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TSAMINA MINA - THIS TIME FOR AFRICA - WORLD CUP ANTHEM

 
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TiZepeng



Joined: 25 Jul 2007
Posts: 295

 PostPosted: Fri Jun 11, 2010 8:01 am    Post subject: TSAMINA MINA - THIS TIME FOR AFRICA - WORLD CUP ANTHEM Reply with quote Back to top

Justin case some of you might be wondering I found this article on the Official Anthem of South Africa FIFA World Cup 2010.

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"Tsamina" or "Zangaléwa" is a 1986 hit song, originally sung by a makossa group from Cameroon called Golden Sounds who were beloved throughout the continent for their silly dances and costumes. The song was such a hit for Golden Sounds that they eventually changed their name to Zangaléwa, too.The song pays tribute to African skirmishers (a.k.a tirailleurs [or soldiers that were volounteered]) during WW2. Most of the band members were in the Cameroonian Army themselves and used make up, fake belly and fake butt for comic relief.

The song is still used today almost everywhere in Africa by soldiers, policemen, boy scouts, sportsmen and their supporters, usually during training or for rallying. It is also widely used in schools throughout the continent especially in Cameroon as a marching song and almost everyone in the country knows the chorus of the song by heart. The song was also popular in Colombia where it was known as "The Military" and brought to the country by West African DJs.

The men in the group often dressed in military uniforms, wearing pith helmets and stuffing their clothes with pillows to appear like they had a swollen butts from riding the train and fat stomachs from eating too much. The song, music historians say, is a criticism of black military officers who were in league with whites to oppress their own people. Or at least, some of it was. The rest is Cameroonian slang and jargon from the soilders during the war.

According to Jean Paul Zé Bella, the lead singer of Golden Sounds came from Cameroonian "sharpshooters who had created a slang for better communication between them during the Second World War". They copied this fast pace in the first arranments of the song. They sang the song together for freedom in Africa. [1]

The lyrics, which are in a Cameroonian language called Fang, read like this:

Tsamina mina eh eh
Waka waka eh eh
Tsamina mina zangalewa
Ana wam ah ah
Zambo eh eh
Zambo eh eh
Tsamina mina zangalewa
Wana wa ah ah


Meaning of the words in Fang language

Tsaminamina :Come.
Waka waka : Do it - as in perform a task. Waka is pidgin language meaning walk while working. [I wonder if Nike will capitalize on this]
Tsaminamina Zangalewa: Where do you come from?.
Wana :It is mine.
Zambo : Wait.

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TZ
 
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