“Dzakasvika Nyasha”: Charles Charamba Ushers In A Graceful New Era With A Luminous Video

“Dzakasvika Nyasha”: Charles Charamba Ushers In A Graceful New Era With A Luminous Video. Charles Charamba has unveiled the official music video for “Dzakasvika Nyasha,” a worshipful standout from his 2025 album Farai Nevanofara.

The song’s Shona title translates to “Grace has arrived,” and that is the atmosphere the clip cultivates: quiet assurance, reverence, and the steady glow of testimony. The video went live on The Charambas & Fishers of Men YouTube channel, extending the album’s spirit beyond audio into a devotional visual that feels as intentional as the music itself.
The track anchors Farai Nevanofara, which was released on May 26, 2025, under Fishers Of Men Music and Next Music. It opens the eight-song set and reads like the album’s thesis, with grace as both culmination and catalyst. Streaming and download listings confirm the release details and track order, placing “Dzakasvika Nyasha” first, followed by “Farai Mufarisise,” “Dai Musina Kuuya,” and “Tipemberere,” among others.
On the visual side, Charamba and team keep the focus on message over spectacle. Official materials credit PIKICHAYEDU Films, led by Taurai Zidya, with production. The credit choice shows in the clean framing and unhurried edits. The camera never competes with the worship. It makes room for it. Social posts from The Charambas flagged the rollout and pointed fans to the channel, which hints at a carefully sequenced release plan that built anticipation across Facebook and Instagram before the premiere.
Musically, “Dzakasvika Nyasha” is classic Charamba. The writing is scripture soaked, the melody resolves like a prayer, and the ensemble feel of Fishers of Men is warm and steady. Platform credits list Charamba as composer and producer of the audio, which reflects his habit of shepherding both the message and the mechanics of his records. The arrangement serves the lyric at every turn. Crescendos arrive where the text calls for emphasis, and the refrain lands like a corporate confession of faith.
The video translates that confession into pictures. The palette is bright but not flashy. Performance shots are intercut with congregational moments that read as lived faith rather than staged piety. The result is less a plot and more a procession, an invitation to join a song already in progress. Even the pacing seems to breathe with the lyric, and phrases are allowed to sit long enough to be absorbed.
Beyond the single, the clip helps re-centre a milestone year for the Charambas. The YouTube channel continues to curate legacy moments and fresh releases. “Dzakasvika Nyasha” arrives as a focal point for new listeners who are discovering Farai Nevanofara on Apple Music, Spotify, and Tidal. It is the kind of cross-platform moment that keeps gospel moving, a record planted in May that now flowers in visuals, comments, and congregational echo.
If you are stepping into the album for the first time, start where the band starts with “Dzakasvika Nyasha.” Then walk the tracklist in order. It reads like a liturgy of gratitude, and the new video functions as its opening call. Grace has arrived, and we are invited to see it as well as sing it.
Watch: “Dzakasvika Nyasha, Charles Charamba, Official” on The Charambas & Fishers of Men YouTube channel.
Album: Farai Nevanofara, released May 26, 2025.
Video credits, selection: Produced by PIKICHAYEDU Films, Taurai Zidya.