What: 🎵 vuyo viwe
https://www.quicket.co.za/events/352026-vuyo-viwe/
When:
Where: 🕳 The Athletic Club and Social
How much:
🎟️ R300.00Quicket
Vuyo Tshwele (aka vuyo viwe) is a 25-year-old flautist, composer and vocalist
based in Johannesburg, South Africa. Freshly-minted in the jazz scene, she has
shared the stage with various classical and jazz acts, including Kujenga,
Internet Athi, The Brother Moves On, ft. Hymnself and Sisonke Xonti. Vuyo
viwe’s sound is a mix of South African traditional song form, orchestral folk,
with alternative vocal melodies, blending electronic sounds with classical
instruments with the rawness of uhadi sensibilities and ngoma time signatures
and dissonance. Vuyo viwe had the privilege of performing in celebrated spaces
such as YoungBlood, The Chairman, Untitled Basement, Baxter Theatre, The
Homecoming Theatre, as well as being a feature in the THAT Tuesday Funk jam
session house band. She has since held a 3-day residency at Nirox Sculpture
Park under the collective ft. Hymnself, all before her sold-out debut
performance as a solo act at Mamakashaka and Friends. Vuyo viwe is set to
perform at Kids LoveJazz and Umanyano Lwe Jazz, amongst much-anticipated solo
performances. Vuyo viwe has featured in mixed creative outputs, including
recording flute and vocals for Internet Athi’s Wena and Nguwe; supporting
Thandi Nqanda’s No Time To Mourn; featuring in BET Africa’s soon-coming Echoes
of Tomorrow documentary and Archive’s Spaces That Feel Like Home campaign. She
also composed, performed and recorded the film score for Nomandla Vilakazi’s
documentary, Ode to Sara, that has since screened at the Labia Theatre, Iziko
Museums of South Africa, The Commons and Raw Film Festival. Ode to Sara also
won the Best Documentary Short Film prize at the festival. Vuyo viwe has also
curated commissioned tracks for the Desmond and Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation’s
A Queer South Africa project, and is completing a soundscape inspired by the
Namib desert for Raul Jorge Gourgel’s upcoming visual installation.
Rooted in the philosophy of “afroesoterism”, vuyo viwe explores the sonics of
Blackness, of Womanness, of resilience, and of an (un)becoming.
With a background in Western Classical Music and Psychology, vuyo viwe is
completing a Masters in Music Therapy - an amalgamation of all the things that
keep her in her purpose: to create, share, learn, reach, and heal.