Times of Eswatini

Mambazo shrugs off power cut, sing for Mandela

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JOHANNESBU­RG - Ladysmith Black Mambazo sang their warm-hearted choral harmonies in honour of peace icon Nelson Mandela on Sunday, with a 45-minute forced intermissi­on caused by one of the power cuts that have become a part of daily life in South Africa.

The concert in Johannesbu­rg’s main theatre, a day before UN-declared Mandela Day, his birthday, celebrated the life of the man who steered South Africa from the manacles of apartheid to multi-racial democracy while narrowly avoiding a civil war.

“Madiba has been an inspiratio­n for us,” Sibongisen­i Shabalala, band member and son of the band’s late founder Joseph Shabalala, said, using Mandela’s clan name.

“He was in prison for people to get freedom, even when they said, ‘ok, we’re gonna release you if you (give up)’ … he said ‘no, my freedom is the freedom of my people’,” Shabalala told Reuters before the concert.

Formed in the 1960s, the lilting choir jazzed up traditiona­l Zulu music with a ragtime feel and exported it to the world – most famously through a collaborat­ion with Paul Simon on his 1986 album ‘Graceland’.

It also cut songs with Dolly Parton, George Clinton, Michael Jackson and other big names.

“My father taught us that a good song is one everyone can listen to. A song that will unite people,” Sibongisen­i Shabalala said, reminiscin­g about founding member, Joseph, who died from illness in early 2020.

The band’s name derives from the small farming town its members are from, the black oxen which were most prized among pastoral Zulus, and ‘mambazo’ – the Zulu word for ‘axe’.

It was not closely associated with Mandela during the struggle against white minority rule, and was tolerated by the authoritie­s as apolitical – something they misunderst­ood, according to longstandi­ng singer Albert Mazibuko.

“We were on the same page (as Mandela),” he said. When they performed at his birthday in 1993, Mandela told them that their music had kept him going while in prison.

 ?? ?? A team from the United States is going to compete against Korea in a Tae Kwon Do tournament. The team consists of fighters from all over the country - can they overcome their rivalry and work together to win? Starring: Eric Roberts, James Earl Jones, Sally Kirkland, Phillip Rhee and Chris Penn.
– Catch this film on SABC 1 at 10:30 tonight.
A team from the United States is going to compete against Korea in a Tae Kwon Do tournament. The team consists of fighters from all over the country - can they overcome their rivalry and work together to win? Starring: Eric Roberts, James Earl Jones, Sally Kirkland, Phillip Rhee and Chris Penn. – Catch this film on SABC 1 at 10:30 tonight.

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