the Environment, Dr. Ferraz, the President of the Republic, Joaquim Chissano and Pascoal Mocumbi, Prime Minister.
== Social projects ==


Afrikiti becomes the first Mozambican CD to be released in national territory in 1997.
Sukuma links music and social outreach, working in conjunction with the National Campaign against AIDS, the National Election Commission, [[UNICEF]], and other aid organisations to increase awareness about health, domestic violence, and human rights issues. In 2004, he co-founded Sem Crítica, a movement dedicated to empowering the youth by encouraging the use of their artistic skills and talents.


A year later Stewart Sukuma signs with Tropical music Germany and the CD is available in all major music stores around the world distributed by the hands of BMG-Ariola.
His persistence in the struggle for [[social responsibility]], led him to start an individual campaign in several secondary schools in Maputo and Inhambane. Its own project was inspired by the words from [[Martin Luther King Jr.]]'s 1963 speech "[[I Have a Dream]]", as a way to fight HIV / AIDS and other illnesses that victimize societies not only in Mozambique but also in other parts of the world.


Sukuma moved to [[Boston]] in 1998, where he attended the [[Berklee College of Music]]. A decade later, he was on the advisory board of the school's Africa Scholars program.<ref name="berklee">{{cite web |last1=Edwards |first1=Margot |title=Auditions in Africa |url=https://www.berklee.edu/news/37/auditions-in-africa |website=Berklee College of Music |access-date=9 January 2021 |date=May 22, 2008 }}</ref>
The project consists of using the dream as a purpose of effective struggle, in which the proposer has the unique obligation to overcome all obstacles as in a game.


In 2013, Sukuma featured in fellow Mozambican musician [[Azagaia]]'s second and final album, ''Cubaliwa'', appearing on the track "Wa Gaia".<ref>{{Citation |title=Azagaia - Cubaliwa |url=https://www.discogs.com/release/11479192-Azagaia-Cubaliwa |access-date=2023-03-22 |language=en}}</ref>
The project was effective but without institutional support was unsustainable.


== {{anchor|Music Festivals & Shows|Music|Social projects}}Music and activities==
Stewart Sukuma believes that the fight against HIV / AIDS, malaria, violence, and malnutrition necessarily requires good education for the children and also training the illiterate adult population to generate their own income.
Sukuma combines traditional and contemporary Mozambican music and instrumentation. His songs reflect [[Mozambique]]'s varied musical influences, which include [[Music of Portugal|Portugal]] throughout the country and [[Islam]] in the north (which was visited by Arabs). Sukuma began a project in 2010 to encourage young people to play and listen to [[Marrabenta]], a popular style of Mozambican dance music.<ref name="club">{{cite web |last1=Frey |first1=Adrian |title=Stewart Sukumba |url=https://clubofmozambique.com/who-is-who-post/stewart-sukuma/ |website=Club of Mozambique |access-date=9 January 2021 |date=8 February 2016}}</ref>
<blockquote>
He donated part of the proceeds of his first solo album, ''Afrikiti'' (1997), to environmental groups, and is involved with AIDS relief.<ref name="allmusic" /> Sukuma was appointed the first national goodwill ambassador for UNICEF Mozambique on 14 December 2012. The following year, he visited evacuees on behalf of UNICEF in [[Chiaquelane]], [[Chókwè District]] who were in temporary accommodations after the flooding of the [[Limpopo River]].<ref>{{Cite web
"A malnourished and poor child will never have a positive outcome in school."
</blockquote>
Mozambique is a rich country in natural resources and for this reason, the population should be instructed to take benefits of this wealth in the pursuit of a better life. In consequence, poverty could be addressed and greater integration of the population in the fight against diseases could be achieved.

Stewart Sukuma believes that through culture and tourism, the largest existing resources in the country, we can overcome poverty.

Stewart Sukuma supports the Casa do Gaiato through Academia do Bacalhau by sponsoring one student permanently and two scholarships to two children of 12 and 14 years.

Stewart Sukuma joined internationally renowned actors in a campaign designed by him, 30 seconds to save a life, which spread thoughts and acts that could change the lives of people affected by HIV / AIDS. Artists like Jamie Fox, Jon Voight, Jeffrey Wright, Mikelty Williamson, Charles Shufford lent their services in support of this campaign which was broadcast on television in Mozambique for a year through the National Council for HIV/AIDS.

In 1995 Stewart Sukuma was the first Mozambican musician to become an activist in the fight against HIV / AIDS joining national-level artists from all sections and with some success in favor of a campaign to combat this disease.

Stewart Sukuma has had an important role in popular mobilisation for greater responsibility in authenticating democracy alert by vote. "Your vote makes Mozambique happy" is a song widely circulated and sung by various national interpreters who assisted in the struggle for democracy. Singing and mobilising the entire country, he was known as the mascot of national democracy.

Stewart Sukuma was appointed the first National Goodwill Ambassador for UNICEF Mozambique on 14 December 2012, due to his commitment to the cause of children. In 2013, on behalf of UNICEF, he visited evacuees at Chiaquelane in [[Chókwè District]], in temporary accommodation in response to the flooding of the [[Limpopo River]].<ref>{{Cite web
| title = Stewart Sukuma, UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador, visits flood victims in Mozambique
| title = Stewart Sukuma, UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador, visits flood victims in Mozambique
| work = UNICEF Mozambique – Voices
| work = UNICEF Mozambique – Voices
Line 115: Line 57:
| date = 27 January 2013
| date = 27 January 2013
| url = http://www.unicef.org/mozambique/partners_12197.html
| url = http://www.unicef.org/mozambique/partners_12197.html
| archive-date = 14 July 2014
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20140714223943/http://www.unicef.org/mozambique/partners_12197.html
| url-status = dead
}}</ref>
}}</ref>
As a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador, he coordinated a musical project called Facts For Life. He produced a 16 song CD with other 50 Mozambican musicians, the well known Zimbabwean music star and UNICEF ambassador Oliver Mtukudzi among them.

== Present==
Stewart Sukuma still combines Music with TV and Social Activities. Apart from the usual activities ( shows ) he launched a project against stigma, misunderstanding, and violence that the albino community has come to be exposed in Mozambique. He is also a debut actor in a South African movie called "Inside TB" where he acts as himself.


== Discography ==
== Discography ==
===Albums===

* ''Afrikiti'' (1997)<ref name="broughton1999" />
* 1995 – AFRIKITI
* ''Nkhuvu'' (2008)
Feat: Hugh Masekela ( Muliba and Watcha ), Jimmy Dludlu ( all songs except Life Goes On and Ceramica Negra ), George Lee ( Moçambique and Katamaga ), Fana Zulu, Khanyo Maphumulo, Mauritz Lots ( Ceramica Negra and Life Goes On ) ...
* ''Os Sete Pecados Capitais'' and ''Boleia Africana'' (2014 [[Double album|double CD]])

* ''O Meu Lado B'' (2016)
* 2008 – NKHUVU
Feat: Lokua Kanza ( Tingalava and Africa ), Jimmy Dludlu ( Africa and Tingalava ), Ivan Mazuze ( Ameli ), Elizah Rodrigues ( Wulombe ), Roger Moreira ( Olumwengo ), Artur Maia ( Olumwengo and Mandziku ), Sheila Jesuita ( Olumwengo ), Werner Puntigam ( Mandziku ) and Thiago Espirito Santo ( Wulombe )

* 2014 - OS SETE PECADOS CAPITAIS & BOLEIA AFRICANA ( Double CD )
Feat. Luis Represas ( Ceramica Negra ) [[Cuca Roseta]] ( Mouros ) Oliver Mtukudzi ( The Guardians of the Light ) Pedro Joia, Jimmy Dludlu, Namoukounda Cissoko and Maria Berasarte ( Boleia Afircana ) Isabel Novella ( Café ) Jimmy Dludlu ( Papalati ) Gabriele Mirabassi ( Bata and Parque de Diversoes ) Elizah Rodrigues and JP Simoes ( Parque de Diversoes ) Alcidio Pires ( Moya ) Spring String Quartet ( Mbilu Yanga, Inadiavel Viagem, Papalati and Bata )

* 2016 - O MEU LADO B


=== Singles ===
=== Singles ===


* Felizminha 2007
* "Felizminha" (2007)
* Wulombe (Feat Elizah) – 2008
* "Wulombe" (2008)
* Olumwengo (Feat Roger and Sheila) – 2009
* "Olumwengo" (2009)
* Xitchuketa Marrabenta – #MOAMA Best Alternative winner – 2010
* "Xitchuketa Marrabenta" (2010)
* Caranguejo 2011
* "Caranguejo" (2011)
* Vale a Pena Casar? - 2011
* "Vale a Pena Casar?" (2011)
* Txolpela Moçambique - 2013
* "Txolpela Moçambique" (2013)


=== Compilation ===
=== {{anchor|Compilation}}Compilations ===
* 1998: New African World Beat Vol 4/Star Pool/Universal
* ''New African World Beat, Vol. 4'' (1998, Star Pool/Universal)
* 2000: Mozambique Relief/Naxos World
* ''Mozambique Relief'' (2000, [[Naxos (company)|Naxos World]])
* 2003: Musica da CPLP/Marcelo Salazar
* ''Musica da CPLP'' (2003, Marcelo Salazar)
* 2006: Tales of Mozambique/Sheer Sound
* ''Tales of Mozambique'' (2006, [[Sheer Sound]])
* 2007: Nkhuvu<ref>{{Cite web
* ''Nkhuvu'' (2007)<ref>{{Cite web
| title = Stewart Sukuma – Nkhuvu
| title = Stewart Sukuma – Nkhuvu
| work = CD Baby Music Store
| work = CD Baby Music Store
| accessdate = 8 June 2014
| accessdate = 8 June 2014
| url = http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/stewartsukuma
| url = http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/stewartsukuma
| archive-date = 28 May 2014
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20140528052819/http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/stewartsukuma
| url-status = dead
}}</ref>
}}</ref>
* 2008: Kizomba Mix/Vidisco
* ''Kizomba Mix'' (2008, Vidisco)
* 2011: Sofrimento/UNICEF/Neyma
* ''Sofrimento'' (2011, UNICEF)
* 2012: 30 Anos de Carreira
* ''30 Anos de Carreira'' (2012)<ref name="club" />


=== Awards ===
== {{anchor|Distinctions}}Awards ==
* Best Performance, EME Awards (1983) – "Mulata do MK"
Stewart Sukuma is the most combined awarded musician of all times in Moçambique
* Press Award, Ngoma Mocambique (1992) – "Josefina"

* Popular Song of the Year, Ngoma Mocambique (1994) – "Julieta"
* Best Performance/EME Awards/1983 – Mulata do MK
* Press Award//Ngoma Mocambique 1992Josefina
* Best Song of the Year, Ngoma Mocambique (1996)"Afrikiti"
* Popular Song of the Year/Ngoma Mocambique 1994 – Julieta
* Popular Song of the Year, Ngoma Mocambique (2008)
* Best Song of the Year/Ngoma Mocambique 1996 – Afrikiti
* Popular Song of the Year, Ngoma Moçambique (2010)
* Popular Song of the Year//Ngoma Mocambique 2008
* MOAMAS Best Alternative Song of the Year (2010)
* Mozart Award, UNESCO (Best Musician, 1997)
* Popular Song of the Year/Ngoma Moçambique 2010
* MOAMAS Best Alternative Song of the Year 2010
* Cultural Personality of the Year, 2008 (''Jornal Noticias'')
* MMA, Best Pop Music (2009) - Olumwengo Remix
* Mozart Award/UNESCO/Best Musician 1997
* Cultural Personality of the Year 2008/Jornal Noticias
* Cultural Personality, 2012{{snd}}''[[Savana News|Jornal Savana]]''
* MMA, Bestselling CD (2013) - ''30 Anos de Carreira''
* Best Male Music Video/Channel O Music Video Awards 2005 ( Nomination )
* MMA - Best Pop Music - 2009 - Olumwengo Remix
* MMA, Best Contemporary Music (2015) - "Xitchuketa Marrabenta"
* MMA, Bestselling CD (2015) - ''Boleia Africana/Os Sete Pecados Capitais''<ref name="club" />
* Cultural Personality 2012/Jornal Savana
* MMA - Best Selling CD - 2013 - 30 Anos de Carreira - Compilation
* Best PALOP Artist/African Entertainment Award 2015 ( Nomination )
* MMA -Best Contemporary Music - 2015 - Xitchuketa Marrabenta
* MMA - Best Selling CD - 2015 - Boleia Africana/Os Sete Pecados Capitais

=== Distinctions ===

Awarded for contribution to the dissemination of Mozambican culture
by Brazilian Ambassador in Mozambique with Medalha da Legião Paranaense
do Expedicionário - 2018

Awarded the Official Degree “Ordem de Merito Infante Dom Henriques”
Presidency of the Republic of Portugal - 2016

Awarded for services provided for Democracy and Citizenship Moçambique
Secretariado Tecnico de Administraçao Eleitoral - 2015

Awarded for contribution to the dissemination of Mozambican culture
Association of Friends of Macau - Macau 2012

Awarded for contribution as a TV Host to the Culture of Moçambique
Grupo SOICO 2012

Awarded for contribution to the education in Mozambique
Universidade do Lurio 2012

Newspaper Personality of the Year 2012
Jornal Savana

Cultural Personality of the Year 2008
Jornal Noticias

Mozart Award
UNESCO 1997


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}
https://www.berklee.edu/news/37/auditions-in-africa
http://www.coliseulisboa.com/historicoeventos.aspx?p=6
http://www.auditorioibirapuera.com.br/2013/01/10/stewart-sukuma-banda-nkhuvu/
https://web.archive.org/web/20160323074453/http://www.tourismus-tv.at/traunsee/gmunden/stewart-sukuma-in-gmunden/

== External links ==
* [http://www.sukuma.com Sukuma]


{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Sukuma, Stewart}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Sukuma, Stewart}}
[[Category:Mozambican singers]]
[[Category:20th-century Mozambican male singers]]
[[Category:1963 births]]
[[Category:1963 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Berklee College of Music alumni]]
[[Category:Berklee College of Music alumni]]
[[Category:21st-century Mozambican male singers]]

Latest revision as of 01:27, 27 September 2023

Stewart Sukuma, born Luis Pereira in 1963, is a Mozambican singer.[1] Sukuma's stage name means "rise up" in Xitsonga and "push" in Swahili. He was born in Cuamba, Niassa Province.[2] Coming from a modest family, Sukuma loved music; he moved to the Mozambican capital of Maputo in 1977, learning to play percussion instruments, guitar and piano. Five years later, Sukuma joined a musical group as a vocalist. He received a Ngoma Mozambique award in 1983, and has been described as "Mozambique's most popular male vocalist".[3] Sukuma's songs include "Felizminha", "Xitchuketa Marrabenta", "Sumanga", "Male" and "Why". He sings in Portuguese, English, Swahili, Echwabo and Xitsonga.

Early life and career

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Born is a small town, Sukuma was a son of a truck driver with a modest income. He received his first guitar as a Christmas gift at a party for poor people. After Mozambique became independent in 1975, Sukuma danced for musical groups. The death of his eldest sister, who had left two children and a house in Maputo, drove him to the city in 1977. Sukuma learned to play percussion instruments, guitar and keyboards, and began singing in a band in 1982.

When he moved to Maputo, he went to live temporarily in his sister's house, who was married to one of the most highly regarded musicians in the city: Edmundo Luis Gomes better known for Mundinho. Here, the first contact with a battery was made through his brother-in-law. Percussion instruments emerged in Sukuma's life out of necessity and passion.

With some guitar basics, he began to imitate famous international songs of the time that were consumed by the market. He was persistent and with a little luck he ended up meeting other great Mozambican musicians such as Hortencio Langa, Arao Litsuri, Lisboa Matavele, Fani Pfumo, Alexandre Langa with whom he lived and learned to perfect his singing and guitar.

Before recording his first song he played in bars and nightclubs for many years. It was in these places where he had time to perfect his singing. In 1982 an opportunity arises to participate in a musical contest organized by a figure well-known for his connection with Eduardo Mondlane, former president of FRELIMO: Eddy Mondlane was the son. Stewart Sukuma won the award for best performance in this contest and records his first song backing by his band at that time, Formacao 82: Musica Quente created some excitement at the time because it was out of the market context, it was sung in Portuguese at a time when traditional languages commanded the music market and the quality was above average and it was a reggae, the first to be recorded in Mozambique .

This song earned him recognition as an emerging composer. From here on, it starts recording more often. He started to write in Portuguese but created a balance with tradition. That was the hardest part to get. With all the influences of western music Sukuma had a hard task to investigate the popular and traditional rhythms of Mozambique. The only source that existed in the 1980s was the Companhia Nacional de Canto e Danca, under the coordination of David Abilio, and the ARPAC, an institution that preserves traditional rhythms. He joined Companhia de Danca and toured extensively as a sound technician and supporting musician. It was here where Sukuma learned most of the traditional music of Mozambique.

He recorded a song for state-owned Radio Moçambique the following year, and received a Ngoma Mozambique award.[2] After working with the Orchestra Marrabenta Star, Sukuma moved to South Africa and released Afrikiti in 1997.[3]

The base acquired from the information he gathered in his research allowed him to start recording more frequently on Radio Mocambique, the only studio active in the 1980s in Maputo.

But he still needed more contact with experienced musicians and luck hit him once again and he was invited by the great Ghanaian saxophonist, George Lee Larnioh to join the Banda Anansi which was based in Swaziland.

After two years living in Swaziland and playing with Anansi, basically in hotels, he returned to Maputo on vacation and received an invitation from the great concert manager Aurelio Le Bon to join the famous Marrabenta Star Orchestra of Mozambique as a percussionist and singer. At the Marrabenta Orchestra, he toured the world and established his first contacts with the western music market and shared stages with great African musicians such as Papa Wemba, Baaba Maal, Youssou N'dour and gradually began to understand the tricks of the music market in world. While the other musicians, his colleagues, focused on their career linked to the Orchestra, Sukuma had more time to investigate the market, the ways of composing and fusing traditional music with pop music. On these tours, he bought the first CDs of the African musicians he most admired and among them Salif Keita, where he gained enormous influences in the way of composing and arranging the songs. After his experience with the Marrabenta Orchestra and influenced by the arrangements of other great African musicians, he travels to South Africa in search of more sophisticated studios and meets an old friend who had a studio: Fernando Perdigao, sound engineer and producer and musical arranger from great prestige living in Johannesburg.

Together, they decide to record the first and one of the most important CDs of the new generation of musicians from Mozambique in the 90s: Afrikiti! Fernando Perdigao and his partner at the time, Cedric Samson, at Treehouse music studio in Johannesburg, will be the producers of this first CD and invited great figures in South African and Mozambican music scene to play songs previously written by Sukuma. Bass players Fana Zulu and Peter Sclair, pianist Paul Hanmer, guitarist Jimmy Dludlu and percussionist John Hassan team up with Stewart Sukuma to materialize Afrikiti. Then later, Mauritz Lotz, Kanyo Maphumule, Kululiwe Sithole and others. Hugh Masekela and George Lee are keen to record this album after listening through the producers.

After the recording Stewart Sukuma has two proposals on the table, one by Sony Music SA led by Lindelani Mkhize and the other by EMI SA led by Sean Watson.Sony Music asked to wait six months until Lindelani, newly admitted, became familiar with the market. Stewart didn't want to wait with such anxiety and signed with EMI/CCP Records. Afrikiti was launched in Maputo, at Hotel Polana, in an unprecedented ceremony in Mozambique with the presence of the Minister of the Environment, Dr. Ferraz, the President of the Republic, Joaquim Chissano and Pascoal Mocumbi, Prime Minister.

Afrikiti becomes the first Mozambican CD to be released in national territory in 1997.

A year later Stewart Sukuma signs with Tropical music Germany and the CD is available in all major music stores around the world distributed by the hands of BMG-Ariola.

Sukuma moved to Boston in 1998, where he attended the Berklee College of Music. A decade later, he was on the advisory board of the school's Africa Scholars program.[4]

In 2013, Sukuma featured in fellow Mozambican musician Azagaia's second and final album, Cubaliwa, appearing on the track "Wa Gaia".[5]

Music and activities

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Sukuma combines traditional and contemporary Mozambican music and instrumentation. His songs reflect Mozambique's varied musical influences, which include Portugal throughout the country and Islam in the north (which was visited by Arabs). Sukuma began a project in 2010 to encourage young people to play and listen to Marrabenta, a popular style of Mozambican dance music.[6] He donated part of the proceeds of his first solo album, Afrikiti (1997), to environmental groups, and is involved with AIDS relief.[2] Sukuma was appointed the first national goodwill ambassador for UNICEF Mozambique on 14 December 2012. The following year, he visited evacuees on behalf of UNICEF in Chiaquelane, Chókwè District who were in temporary accommodations after the flooding of the Limpopo River.[7]

Discography

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Albums

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  • Afrikiti (1997)[3]
  • Nkhuvu (2008)
  • Os Sete Pecados Capitais and Boleia Africana (2014 double CD)
  • O Meu Lado B (2016)

Singles

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  • "Felizminha" (2007)
  • "Wulombe" (2008)
  • "Olumwengo" (2009)
  • "Xitchuketa Marrabenta" (2010)
  • "Caranguejo" (2011)
  • "Vale a Pena Casar?" (2011)
  • "Txolpela Moçambique" (2013)

Compilations

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  • New African World Beat, Vol. 4 (1998, Star Pool/Universal)
  • Mozambique Relief (2000, Naxos World)
  • Musica da CPLP (2003, Marcelo Salazar)
  • Tales of Mozambique (2006, Sheer Sound)
  • Nkhuvu (2007)[8]
  • Kizomba Mix (2008, Vidisco)
  • Sofrimento (2011, UNICEF)
  • 30 Anos de Carreira (2012)[6]

Awards

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  • Best Performance, EME Awards (1983) – "Mulata do MK"
  • Press Award, Ngoma Mocambique (1992) – "Josefina"
  • Popular Song of the Year, Ngoma Mocambique (1994) – "Julieta"
  • Best Song of the Year, Ngoma Mocambique (1996) – "Afrikiti"
  • Popular Song of the Year, Ngoma Mocambique (2008)
  • Popular Song of the Year, Ngoma Moçambique (2010)
  • MOAMAS Best Alternative Song of the Year (2010)
  • Mozart Award, UNESCO (Best Musician, 1997)
  • Cultural Personality of the Year, 2008 (Jornal Noticias)
  • MMA, Best Pop Music (2009) - Olumwengo Remix
  • Cultural Personality, 2012 – Jornal Savana
  • MMA, Bestselling CD (2013) - 30 Anos de Carreira
  • MMA, Best Contemporary Music (2015) - "Xitchuketa Marrabenta"
  • MMA, Bestselling CD (2015) - Boleia Africana/Os Sete Pecados Capitais[6]

References

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  1. ^ "Mozambique's Stewart Sukuma: Good musicians make good money". BBC News. 6 June 2014. Retrieved 8 June 2014.
  2. ^ a b c "Stewart Sukuma – Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved 8 June 2014.
  3. ^ a b c Broughton, Simon; Mark Ellingham; Richard Trillo (1999). World Music: Africa, Europe and the Middle East. Rough Guides. p. 581. ISBN 9781858286358.
  4. ^ Edwards, Margot (22 May 2008). "Auditions in Africa". Berklee College of Music. Retrieved 9 January 2021.
  5. ^ Azagaia - Cubaliwa, retrieved 22 March 2023
  6. ^ a b c Frey, Adrian (8 February 2016). "Stewart Sukumba". Club of Mozambique. Retrieved 9 January 2021.
  7. ^ "Stewart Sukuma, UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador, visits flood victims in Mozambique". UNICEF Mozambique – Voices. 27 January 2013. Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 8 June 2014.
  8. ^ "Stewart Sukuma – Nkhuvu". CD Baby Music Store. Archived from the original on 28 May 2014. Retrieved 8 June 2014.