Hugh Masekela
@ the Royal Festival Hall
1 2 November 2010
Click an image to enlarge.
Hugh Masekela Desert Island Discs
Which 2 albums would you take with you to a
desert island?
“If I was on a desert island I would
not need any music I would listen to the birds and the sea!”
However… I guess if I had to take two
albums…
Louis Armstrong – The Ultimate Collection
Miles Davis – Kind Of Blue
Biography
Ever since the day in 1954 when Archbishop Trevor
Huddleston gave him his trumpet, Masekela has played music that
closely reflects his beginnings as a little boy in Witbank. The
street songs, church songs, migrant labour work songs, political
protest songs and the sounds of the wide cross-section of ethnic
culture South Africa possesses from Xhosa, Zulu, Swazi, Khoi, San,
Griqua, Sotho and Tswana peoples of the South, South East, Central
and Western Regions to the Ndebele, Tsonga, Venda and Pedi provinces
of the North and North West. The urban sounds of the townships,
the influences of the Manhattan Brothers, Dorothy Masuka, the Dark
City Sisters, the Mahotella Queens and Mahlathini, Ladysmith Black
Mambazo, Miriam Makeba, Spokes Mashiyane, Lemmy Mabaso, Elijah Nkwanyana,
Kippie Moeketsi, Mackay Davashe, all these form an intrinsic part
of his musical roots, intertwined with vivid portraits of the struggles
and the sorrows, the joys and passions of his country.
After Huddleston asked the leader of the Johannesburg
“Native” Municipal Brass Band, Uncle Sauda to teach
him the rudiments of trumpet playing, Masekela quickly proceeded
to master the instrument after having been inspired by the film
“Young man with a horn” in which Kirk Douglas portrayed
the great American Jazz trumpeter,Bix Beiderbecke. Soon, some of
his music loving schoolmates also became interested in playing instruments,
leading to the formation of the Huddleston Jazz Band, South Africa's
very first youth orchestra formed at St. Peters Secondary
School where the anti-apartheid priest was chaplain.
Huddleston was deported by the racist government
of the time for his emancipation militancy and when Masekela kept
on badgering him to help him leave the oppressive country for music
education opportunities abroad, the priest worked very hard to get
him to England. After playing in other dance bands led by the great
Zakes Nkosi, Ntemi Piliso, Elijah Nkwanyana and Kippie Moeketsi
among others, he joined the star studded African Jazz Revue in 1956.
Following a Manhattan Brothers tour of the country in 1958, he ended
up playing in the orchestra for the “King-Kong” musical
written by Todd Matshikiza, with Jonas Gwangwa and some of the afore
mentioned musicians. “King-Kong” was South Africa's
first record breaking blockbuster
theatrical success that toured the country for a sold out year with
Miriam Makeba and the Manhattan Brothers’ Nathan Mdledle in
the lead. The musical later went to London’s West End for
two years. At the end of 1959, Abdullah Ibrahim, Kippie, Jonas,
Makhaya Ntshoko, Johnny Gertze and Hugh formed Jazz Epistle Verse
1, the Hugh Masekela first African group to record an LP and perform
to record-breaking audiences in J.H.B. & CapeTown through late
1959 to early 1960.After the March 21, 1960 Sharpville Massacre
where 69 Africans peacefully protesting the pass laws along with
thousands of their fellow comrades were mercilessly mowed down,
the ensuing national outrage caused the government to proclaim a
state of emergency and the banning of gatherings by more than ten
people.
As the brutality of the Apartheid state increased,
Masekela finally left the country with the help of Trevor Huddleston
and his friends Yehudi Menuhin and Johnny Dankworth who got him
admitted into London's Guildhall School of music. Miriam Makeba
who was already enjoying major success in the USA later helped him
with Harry Belafonte, Dizzy Gillepsie and John Mehegan, to get admission
to the Manhattan school of Music in New York. Hugh finally met Louis
Armstrong who had sent the Huddleston Band a trumpet after Huddleston
told the trumpet king about the band he helped start back in South
Africa before his deportation. With immense help from Makeba and
Belafonte, Masekela eventually began to record, gaining his first
breakthrough with “The Americanization of Ooga-Booga”
produced by the late Tom Wilson who had been producer of Bob Dylan
and Simon & Garfunkel’s debut successes. Stewart Levine,
his business partner in Chissa Records went on to produce hit records
for Masekela on Uni Records, beginning with the “Emancipation
of Hugh Masekela” followed by “Alive and Well at the
Whiskey” in 1967 and then “Promise ofA Future”
which contained the gigantic hit song “Grazing in the Grass”
in 1968.
By the beginning of the 1970’s he had attained
international fame, selling out all of America’s festivals,
auditoriums and top niteries. Heeding the call of his African roots,
he moved to Guinea, then Liberia and Ghana after recording the historical
“Home is where music is” with Dudu Pukwana. After a
pilgrimage to Zaire in 1973, Masekela met Fela Kuti in Nigeria who
introduced him and Stewart Levine, to “Hedzoleh Soundz”
a grassroots Ghanaian band. For the next five years they produced
a string of ground breaking records, which included international
favourites such as “The Marketplace”, “Ashiko”.
“The Boy’z doin it”, “Vasco Da Gama”,
“African Secret Society” and the evergreen “Stimela”.
After a tour and two duet albums with Herp Albert, Masekela and
Miriam played a Christmas Day concert in Lesotho in 1980 where 75
000 people came to see them after they had been away for 20 years
from the region. In 1981, Hugh moved to Botswana where he started
the Botswana international School of Music with Dr. Khabi Mngoma.
His record label Jive Records, helped him to set up a mobile studio
in Gaborone where Stewart produced “Techno Bush” from
which came the hit single “Don’t Go Lose it Baby”
in 1984. He unexpectedly had to leave with his band Kalahari for
England, Hugh Masekela after his childhood friend George Phahle,
his wife Lindi Phahle along with 14 people were murdered by South
African defence force death squads in the pretext of raiding “communist
terrorist camps”manned by South African Anti-apartheid activists.
While in England, Masekela conceived the Broadway musical “Sarafina”
with Mbongeni Ngema and recorded another runaway song “Bring
Back Nelson Mandela bring him back home to Soweto” with Kalahari
in 1986. After touring in “Graceland” with Paul Simon,
Black Mambazo and Miriam Makeba, Masekela returned home following
the unbanning of political parties and the release of Nelson Mandela
in 1990. In 1991, he launched his first tour of South Africa called
“Sekunjalo, This is it” with Sankomota and Bayete. It
was a four-month tour, selling out in the country’s major
cities. His recent albums “Black to the Future”, “Sixty”,
“Greatest Hits” and “Time” have all gone
platinum. 2004 saw the publishing of “Still grazing”
Masekela’s biography which was published by Random House in
New York.
Masekela uses his position to give a platform to
a fresh generation of South African talent, some of whom will be
performing with him on his tours. Masekela was heavily influenced
by African-American music since his infancy, having been raised
on the 78 RPM gramophone records of Louis Armstrong, Jelly Roll
Morton, Bessie Smith, Ma Rainey, Chick Webb, Ella Fitzgerald, Sy
Oliver, Lucky Millinder, Duke Ellington, Count Basie, Erskine Hawkins,
Coleman Hawkins, Cab Calloway, Fats Waller, Sarah Vaughan, Billy
Eckstine, Louis Jordan, The Ink Spots, The Mills Brothers, Billie
Holiday and Charlie Christian. In his teens, he fell in love with
Dizzy Gillepsie, George Shearing, Miles Davis, Clifford Brown, Coltrane,
Cannonball, Horace Silver, Art Blakey, Lee Morgan, Kenny Dorham,
Oscar Peterson, Bud Shank, Dave Brubeck, Paul Desmond, Stan Getz,
Jackie & Roy Kral, June Christy, Shorty Rogers, Gerry Mulligan,
Chet Baker, Bud Powell, and Mahalia Jackson. He went to Manhattan
School of Music with Dave Grusin, Herbie Hancock, Chick Correa,
David Izenzon, Donald Byrd, Eric Dolphy, Edie Gomez, Richard
Davis, Ron Carter and many other jazz greats.
Masekela played on some of Bob Marley’s very
first recordings and his music has very strong Brazilian, Nigerian,
Ghananian and Congolese influences. Hugh Masekela has just released
a new album called “Revival” produced by Zwai Bala and
Godfrey ‘Guffy’ Pilane, both of whom are considered
to be hip hop, kwaito musicians. However their collaboration with
Masekela destroys that myth and shows them to be extremely gifted
and well rounded musicians instead. Hugh Masekela has also just
recorded an album of old and popular standard ballads with a trio
led by his Manhattan School of music classmate Larry Willis from
43 years ago. Larry played piano in Masekela’s debut American
quartet which recorded the classic “The Americanization of
Ooga Booga” album in 1965. Along with bassist John Heard and
drummer Lorea Hart, they completed a 3 day live recording of the
love songs. This had been a dream of theirs for 4 decades. The album
is called “Almost like being in Jazz” and was released
in 2007. In the last years Hugh Masekela toured the USA, Europe,
Asia and his home country extensively. Numerous new recordings and
some remixes of his most successful cd’s were released.
In summer 2007, Masekela embarked on a tour of
the United States and Canada in support of the live recording, “Hugh
Masekela: Live at the Market Theatre”, touring with most of
the band mates that supported his highly regarded album, “Uptownship”.
Since October 2007 he is a Board Member of the Woyome Foundation
(THE WOYOME FOUNDATION FOR AFRICA (WOFA) is an International Charity
Foundation registered in Ghana with a strategic thrust of launching
a new offensive in the fight against HIV/AIDS.).
Edited by Robin Francis
© Michael Valentine Studio
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