Legendary South African musician Hugh Masekela died on Tuesday
after a long battle with cancer, the South African government announced on its
official Twitter page. He was 78.
Known as the
father of South African jazz, the trumpet master channeled the struggle against
apartheid into soulful compositions that championed the experiences of ordinary
South Africans.
Masekela's 1986
"Bring Him Back Home" song, written for Nelson Mandela, became an
anthem of the 1980s anti-apartheid movement. The Grammy-nominated artist toured
with Paul Simon and was a major player on the jazz and world music scene for
decades.
"A loving
father, brother, grandfather and friend, our hearts beat with profound
loss," the family said in a statement released by his agents Dreamcatcher.
"Hugh's
global and activist contribution to and participation in the areas of music,
theatre, and the arts in general is contained in the minds and memory of
millions across six continents and we are blessed and grateful to be part of a
life and ever-expanding legacy of love, sharing and vanguard creativity that
spans the time and space of six decades. Rest in power beloved, you are forever
in our hearts," the statement said.
Also known
affectionately in South Africa as Bra Hugh, Masekela was born in the town of
Witbank in 1939. At the age of 14, he was given his first trumpet by the
respected anti-apartheid campaigner Father Trevor Huddleston.
In 1960, at the
age of 21, Masekela left South Africa to begin what would be 30 years in exile
from the land of his birth. On arrival in New York he enrolled at the Manhattan
School of Music.
He immersed
himself in the New York jazz scene, watching jazz greats such as Miles Davis
and John Coltrane.
According to
his official biography, fellow jazz trumpeters Dizzy Gillespie and Louis
Armstrong encouraged Masekela to develop his own unique style, feeding off
African rather than American influences. Masekela's debut album, released in
1963, was entitled Trumpet Africaine.
In the late
1960s, in the heat of the "Summer of Love," Masekela moved to Los
Angeles, where he fell in with hippie icons like David Crosby, Peter Fonda and
Dennis Hopper.
During this
period he performed alongside Janis Joplin, Otis Redding, Ravi Shankar, The Who
and Jimi Hendrix. In 1968, his instrumental single 'Grazin' in the Grass' went
to Number One on the American pop charts and was a worldwide smash, elevating
Hugh onto the international stage.
His subsequent
solo career spanned 5 decades, during which time he released over 40 albums and
worked with a range of artists including Nigeria's Fela Kuti, Marvin Gaye,
Stevie Wonder and his former wife, the late Miriam Makeba.
In 1990
Masekela returned home, following the unbanning of the ANC and the release of
Mandela.
Masekela's team
released a statement in October saying he had been battling cancer since 2008
that spread to other parts of his body, according to the South African
newspaper the Sowetan. - CNN
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