NORTON META TAG

23 January 2018

Legendary musician Hugh Masekela has died & Hugh Masekela, South African jazz trumpeter, dies 23JAN18

Image result for grazing in the grass hugh masekela pictures
HUGH MASEKELA, South African, musician, anti-apartheid activist. He was also a son, husband and father. I have the 45 of 'Grazing In The Grass' and remember him using his music and fame in the struggle to free South Africa from apartheid. I am glad he experienced a free South Africa. Godspeed Mr Masekela, and thank you!
NKOSI SIKELEL IAFRIKA



Hugh Masekela - Grazing In The Grass


Legendary musician Hugh Masekela has died


Hugh Masekela
File picture: Cathy Pinnock
Legendary musician Bra Hugh Masekela has died.
Bra Hugh’s family sent a statement confirming the news to the media.
“After a protracted and courageous battle with prostate cancer, he passed peacefully in Johannesburg, South Africa surrounded by his family,” read the statement.
The musician’s team released a statement in October saying he had been battling prostate cancer since 2008.
The statement explained that the jazz veteran underwent eye surgery in March 2016 after the cancer spread, and had to go into theatre again in September 2016 as another tumour was discovered.
In December, Georgiou told TshisaLIVE that he was fighting the disease with everything he had.
Bra Hugh was born in KwaGuqa township in Witbank and began singing and playing the piano as a child.
After seeing the film Young Man with a Horn when he was 14, Masekela began playing the trumpet.
His first trumpet was given to him by Archbishop Trevor Huddleston, an anti-apartheid chaplain at St Peter’s Secondary School.
He soon mastered the instrument and by 1956 joined Alfred Herbet’s African Jazz Revue.
Bra Hugh’s music was inspired by the turmoil that South Africa went through during  apartheid and he said it was used as a weapon to spread political change.
Masekela’s son, Sal Masekela, said it was with a heavy heart that he confirmed his father had “hung up his horn after a long battle with prostate cancer”.
“It is difficult to comprehend that this moment is real. To me, my father has always been both ageless and immortal. Of the countless shows I had the honor of watching my dad perform, each felt like the first, each felt brand new,” he wrote on Facebook.
“To know Hugh Masekela was to know no matter class, creed, color, religion or any other made up distinctions, he stood with empathy and compassion, locked arm in arm with the distressed, displaced and downtrodden everywhere and anywhere on this planet. He carried a deep seeded belief in justice, freedom and equality for all peoples to the very end.”


Fans from across the globe have filled social media with heartfelt condolences to Bra Hugh’s family and have remembered his massive contribution to the country’s political struggle through music:







A baobab tree has fallen, the nation has lost a one of a kind musician with the passing of Jazz legend bra Hugh Masekela. 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.




Oh Papa Hugh 💔 A legend has fallen, may his soul rest in eternal peace. What a man!!!! Thank you for the music

https://www.instagram.com/p/BeSMHC2BdAw/?utm–source=ig–embed& utm–campaign=embed–ufi
– TshisaLIVE



Hugh Masekela, South African jazz trumpeter, dies


Hugh Masekela
Image captionMasekela was given his first trumpet at the age of 14

Legendary jazz trumpeter Hugh Masekela, a leading figure in the struggle to end apartheid and "the father of South African jazz", has died aged 78.
In a statement, his family said he had "passed peacefully" in Johannesburg "after a protracted and courageous battle with prostate cancer".
Masekela gained global recognition with his distinctive Afro-Jazz sound and hits such as Soweto Blues.
The 1977 song became synonymous with the anti-apartheid movement.
In a statement, South African President Jacob Zuma said Masekela's death was "an immeasurable loss to the music industry and to the country at large".
Zuma continued: "His contribution to the struggle for liberation will never be forgotten."


Media captionHugh Masekela on music and his relationship with South Africa

Born in the South African town of Witbank in 1939, Masekela was inspired to learn the trumpet after seeing Kirk Douglas play Bix Beiderbecke in the 1950 film Young Man with a Horn.
He persuaded one of his teachers - the anti-apartheid crusader Father Trevor Huddleston - to buy him an instrument, promising to stay out of trouble in return.

Hugh Masekela with Femi KutiImage copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image captionHe helped open the 2010 World Cup in South Africa with fellow musician Femi Kuti

In 1960, aged 21, he left South Africa to begin what would be 30 years in exile from the land of his birth.
Under the tutelage of Dizzy Gillespie and Louis Armstrong, he was encouraged to develop his own unique style.
In 1967, he performed at the Monterey Pop Festival alongside Janis Joplin, Otis Redding, Ravi Shankar, The Who and Jimi Hendrix.
The following year, his instrumental single Grazing in the Grass topped the charts in the US and became a worldwide hit.
Masekela returned to South Africa in 1990 following the release of Nelson Mandela, whose freedom he had called for in his 1986 anthem Bring Home Nelson Mandela.
In June 2010, he performed at both the opening concert of the Fifa World Cup and the tournament's opening ceremony in Soweto's Soccer City.

Hugh Masekela with Paul Simon in 2014Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image captionMasekela's many friends included Paul Simon, seen here performing with him in 2014

In their statement, Masekela's family described him as "a loving father, brother, grandfather and friend" who would be "forever in our hearts".
"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," it continued.
"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."
Details of memorial and burial services, the family said, would be released "in due course".
South African musician Loyiso Bala was among many to mark his death on Twitter.

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Analysis by Pumza Fihlani, BBC News, Johannesburg

The passing of Hugh Masekela is the end of an era and has saddened many across the country. Described as a legend, he was celebrated for his contribution to music, theatre and social and political activism.
The jazz musician whose Soweto Blues served as one of the soundtracks to the anti-apartheid movement was never one to shy away from challenging the status quo.
In a career spanning six decades, he gained international recognition with his distinctive sound, a constant reminder of his love for South Africa - a country whose political turmoil once forced him into exile.
Diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2008, the world-acclaimed musician - affectionately known as Bra Hugh - spent the last months of his life encouraging men to go for regular cancer check-ups.

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