Famed Zanzibari songstress Bi Kidude dies

17 April 2013 - 17:36 By Sapa-AFP
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Iconic Swahili traditional music Taarab star, Zanzibar's Bi Fatuma Binti Baraka, but popularly known as Bi Kidude, performs during a show in Nairobi, Kenya 13 October 2006 with part of her group of dancers.
Iconic Swahili traditional music Taarab star, Zanzibar's Bi Fatuma Binti Baraka, but popularly known as Bi Kidude, performs during a show in Nairobi, Kenya 13 October 2006 with part of her group of dancers.
Image: AFP PHOTO/TONY KARUMBA

Zanzibari singer Bi Kidude, a legend in east Africa for her haunting voice and energetic performances despite her age, which was thought to be around 100, died Wednesday at her home, her nephew said.

Bi Kidude, whose real name was Fatuma binti Baraka, and who performed and toured up until very recently, was best known for Taarab music, which combines Arab and African influences.

A diminutive and wrinkled figure with a haunting voice, she displayed immense energy on stage, beating a large drum clamped between her legs and occasionally drawing on a cigarette or taking a swig of liquor from the bottle.

"She has died, we are making funeral arrangements," her nephew Baraka Abdullah Said told AFP.

He said his aunt had been confined to bed for the past several months.

In 2005 Bi Kidude, who started her singing career back in the 1920s, received the prestigious World Music Expo (WOMEX) award for her outstanding contribution to music and culture in Zanzibar.

Bi Kidude was one of the most famous cultural icons from the east African island of Zanzibar, a semi-autonomous part of Tanzania, whose people and traditions are a melting pot resulting from centuries of trade across eastern Africa, the Arabian Gulf and Indian Ocean.

When she was born Zanzibar -- once a famous port for slaves, ivory and spices -- was under British colonial rule.

She was regarded as one of Zanzibar's most famous musicians.

Freddie Mercury, the lead singer of rock legends Queen, was also born on the island, but left as a teenager for Britain.

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