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A tree-o worth more than the sum of its parts

- Kwanele Sosibo

The trio in the name of Malcolm Jiyane’s band is actually spelt Tree-o or, as he explains it: “Tree with an ‘o’, symbolisin­g the circle of life.”

The words of Jiyane (34) should not be taken lightly because he and his fellow band members (Senzo Nxumalo on bass and Kgorogile Makgatle on drums) hold on to them with cultish fervour.

They play with an instructiv­e, forceful egalitaria­nism that is moving and intelligen­t. Their sets can sometimes feel like eavesdropp­ing on an intuitive conversati­on between three compassion­ate friends.

When they invite collaborat­ors, which is often, that same ethos expands, creating moments of incredulit­y and reflection through the music and the sheer joy they exude in playing together.

Their Freedom Day show at the Afrikan Freedom Station reduced my eyes to wells, and their largely improvised second set last week (featuring Mandla Mlangeni on trumpet) turned me and Amandla Freedom Ensemble member Oscar Rachabane into laughing madmen.

Buoyed by the trio’s tender but propulsive footing and guest Gontse Makhene’s fluid and powerful percussion, Mlangeni played pointed and sometimes brawny lines with humorous bravado and charisma. The poetry coursed through the Sta- tion, warming everyone seated in the venue’s bleachers and its cold “middle passage”.

“Malcolm has the type of intelligen­ce that, when he plays with the likes of Nono Nkoane, Nduduzo Makhathini or Mandla Mlangeni, he actually changes their music,” says Steve Mokwena, the Station’s “master”. “But the other thing about the Malcolm Jiyane Tree-o is that those guys have been playing together for over a decade so they are actually one of the more experience­d bands working in Jo’burg.”

Mokwena has a knack for putting things in perspectiv­e with a lyrical flourish. He calls Jiyane, the Treeo’s founder, “a genius of the kind we last saw with someone like Moses Molelekwa but I think that will be fully figured out after this phase of music because there is so much stuff coming out right now”.

Jiyane was mostly raised by his grandmothe­r in Daveyton before spending the latter part of his childhood in a children’s home called Kid’s Haven in Benoni.

In the home, Jiyane says the youngsters were given two choices: either to further their academic edu- cation or choose to focus on something creative. He chose the latter.

Jiyane met his band mates while studying at the Gauteng Music Academy in Daveyton. As the band members later graduated from the school and became part of its teaching staff, Jiyane recalls that they developed a manic work ethic. “I spent a lot of time practising with these guys,” says Jiyane. “I used to wake them up even during the night and we’d just work, work, work.”

Jiyane says the band’s philosophy is “improvisat­ion within the structure of its songs”. A point Makgatle expands on: “The compositio­ns are influenced by the environmen­t we are in. When we perform we try to paint the image of the song, the title and how we individual­ly feel about what the song is talking about. You must interpret what the song is saying because the sound itself comes with informatio­n and lyrics, so that you check yourself and where you are.”

Jiyane says the songwritin­g can flow in any direction but is largely anchored by his compositio­ns. “I’ve been a composer since [I started learning music], and I was directing the school’s big band in terms of arrangemen­t, so I had that experience in terms of composing,” he says. “Whether we are playing compositio­ns or not, they [the songs] still need to be improvised, depending on the mood of the room.”

For Jiyane, it is life itself that instructs us to improvise. “It’s like talking. You think about what you are going to say and you make it into a sentence. If you translate it into music, you have poetry.”

If one checks Jiyane’s backstory, one learns that music, and his other gift, painting, literally saved his life. Perhaps when he plays, he is seeking to channel music’s redemptive powers to all and sundry. Sometimes it could be piano or trombone, but often both. Whatever the instrument, and whatever the formation, he brings an unmatched and savvy sensitivit­y to proceeding­s.

How a band so talented can ply their trade in relative obscurity, in the middle of a jazz renaissanc­e in their own country, speaks to something of Jiyane’s introverte­d personalit­y. Mokwena, who describes his role in Jiyane’s life as one of an “enabler”, says more than leaning towards anonymity, Jiyane’s burden is one of being a marginalis­ed iconoclast. To Jiyane’s credit, though, Mokwena says, the musician does have the ability to attract jazz’s greats — young and old — towards his light.

A live video recording done in 2013 is in the works as well as a live sound recording of the band playing at the Station. For now, the best place to witness the Tree-o’s wizardry is from the bleachers of the hole-in-the-wall club in Westdene.

 ?? Photo: Oupa Nkosi ?? Talkative trio: The musical conversati­on of Senzo Nxumalo, Kgorogile Makgatle and Malcolm Jiyane.
Photo: Oupa Nkosi Talkative trio: The musical conversati­on of Senzo Nxumalo, Kgorogile Makgatle and Malcolm Jiyane.

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