At 92, Giddes Chalamanda, a song legend, ignites TikTok

Giddes Chalamanda has become a star on the online platform TikTok with a title viewed more than 80 million times. From South Africa to the Philippines, its acoustic and catchy track Linny Hoo, recorded at the end of 2020 and in which he tells his daughter Linny all his pride, has been reinterpreted and remixed at will, becoming a phenomenon. Young people “come to show me the videos on their phones, but I have no idea how it works”, admits the artist met by AFP in his house on the edge of a macadamia plantation, about twenty kilometers from Blantyre, the economic capital of Malawi. The slender white-haired old man, a little stooped, retained a youthful cheerfulness: “I like people having fun and listening to what I do.” His 16-year-old grandson Stepson Austin, who wants to get into hip-hop himself, is amazed by the longevity of the musician with his 70-year career: “It’s amazing that he lived long enough to see this”, this global success.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ajFvhRt5xZM

Born in Chiradzulu, a small town in the south of the country, Giddes Chalamanda and his guitar are legendary in Malawi. His song buffalo soldier, in which he dreams of going to the United States, is known to all. He still performs in concert today and over the past ten years he has played regularly with new generations of musicians. In 2021, with Patience Namadingo, a local musician in her thirties, he decided to record a reggae version of some of his hits. The video goes viral, with nearly seven million views on YouTube. At the end of 2021, the video lands on TikTok and goes around the world.

“When the song is launched in a box or a festival, everyone starts dancing, it’s a real hit.”

Davis Njobvu, musician

at AFP

The lyrics are in Chewa, the local language, but you don’t need to understand them to be won over. “The old man sings with such passion that he touches anyone who listens to him”, says Joe Machingura, producer and label owner based in South Africa. This song “speak to your soul“. “Songs of the past were sometimes written with such depth, they still resonate today,” adds Tammy Mbendera of the Malawi Festivals Institute, for whom TikTok creates incredible opportunities for artists.

@the_new_vibe_zm For those who do not understand the Language but love this piece#music #linnyhoo #namadingo #chamalanda #zambiantiktok #malawi #foryou #fyp ♬ original sound – Muller_Kay92

But to date, Giddes Chalamanda, who has had fourteen children, seven of whom are still alive, is still waiting for this opportunity to pay off. “I’m surprised that despite the popularity of the song, there is nothing for me”, he admits.

“I’m excited to get people dancing around the world, but there should be a benefit for me. I need that money.”

Giddes Chalamanda, artist

at AFP

According to his manager Pemphero Mphande, the process to obtain royalties for his song broadcast on TikTok is ongoing and the Malawi copyright society has expressed its willingness to help him.


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