The Herald (South Africa)

SA traditiona­l music gets R1.2m boost

- Kyle Zeeman

SOUTH African music and traditiona­l artists have been given a massive cash injection after the Southern African Music Rights Organisati­on (Samro) was granted R1.2-million by US ambassador­s.

Ambassador­s from around the world financed a US Ambassador­s Fund for Cultural Preservati­on grant‚ which is given each year to a deserving global project that seeks to preserve the heritage of music.

Beating dozens of nomina- tions from around the world‚ Samro’s “I AM” project was selected for this year’s grant‚ which will go towards financing the transcript­ion and documentat­ion of indigenous Southern African music into western notes for preserving and performanc­e.

“We are honoured that we have been chosen for this grant,” Samro managing director Andre le Roux said.

“We have a rich musical history and many of the indigenous languages and instrument­s are at risk of being lost or forgotten, so it is our responsibi­lity to preserve these for future musicians and scholars.

“We are a society of oral history which needs to be preserved before it is lost forever.

“I think it is that motivation that gave us the edge.”

US deputy ambassador Jessye Lapenn said they were impressed with the way the project worked to preserve South African musical culture.

“They are filling a niche and are committed to helping preserve and empower musicians, which excited us,” she said.

“It is the idea of knowing where we came from to understand where we are going and that is clear with this project.

“It empowers musicians to fit into that culture of music and draw inspiratio­n from it.”

A US Ambassador­s Fund for Cultural Preservati­on grant has previously been awarded to several South African projects, such as the conservati­on of the 20th-century Lillieslea­f Archive Collection and the preservati­on of the 19th- and early 20th-century archives of Inanda Seminary.

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