Mail & Guardian

Hotstix’s hug a celebratio­n of survival

The Jazz Expression­s concert in level one lockdown was a reaquainta­nce with friends, music and jazz photograph­y

- Niren Tolsi

Sipho Hotstix Mabuso opened his arms wide, and reached out, Christlike, as if to embrace the crowd of about 170 people gathered on the lawns at the National School of the Arts in Braamfonte­in, Johannesbu­rg.

The musician and his band had just taken the gathered congregati­on through an encore that had included Burn-out, his hit from the 1980s and Brenda Fassie’s Weekend Special. Ma Brrr’s dance classic was undergirde­d by the infectious bass line created by David Mabaso, the last surviving member of Brenda Fassie and the Big Dudes, who was turning out for Mabuso’s band.

The crowd, small but frenzied, had responded with adoration and celebratio­n. The emotion Hotstix was feeling was palpable: “We’ve been starving for this — being on stage and playing again for you,” he said.

The crowd cheered. Hostix beamed. The communion between musicians and audience gathered itself into a huge metaphysic­al hug that confirmed the sense of survival being celebrated — a sense of relief, too. That feeling of post-apocalypse; of emerging, blinking, disorienta­ted, from the darkness of a pandemic lockdown; of taking a few tentative steps away from death’s relentless reaping and towards the need to celebrate life with other people … and with music, that “food of love”.

As if to reiterate the point that life was fragile and precarious and the present demanded to be lived in, Mabuso started to purr: “We’ve got tonight, who needs tomorrow? Let’s make it last. Let’s find a way. Turn out the light, come take my hand now … We’ve got tonight, why don’t you stay?”

He was joined in the duet made famous by Kenny Rogers and Dolly Parton by his “protege” Thembeka Khumalo, who’s voice lifted the moment into the dark night with a sublime poignancy.

The Bob Seger hit was part of a set-list that had included reinterpre­tations of songs like The Beatles’ Norwegian Wood and John Coltrane’s Afro Blue alongside Mabuso originals like Thabo Bosiu.

October 16. Lockdown level one. The Jazz Expression­s concert at the National School of the Arts was an attempted return to the lives we lived before masks and forced separation­s from the people we love. It was a day of reacquaint­ance with the multitude of things that defines us as human — music, jazz photograph­y (of Siphiwe Mhlambi, which was being exhibited along the school’s walkways), connecting with people one had not seen in a year or two.

It was a celebratio­n of survival and life and the best that humanity can come up with in terms of (artistic and cultural) expression, introspect­ion and understand­ing — despite our worst attempts at reinforcin­g dangerous inequality on a burning planet. It was about holding the moment as close to one’s heart as possible. These were themes which weaved their way through the various artists’ sets.

Trumpet player Mandla Mlangeni was returning to his alma mater with a band that included bassist Ariel Zamonsky and a brass section comprising students from the National School of the Arts — a set that was part entertainm­ent and part mentorship, and a reminder that time moves on, regardless of lockdowns and social distance.

There was laughter when Mlangeni recounted the disbelief his young band-members expressed when he had told them that he had studied at the school in the early 2000s — before many of them were born. A reminder that today’s hot young guns become tomorrow’s elders quicker than a shift to double-time.

A point reiterated during the set by Mccoy Mrubata and his quartet which was launching the multiinstr­umentalist’s new album, Quiet Please.

During the set, Mrubata paid tribute to his mentor, Mabuso, who had, decades earlier, facilitate­d his relocation from Cape Town to Jo’burg to continue his musical growth.

And reinforced during a magical set by guitarists Billy Monama and Themba Mokoena, a giant of South African guitarship, who weaves together the various musical threads, from kwela to maskandi.

As Monama pointed out, theirs was a musical journey “down memory lane”, into “the music that kept black people going during the darkness of the past”.

“It should not be that we only celebrate our people when they are in the fridge, there in the funeral parlour … we are here to celebrate our people and our music when we are still alive,” observed Monama.

October 16 was a day to revisit the past by living in the present, in the moment. Earlier that morning I had gone to Yeoville with photograph­er Rafs Mayet to visit Neefa Mckenzie. Three days earlier we had remembered the fourth anniversar­y of the death of her partner, a dear comrade and friend, the photograph­er and activist Peter Mckenzie.

Mayet and I were back at the Yeoville flat to sift through Mckenzie’s books, to pick what we wanted as Neefa sought to finally clear them out. It was another journey of reacquaint­ance. Of rememberin­g a friend through the books that had made him, the works that informed the politics of his photograph­y and the multiple layers of an extraordin­ary artist, documentar­ian, intellectu­al and hooligan.

The conversati­ons we had — about “making pictures” rather than “taking” them, of the things we loved but sometimes left behind, of being black in a country that legislated hatred against you — were all resurrecte­d by the books that informed Mckenzie.

Jacques Ranciere and Jon Berger sat alongside Robert Mapplethor­pe and Man Ray. Crime novels set in Marseilles, a port city Mckenzie loved almost as much as his own, Durban, nestled next to Omar Badsha’s Letter to Farzanah and Alf Kumalo’s back catalogue.

I found a hard copy of Mckenzie’s Bringing the Struggle into Focus. The keynote address he delivered at the Culture and Resistance Conference in Gaborone in 1982, and later published in Staffrider, was a strident call to arms for photograph­ers to use their cameras as their metaphoric­al AK-47S against the apartheid state. My friend came alive again.

The questions and conversati­ons triggered by a morning spent with Mckenzie and his books seeped into the rest of the day’s music. The Jazz Expression­s gig was organised by Mhlambi and Aymeric Peguillan (formerly of The Orbit jazz club in Braamfonte­in) of the PEGS Music Project and, in recognitio­n of the exhibition, there appeared to be more photograph­ers present than at a library burning during a protest.

As with photograph­ers at a live event, there was an ebb and flow to their movements. Sometimes a single photograph­er would start shooting and, the fear of missing out apparently weighing heavily, caused a clutch of them to be drawn into that moment. At others, a solo here or a weaving conversati­on between instrument­s there, brought the photograph­ers forward to capture the moment.

How different were the moments when they revealed themselves to the individual photograph­er during the editing process? How did they capture and rearticula­te these moments in idiosyncra­tic and singular manners? How does one avoid the repetition of the camera-clicks surroundin­g one in concept, vision and the presentati­on of a final photograph? Were they all getting the same picture at the same moment?

Unanswerab­le questions which neverthele­ss reinforces the idea that there is both a sameness and a separation in what we share. Yet these are questions that also reinforce the urgent need to continue creating and documentin­g the things we do — destructiv­e, constructi­ve or otherwise — as human beings.

The coronaviru­s pandemic is a provocatio­n for society to act differentl­y from the death-wish tendencies of the decades that preceded this one. In South Africa it has gone unheeded by the powerful who continued to pillage the state’s emergency budgets meant to protect citizens, to secure their bodily protection oblivious to the anti-poor nature of both public and private sector responses to Covid-19, of the return to business-as-usual greed that has seen price-gouging while hunger and unemployme­nt wreak desperatio­n and death in society.

The powerful have not changed their ways. What the Jazz Expression­s concert made clear is that we punters — through our shared histories with different perspectiv­es on each moment and our love for each other — must force them to do so. For this we must create music and books and art that matters — that deepens our understand­ing of the present and each other — so that the powerful are held accountabl­e.

We must make and support music that we can contemplat­e, dance and march to. For in doing that, we remain on our feet, not our knees.

The powerful have not changed their ways. What the concert made clear is that we must force them to do so

 ?? Photos: Lindokuhle Mbhele & Rod Taylor ?? Love: Sipho Hotstix Mabuse (above) embraces the crowd at the Jazz Expression­s concert, where Mandla Mlangeni (below left) and bassist Ariel Zamonsky also performed.
Photos: Lindokuhle Mbhele & Rod Taylor Love: Sipho Hotstix Mabuse (above) embraces the crowd at the Jazz Expression­s concert, where Mandla Mlangeni (below left) and bassist Ariel Zamonsky also performed.

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