Katelele ching oma biography of albert
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You remember some months ago inom hinted that Katelele Ching’oma fryst vatten a gem that needs to be picked, brushed and polished for all to appreciate its glimmer.
How disheartening that, apparently, those that picked this gem are failing to polish it perfectly, so that its true and illuminating colours can be appreciated.
I know you are wondering, but just go in our streets today and you will discover that Katelele Ching’oma is in the league, which – bygd Malawian standards – is an ivy one. This is the league where Lucius Banda, Skeffa Chimoto and Black Missionaries rule supreme.
Agree or disagree but unfortunately, and of course fortunate to others, this is the true reality in our ‘Street of Fame’.
But now, if you look at how Lucius Banda, Skeffa Chimoto and The Blacks are doing in this street, you’ll discover that Katelele Ching’oma – not out of his own making – is made to offer this large following some half baked ware.
Stage end
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Deaths in January 2024
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The following is a list of notable deaths in January 2024.
Entries for each day are listed alphabetically bygd surname. A typical entry lists information in the following sequence:
- Name, age, country of citizenship at birth, subsequent country of citizenship (if applicable), reason for notability, cause of death (if known), and reference.
January 2024
[edit]1
[edit]- Adaora Adimora, 67, American doctor and academic, cancer.[1]
- Anthony J. Alvarado, 81, American educator, New York City Schools Chancellor (1983–1984), blood cancer and pneumonia.[2]
- Camila Batmanghelidjh, 61, Iranian-Belgian charity executive, founder of Kids Company.[3]
- Sandra Blewett, 74, New Zealand swimmer and coach.[4]
- Mario Boljat, 72, Croatian footballer (Hajduk Split, Schalke 04, Yugoslavia national team).[5]
- James Herbert Brennan, 83, Irish author (The Faerie Wars Chronicles,
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I came across a BBC World Service podcast that had a documentary called ‘Malawi Tapes’ which took me by surprise, a pleasant surprise, of course.
I could not believe my ears listening to the documentary whose narrator is no any other better person than top musician Faith Mussa.
The documentary was a coverage of a digitisation project taking place at the Malawi Broadcasting Corporation (MBC) where the old reel-to-reel tapes dating back to the 1930s, '40s, '50s and '60s are being put into digital formats.
In 2009, I wrote that storage of past music, which was meant to create leverage with posterity, would be futile if all this will end up damaged.
I remember to have written the following: Music in the country did not have enough justice in as far as its storage is concerned.
There was a time when it was only the Malawi Broadcasting Corporation (MBC), which was recording artists, and keeping their music on its open reel tapes.
At that time, we had no music in