TM: How are you Sandra?
SN: Am fine my dear and you.
TM: You got married a couple of years ago and most people thought you would quit music and dance. How does your husband take it when you gyrate on stage?
SN: He is unmoved by it because it is bringing food to our table. He is very supportive to the group.
TM: Your dances have been linked to “dirty styles” by music critics what you can say about that considering that you are a mother.
SN: I don’t see anything wrong about my dances and people that come to our our shows can testify that we are professional. I no longer put on attires that expose my body and my dances are still the same because they have never been wrong.
TM: How do you balance music and your family business?
SN: It is difficult because as a mother of two children and owner of a boutique named Sandy Fashions in Bulawayo, I sometimes compromise my time for music. I suspend rehearsals so often when I have to travel to Dubai and Botswana for the purchase of wares for the shop and my children also need attention.
TM: What happened to your Sandy Craft shop?
SN: It is still there and we usually sell our goods in United States of America.
TM: So do you go to music rehearsals every weekend?
SN: As for now I am practicing every weekend because we are working on a new album that will be released before Easter holidays.