Los Angeles Times

‘Father of South African jazz’

HUGH MASEKELA, 1939 - 2018 Through music, he spread awareness of a nation’s oppression.

- Associated press

Hugh Masekela, who spread awareness of a nation’s oppression through his music, dies at 78.

Legendary South African jazz musician and antiaparth­eid activist Hugh Masekela has died at 78 after a decadelong fight with cancer, according to a statement from his family on Tuesday.

Often called the “Father of South African jazz,” Masekela died Tuesday in Johannesbu­rg after what his family said was a “protracted and courageous battle with prostate cancer.”

Masekela was a rare artist who succeeded in fusing politics with his music, making his songs and performanc­es compelling and timeless.

Masekela was born in South Africa in 1939. The trumpeter, flugelhorn­ist, singer and composer, affectiona­tely known as “Bra Hugh,” started playing the horn at 14. He quickly became an integral part of the 1950s jazz scene in Johannesbu­rg as a member of the band the Jazz Epistles and a member of the orchestra in the groundbrea­king jazz opera “King Kong.”

In the 1960s, he went into exile in the United Kingdom and the United States, using his music to spread awareness about South Africa’s oppressive system of whiteminor­ity rule. He scored an internatio­nal No. 1 hit in 1968 with “Grazing in the Grass.”

Masekela spent time in New York and Los Angeles, performing at the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival with some of the era’s most iconic musicians, including Janis Joplin, Otis Redding and Jimi Hendrix. He collaborat­ed with musicians including Herb Alpert and was married to South African singer and activist Miriam Makeba for two years.

In the 1980s Masekela appeared with Paul Simon and other South African musicians as part of the “Graceland” album tour.

Many of his compositio­ns were about the struggle for majority rule and full democratic rights in South Africa. Masekela’s catchy upbeat 1987 song “Bring Him Back Home,” calling for Nelson Mandela’s release from prison, became an internatio­nal anthem for the anti-apartheid movement.

Masekela returned to South Africa in 1990 after Mandela was freed and the ban on the African National Congress party was lifted. He released more than 40 albums and toured in South Africa and internatio­nally until late in 2017.

Masekela’s son Sal, who is also a musician, wrote in a statement that it was “difficult to comprehend that this moment is real.” He recalled his father’s performanc­es in New York when he would “steal the hearts and souls of innocents with a musical storytelli­ng all his own.”

“My biggest obsession is to show Africans and the world who the people of Africa really are,” Hugh Masekela is quoted as saying on his official website.

In October, Masekela issued a statement saying he had been fighting prostate cancer since 2008 and would have to cancel his profession­al commitment­s to focus on his health. He said he started treatment after doctors found a “small ‘speck’ ” on his bladder, and had surgery in March 2016 after the cancer spread.

Masekela also said he felt an “imbalance” and had an eye problem after a fall in April in Morocco in which he hurt his shoulder. He said another tumor was then discovered, and he had surgery.

“I’m in a good space as I battle this stealthy disease, and I urge all men to have regular tests to check your own condition,” his statement said, asking the media for privacy.

Masekela supported many charities and was a director of the Lunchbox Fund, a nonprofit organizati­on to provide daily meals to students in Johannesbu­rg’s Soweto township.

Condolence­s from fans poured in on social media, paying tribute to the inf luential musician’s career.

“A baobob tree has fallen,” Nathi Mthethwa, South Africa’s minister for arts and culture, wrote on Twitter. “The nation has lost a one-of-a-kind musician. We can safely say Bra Hugh was one of the great architects of Afro-Jazz and he uplifted the soul of our nation through his timeless music.”

South African President Jacob Zuma expressed his condolence­s, saying Masekela “kept the torch of freedom alive globally, fighting apartheid through his music and mobilizing internatio­nal support . ... His contributi­on to the struggle for liberation will never be forgotten.”

Masekela inspired generation­s of musicians in jazz and beyond and collaborat­ed in recent years with South African house musician DJ Black Coffee, who tweeted Tuesday: “I have no words.”

Kenya President Uhuru Kenyatta paid tribute to Masekela in a series of tweets that showed a picture of the two walking together. Kenyatta wrote of Masekela: “His music then was the music of a free Africa: full of anger at injustice; confident that one day these injustices would be overcome.”

 ?? Leon Neal AFP/Getty Images ?? ‘ONE-OF-A-KIND MUSICIAN’ Hugh Masekela’s upbeat 1987 song “Bring Him Back Home” became an anthem for the anti-apartheid movement. Above, he performs in London in 2012.
Leon Neal AFP/Getty Images ‘ONE-OF-A-KIND MUSICIAN’ Hugh Masekela’s upbeat 1987 song “Bring Him Back Home” became an anthem for the anti-apartheid movement. Above, he performs in London in 2012.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States