Radio Lusaka
Radio Lusaka is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.
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Shipping & Pick-Up
Shipping & Pick-Up
SHIPPING POLICY
We offer FREE shipping on orders of $100 or more. All media orders (vinyl/CD/cassette) will ship via USPS media mail. Please be aware that we cannot provide free multiple shipments for a single order, so if your order includes pre-order items, the entire order will be held until all items are in stock and ready to be shipped.Your tracking information usually updates within 24-72 hours. Once your order departs from our facility, we no longer have control over it. For assistance with missing packages, kindly reach out to your local post office branch. Please note that we are not responsible for stolen packages and are not able to refund you for your purchase if your package was stolen after delivery. Shipping times may vary.
FREE IN-STORE PICKUP
If you are local, we offer FREE in-store pickup on online orders. Please note, however, that using Apple Pay at checkout will auto-fill a shipping charge and will not allow you the option to choose free in-store pickup. In other words, if you wish to choose free in-store pickup at checkout, you must checkout without using an accelerated payment method like Apple Pay.Country, township jazz, and pop hits from the height of Zambia's freedom movement. Vocalist, guitarist, and bandleader Alick Nkhata moved effortlessly between lonesome country slide, big band pop, and air-tight vocal harmonies, all with roots in Bemba and other African traditional songs and rhythms. It's a dizzying, inclusive, expansive blend from an artist and music archivist who became the voice of his nation's fight for freedom. The lyrics and music represent the times - lonesome country laments like "Nafwaya Fwaya" and "Fosta Kayi" drift along the railways to urban centers and copper mines. "Nalikwebele Sonka (I Told You Sonka)", sung in "deep-Bemba" pairs honey-soaked yodels with a warning about the downward spiral of unemployment in townships, while Mayo Na Bwalya' (Mother of Bwalya) is a mother's plea to a traditional songbird for guidance of her wayward son. Songs like "Shalapo," "Kalindawalo Na Mfumwa," and his biggest hit, "Imbote," infuse piano, big band horns, and even early electronic instruments into stunning syncretic pop masterpieces. Despite Nkhata's role in Zambian independence and his influence on future generations of African artists, this LP is the first time his music is being reissued on vinyl. We're honored to work closely with Alick Nkhata's family, as well as with collectors around the world who provided some of the rare recordings. Music archivist, researcher, and NTS host Jamal Khadar wrote in-depth liner notes spanning the history of Zambian independence, and noted Zambian author and translator Ellen Banda-Aaku provides careful and deeply researched lyric translations. On high-quality black vinyl with deluxe 12-page booklet with unpublished photos, lyrics, translations, and liner notes written by NTS radio host Jamal Khadar.
UPC: 850024931862
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