THE CULTURE CLOCK IS TICKING AGAIN

The Culture Clock Is Ticking Again

By Panashe Julian Chengeta

Changamire Awards return for year 11 and the red carpet has something to prove.                                                                       

The Changamire Festival Awards land on April 28 at The Backspace in Newlands. Eleven years in, that sentence alone means something. Most Zimbabwean cultural platforms don't make it past three.

What's different this time isn't the volume or the scale. It's the posture. The artists in this year's nomination pool aren't jostling for a seat at the table. They're already seated, and they seem less interested in asking permission than they were a year ago.

That shift — subtle but unmistakable — is what makes the 2026 edition feel less like a celebration and more like a temperature check.

Eleven Years In

The Backspace won't just be hosting an awards ceremony. It'll be hosting a marker in time.

Changamire's survival is the story. Urban music in Zimbabwe has cycled through waves of media indifference, radio exclusion, and venue scarcity. Awards shows have come and gone — some loudly, some quietly. Changamire stayed by refusing to pivot away from the music itself. Hip hop. Dancehall. R&B. Alternative. The categories expanded, but the centre held.

This year's nominations reflect an ecosystem, not a genre list. Fashion, media, social influence — they're all in the mix now. Not because the awards diluted. Because the culture did what cultures do: it grew.

No Single Face

Runna Rulez, whose pivot from upcoming to chart mainstay now feels inevitable, leads with 10 nominations. Bling 4, an artist who has turned consistency into its own kind of statement, holds 9 with his recent release Majeso album which had a successful launch with the Festival in Chitungwiza. SaintFloew with his latest body of work Gunda which was solid project with great features, polarising, unavoidable, and arguably the most streamed voice in the country right now sits at 8.

The instinct is to frame this as a race. It isn't one. 

What's more interesting is the spread. Yadis, Millz Million, Micky Black, Trap Dee — none of these names are "emerging" in the way that word usually gets used. They're already embedded in playlists, conversations, and live lineups. The nominations just confirm what anyone following the scene already knows: gatekeeping has collapsed. The audience is making its own decisions, and those decisions are pulling in multiple directions at once.

There's no single face of Zimbabwean urban music right now. That's not a weakness.

The Infrastructure Behind the Noise

Changamire has always been smarter than most people give it credit for, and the producer and DJ categories are where that shows.

Makenzi. Tatenda LXA. Belaire Boys. DJ Rax. Earground Media. Culture Kontrol.


These aren't afterthought categories. They're an acknowledgement that an artist is only as visible as the ecosystem around them — the producers shaping the sound, the DJs breaking the records, the media pages keeping the conversation alive. When Zimbabwean urban culture was still considered a phase, these were the people treating it like a career. The awards haven't forgotten that.

The Foundation Honours

Tate Da MC receiving a Lifetime Achievement Award will be one of the night's more significant moments. Before radio gave Zim Hip Hop a slot, before brands came calling, Tate was carving out space in a scene that had no infrastructure—organising cyphers, mentoring, refusing to let the thing die before it had a name. Commercial Zim Hip Hop didn't emerge from nowhere. Someone poured concrete.

Dr Kudakwashe Tagwirei's Community Champion recognition is a different signal entirely. It's a nod to the growing overlap between cultural capital and economic power, whether people are comfortable with that or not. And not everyone is. In a scene built partly on outsider identity, the embrace of establishment figures—particularly those whose rise invites as much scrutiny as admiration—tests the very definition of "community." The awards seem willing to live inside that discomfort. The question is whether the audience will.

Pokello's Cultural Impact Award says something about branding — the kind that doesn't just look good but shifts market perception. And Kalos Meats? That nod steps outside music entirely, into job creation and tangible community footprint. Whether or not you agree with every choice, the awards are clearly trying to say something broader about what "culture" means.

The Crowd's Say

The People's Choice category remains the one that matters in ways the juried categories don't.

Saint Floew. Bagga. Sane Wav. Holy Ten. Bling 4. Voltz JT. Runna Rulez.

No panel. No rubric beyond who the audience actually backs. These are the names that dominate comment sections, streaming numbers, and debate timelines. And the People's Choice vote is rarely about who's most technically accomplished. It's about who's captured something — a mood, a moment, a loyalty — that resists formal measurement.

April 28

Tariro Gezi and MC Baluti will host. The trophies will get handed out. The speeches will happen — some prepared, some not.

 

But what sticks from the night won't be the list of winners. It'll be what the room reveals about where the scene is actually heading. Who draws the loudest reaction. Whose name generates tension. Who's absent, and who's suddenly everywhere.

These are the things awards shows actually measure, even if no one says them into a microphone.

The Real Thread

The question hanging over Changamire 2026 is not "who wins."

Last year, the loudest sound in the room wasn't a winner's name. It was the murmur that rippled through the crowd when a certain category didn't go the way the room expected—a collective intake of breath that said more about shifting allegiances than any acceptance speech could. These are the things awards shows actually measure, even if no one says them into a microphone.

It's whether the infrastructure is finally solid enough to carry the talent that clearly exists. Zimbabwean urban music has never lacked good artists. What's been inconsistent is what surrounds them — funding, media coverage, venue access, strategic management. The awards can't fix those things. But they can make them harder to ignore.

That's the thread worth watching.

Not the trophies. The foundation.


            


Comments

  1. Well written, it feels less like an event preview and more like a snapshot of where the culture is right now.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Keep up the good work Panashe👌🔥

    ReplyDelete
  3. “Not the trophies. The foundation.” That line sums everything up 🔥🔥🔥🔥

    ReplyDelete
  4. Yesaya🔥🔥

    ReplyDelete
  5. Marema chibaba 🔥💪

    ReplyDelete

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