the monitor

Brass until dawn

Majalefha Brass Band opened the first round of the Heavenly Harmonies Concert and their music started calmly, with steady brass tones that settled everyone into their seats
Majalefha Brass Band opened the first round of the Heavenly Harmonies Concert and their music started calmly, with steady brass tones that settled everyone into their seats

The Heavenly Harmonies Concert began the way many community gatherings do, slowly, with people arriving in small groups, greeting familiar faces, and settling into their seats at Gaborone Technical College Hall.

The hall was filled with the usual mix of warm chatter, instrument tuning, and quiet expectation. Everyone knew a long night of music lay ahead, but there was something different in the air this time, a sense that each group had come ready to give more than just a performance. They had come to share. From the moment people stepped into Gaborone Technical College Hall, something about the atmosphere hinted that this would not be an ordinary event. The programme was arranged in five rounds, with each group returning again and again, giving the evening a steady rhythm. Instead of one long performance from each act, the music came in waves. Each round added something new, making the night unfold slowly and naturally. Majalefha Brass Band opened the first round. Their music started calmly, with steady brass tones that settled everyone into their seats. They didn’t rush.

Their sound was confident and clear, setting the mood for what would follow. Every time they returned in later rounds, the audience seemed to recognise the familiar strength of their style. Majenyana Brass Band joined next. Their energy lifted the room immediately. Drums tapped out firm beats, and the horns pushed forward with bright, strong notes. Each round they performed felt like they were giving the night an extra push of life, waking up the hall whenever the energy dipped. Then came the turn of Dineo Tsa Tumelo, the choir filled the stage with warm, blended voices that added a different feeling to the evening. Their sound was smooth and emotional, balancing the stronger brass performances. Each time they came back for another round, the hall seemed to breathe a little deeper. A special moment arrived during the third round, when Majalefha Brass Band and Dineo Tsa Tumelo performed together. Brass and voices joined in one piece, rising and falling in a way that surprised the audience. The choir brought softness, the instruments added strength.

Editor's Comment
Child protection needs more than prevailing laws

The rise in defilement and missing persons cases, particularly over the recent festive period, points not merely to a failure of policing, but to a profound and widespread societal crisis. Whilst the Police chief’s plea is rightly directed at parents, the root of this emergency runs deeper, demanding a collective response from every corner of our community. Marathe’s observations paint a picture of neglect with children left alone for...

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