Wink D in hot soup!
Zimdancehall sensation Winky D is at loggerheads
with promoter Luther Pazvakavambwa of Digital One Promotions, who is accusing
the musician of fraud after he failed to perform in the United Kingdom despite
getting paid for the tour.
Winky D was supposed to have shared stage with
Soul Jah Love, Tocky Vibes, Shinsoman and Trevor D among other artistes in
London, Birmingham and Manchester from May 1 to 3.
Winky D, who allegedly received a whopping $7
000, which he had charged for the performance, failed to join other musicians
for the tour.
In an interview with The Herald Entertainment,
Pazvakavambwa said they paid Winky D $7 000 he charged in instalments, the
first half having been paid in November last year and the other half a week before
the tour.
“Winky charged us $7 000 for three shows and he
wanted half the amount as deposit and that was paid last year in November. He
demanded the other half when his work permit and visa were processed and that
was paid a week before the show,” he said.
He said Winky D also wanted five air tickets for
his band members to travel to the UK which he claimed he bought but the
musician and his crew said they missed their initial flight.
“They wanted five air tickets to travel to the
UK. I bought the tickets and they missed their flight. I bought another set of
tickets and he refused to travel saying they could not travel separately.
“He was booked in a flight with other artistes on
Kenyan Airways and his band was supposed to be in another flight but they did
not honour our contract and did not travel,” he said.
Pazvakavambwa, who is threatening to take legal
action, said he made a loss of $27 000 because Winky D and his band failed to
turn up for the tour.
“The loss that I incurred is over $27 000 and
that won’t go alone. I will take legal action. It is worse because they gave me
names of people who were not on their band at first and the work permit agent
found out that it was fake and did not issue the work permits. I had to pay
again for another group that they had since the first group proved to be fake.
They were not sincere and they also failed to travel for the tour after
everything had been done,” he said.
Winky D manager Jonathan Banda admitted getting
the money but could not give details.
“If they have issues they have to approach us not the Press. If they are saying
we are defrauding them then they should approach the police and we are
waiting,” he said.
“Although we got the money, I said he should
approach the police and we take it from there.”
Meanwhile, away from the fraud accusations, Winky
D asserted himself as a fine entertainer when he put up a sterling performance
at the Castle Tankard Borrowdale Race Course on Friday.
The Ninja President, real name Wallace Chirumiko,
performed shortly after fellow comrade Tocky Vibes got bombarded with missiles
forcing him to end his act prematurely.
Winky D showed Tocky Vibes how to work around
such situations.
First, while he spent double the time that Tocky
Vibes took in setting up his band, not a single missile was thrown by the fans.
The seasoned artiste was strategic is his
hour-long sound check he ensured that fans enjoyed some music as they worked on
the machines.
There were sound glitches for the better part of
his Winky D’s act, but he applied his vast experience in the trade to wins fans
to his side.
Winky D would be quick to amplify the functioning
instruments and played other songs that were not on his list as sound engineers
rectified the matter.
This is contrary to the “Mhai” singer’s tactics
that saw them working while there was dead silence.
Winky D also introduced the services of
Conquering Family member Jah Child to spruce up his act.
The reception was positive and fans were on their
feet despite the disaster that threatened to ruin his reputation.
Sadly, the same could not be said about Tocky
Vibes.
He was not prepared for it.
“We did our sound check but the technical fault
recurred several times. We tried to rectify it with the engineers but it was to
no avail. Tocky was depressed by this and it affected his performance,” said
his manager Elvis Bokosha.
Tocky Vibes tried every trick in the book to win
the hearts of the fans that were baying for his blood, but nothing worked.
When all else had failed, the desperate singer
resorted to giving fans free copies of his album.
“Mukuda kuti ndiende here? Horaiti, regai
ndikupei zvinhu zvenyu ndisati ndaenda. (So you want me to leave? That’s ok,
let me give you your gifts before I go),” he said
He took a bow after just 30 minutes and exited
the stage in a huff.
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