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Author Topic: Radio Tanzania Zanzibar 11735 AM 2015 UTC 22Aug14  (Read 2014 times)

Offline jFarley

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Radio Tanzania Zanzibar 11735 AM 2015 UTC 22Aug14
« on: August 22, 2014, 2034 UTC »
RTZ doing nicely this afternoon at S9+ with fragrant rumba-flavored Taraab.

2042 animated OM tx - recognized a few words of Swahili - no ment of the FM relay nor Tanzania
2045 back to the music - a familiar tune which seems to get a lot of airplay on RTZ
2058 Quick OM ann and off abruptly per usual


« Last Edit: August 22, 2014, 2101 UTC by jFarley »
Joe Farley, Near Chicago
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Offline jFarley

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Re: Radio Tanzania Zanzibar 11735 AM 2015 UTC 22Aug14
« Reply #1 on: September 19, 2014, 1704 UTC »
Checking here today (Friday 19Sep14) I noted RTZ in around 1600, and building impressively afterwards.  1700 pips, ID with good audio for this early.

If you are after the 1800-1810 EE nx, a real possibility today it seems

1755 OM talk in lang
1800 drums, 5+1 pips, nx in EE by OM; nx items read with the country name preceding the item
1803 Link-11 fired up just above it - have to listen in very narrow LSB
1808 Drums, Link-11 off, YL tx - partially in EE?
1812 More Link-11 and into a program of modern Taraab

About S7 during the EE segment
« Last Edit: September 19, 2014, 1817 UTC by jFarley »
Joe Farley, Near Chicago
SDR-IQ / R8 / R7
Remote Resonant Loops for HF and LF / ALA 1530
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QSLS appreciated to:    jfarley44@att.net

Offline Pigmeat

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Re: Radio Tanzania Zanzibar 11735 AM 2015 UTC 22Aug14
« Reply #2 on: September 19, 2014, 1925 UTC »
This is going to take awhile, but here goes; A majority of people on the Zanzibar Islands don't consider themselves to be Tanzanians. It's an autonomous and rather ancient polity. Arabs, Indonesians, Indians, Persians, Chinese, Romans, and Greeks all came there to trade well before the birth of Christ.

The East African coast from the southern border of what is now Mozambique to Somalia was known as "The Land of The Zanj" which basically meant "The Land of The Blacks" from antiquity. Zanj, of course, is root word for Zanzibar. The Chinese Admiral, Zheng He, made a visit there in the early part of the 15th century with his great treasure fleet.

It was the capital of Oman for about a century, until the British were asked to step in to settle an Omani dynastic squabble there in the mid-1800's. The resulting solution was the creation of the Sultanate of Zanzibar, which lasted as a British Protectorate until the 1970's, when it merged with Tanganyika to form Tanzania.

After the merger, there was a brutal war of conquest by the Tanganyikan's on the islands that made up the former Sultanate of Zanzibar, killing and expelling much of the Indian and Arab population who had been there for centuries. It was settled by making the islands of the old Zanzibar Sultanate an autonomous region. However, there are still a lot of hard feelings in Zanzibar towards the mainland government.

To make a long story short, many Zanzibaris loathe to refer to themselves as "Tanzanians", due to recent history. I suspect that's why they leave off "Tanzania" in their broadcast id's.

Offline jFarley

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Re: Radio Tanzania Zanzibar 11735 AM 2015 UTC 22Aug14
« Reply #3 on: September 19, 2014, 2115 UTC »
This is going to take awhile, but here goes...


The ancient Mondoshawan proverb sez: "Time not important. Only life important."

You are probably spot on with all you comments.  This dichotomy or friction shows up even in the music which is aired.  One of the reasons I keep coming back to RTZ is for the music; it is one of the last African SW stations which consistently airs a lot of their own music.  Both Tanzania proper and Zanzibar have a rich musical history in both classical and popular areas, but for the most part, the industry has been corrupted severely by external influences.

Zanzibar is really the de facto home of the music known as Taraab; this is a unique music which draws from many of the cultural influences which you cited.  It is unmistakable, although often mixed up with mainstream Arabic or Middle Eastern music.  There is a classical style which RTZ airs every now and then, and there is also a more modern style which uses electric instrumentation to replace classical instruments such as the accordion or violin.  I find this stuff very relaxing; doesn't get the blood boiling though...

The Tanzanian mainland is the home of one of the most popular musics in all of Africa, and is highly sought after by collectors.  This is Muziki wa Dansi - dance music - and is generally an up-tempo rumba-driven music played by a large ensemble including electric guitars and brass/reed sections.  In the heyday (up to around 1990) the bands were in cut-throat competition for gigs and studio time.  This is one of my fave musics in all Africa, and RTZ will air this very infrequently.  Nowadays, Tanzanian music is dominated by a style known as Bongo Flava, which essentially is hip hop with Swahili lyrics.  By comparison, it is crap, and I have never heard any of this on RTZ.

RTZ does air a lot of Taraab which has a definite rumba flavor, and maybe this is enough to keep everybody happy.  It is cool stuff.

Joe Farley, Near Chicago
SDR-IQ / R8 / R7
Remote Resonant Loops for HF and LF / ALA 1530
Active 60" Whip / PA0RDT
QSLS appreciated to:    jfarley44@att.net

Offline Pigmeat

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Re: Radio Tanzania Zanzibar 11735 AM 2015 UTC 22Aug14
« Reply #4 on: September 20, 2014, 0444 UTC »
There's a lot of Rumba style music in Southern Africa. Some say it was brought to the region by Cuban soldiers in the chaos that followed Portugal giving up it's African possessions in Mozambique and Angola, but I'm not so sure.

What's now Mozambique, Angola, and Tanzania were a source of slaves in the Americas until the Spanish Empire and Brazil both abolished slavery in the mid-1880's. Seeing that the average lifespan for a slave on the sugar plantations of Cuba and Brazil was roughly 18 months, many if not most of the emancipated there were African by birth and culture.

My guess is that sound came to the Americas with them, morphed, and came back a century later with the Cuban troops.

 

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