By Thandisizwe Mgudlwa
Hugh Ramopolo Masekela is a South African trumpeter, flugelhornist, cornetist, composer, and singer.
He is the father of American television host Sal Masekela.
In 1968, Hugh Masekela was nominated for the Grammy Award’s Best Contemporary Pop Performance – Instrumental, Grazin’ in the Grass.
Popularly known as "Bra Hugh" Masekela was born in Kwa-Guqa Township, Witbank, South Africa on the 4th of April, 1939.
Legend has it that "Bra Hugh" began singing and playing piano as a child. At age 14, after seeing the film Young Man with a Horn (in which Kirk Douglas plays a character modeled after American jazz trumpeter Bix Beiderbecke), he took up playing the trumpet.
Masekela’s first trumpet was given to him by Archbishop Trevor Huddleston, the anti-Apartheid chaplain at St. Peter’s Secondary School.
Huddleston asked the leader of the then Johannesburg “Native” Municipal Brass Band, Uncle Sauda, to teach Masekela the rudiments of trumpet playing. Masekela quickly mastered the instrument.
Soon, some of his schoolmates also became interested in playing instruments, leading to the formation of the Huddleston Jazz Band, South Africa’s first youth orchestra.
By 1956, after leading other ensembles, Masekela joined Alfred Herbert’s African Jazz Revue.
Since 1954, Masekela has played music that closely reflects his life experience. The agony, conflict, and exploitation South Africa faced during the 1950s and 1960s: This inspired and influenced him to make music and also spread political change.
Historical records confirm that Masekela was an artist who in his music vividly portrayed the struggles and sorrows, as well as the joys and passions of his country.
His music protested about apartheid, slavery, government; the hardships individuals were living in. Masekela reached a large population of people that also felt oppressed due to the country’s situation.
Following a Manhattan Brothers tour of South Africa in 1958, Masekela wound up in the orchestra of the musical King Kong, written by Todd Matshikiza.
King Kong was South Africa’s first blockbuster theatrical success, touring the country for a sold-out year with Miriam Makeba and the Manhattan Brothers’ Nathan Mdledle in the lead. The musical later went to London’s West End for two years.
At the end of 1959, Dollar Brand (later known as Abdullah Ibrahim), Kippie Moeketsi, Makhaya Ntshoko, Johnny Gertze and Hugh formed the Jazz Epistles, the first African jazz group to record an LP and perform to record-breaking audiences in Johannesburg and Cape Town through late 1959 to early 1960.
Following the March 21, 1960, Sharpeville Massacre—where 69 peacefully protesting Blacks were shot dead in Sharpeville in Johannesburg, and the South African government banned gatherings of ten or more people—and the increased brutality of the Apartheid state, Masekela left the country.
He was helped by Trevor Huddleston and international friends such as Yehudi Menuhin and John Dankworth, who got him admitted into London’s Guildhall School of Music.
During that period, he visited the United States, where he was befriended by Harry Belafonte. He attended Manhattan School of Music in New York where he studied classical trumpet from 1960 to 1964. In 1964, Miriam Makeba and Hugh Masekela were married, divorcing two years later.
He had hits in the United States with the pop jazz tunes “Up, Up and Away” (1967) and the number one smash “Grazing in the Grass” (1968), which sold four million copies.
Masekela also appeared at the Monterey Pop Festival in 1967, and was subsequently featured in the film Monterey Pop by D. A. Pennebaker. In 1974, Masekela and friend Stewart Levine organised the Zaire 74 music festival in Kinshasa set around The Rumble in the Jungle boxing match.
He has played primarily in jazz ensembles, with guest appearances on recordings by The Byrds (“So You Want to Be a Rock ‘n’ Roll Star” and “Lady Friend”) and Paul Simon (“Further to Fly”).
In 1984, Masekela released the album Techno Bush; from that album, a single entitled “Don’t Go Lose It Baby” peaked at number two for two weeks on the dance charts.
And in 1987, he had a hit single with “Bring Him Back Home”, which became an anthem for the movement to free Nelson Mandela, a South African Freedom activist.
A renewed interest in his African roots led Masekela to collaborate with West and Central African musicians, and finally to reconnect with Southern African players when he set up with the help of Jive Records a mobile studio in Botswana, just over the South African border, from 1980 to 1984.
Here, he re-absorbed and re-used mbaqanga strains, a style he has continued to use since his return to South Africa in the early 1990s.
In the 1980s, he toured with Paul Simon in support of Simon’s album Graceland, which featured other South African artists such as Ladysmith Black Mambazo, Miriam Makeba, Ray Phiri, and other elements of the band Kalahari, which Masekela recorded with in the 1980s.
Masekela also collaborated in the musical development for the Broadway play, Sarafina! He previously recorded with the band Kalahari.
In 2003, he was featured in the documentary film Amandla!. In 2004, he released his autobiography, Still Grazing: The Musical Journey of Hugh Masekela, co-authored with journalist D. Michael Cheers,which thoughtfully detailed Masekela’s struggles against apartheid in his homeland, as well as his personal struggles against alcoholism from the late 1970s through to the 1990s.
In this period, he migrated, in his personal recording career, to mbaqanga (jazz/funk) and the blending of South African sounds to an adult contemporary sound, through two albums he recorded with Herb Alpert, and solo recordings, Techno-Bush (recorded in his studio in Botswana), Tomorrow (featuring the anthem “Bring Him Back Home”), Uptownship (a lush-sounding ode to American R&B), Beatin’ Aroun de Bush, Sixty, Time, and his most recent studio recording, “Revival”.
His song, “Soweto Blues”, sung by his former wife, Miriam Makeba, is a blues/jazz piece that mourns the carnage of the Soweto Uprisings in 1976.
He has also provided interpretations of songs composed by Jorge Ben, Antonio Carlos Jobim, Caiphus Semenya, Jonas Gwangwa, Dorothy Masuka, and Fela Kuti.
Furthermore, in 2009, Masekela released “Phola” (meaning “to get well, to heal”), his second recording for 4 Quarters Entertainment/Times Square Records. It includes some songs he wrote in the 1980s but never completed, as well as a reinterpretation of “The Joke of Life (Brinca de Vivre)”, which he recorded in the mid-1980s.
Since October 2007, he has been a Board Member of The Woyome Foundation for Africa.
In 2010, Hugh Masekela was featured, with his son Salema, in a series of videos on ESPN.
The series, called Umlando – Through My Father’s Eyes, was aired in 10 parts during ESPN’s coverage of the FIFA World Cup in South Africa.
The series focused on Hugh and Sal’s travels through South Africa.
Hugh Masekela brought his son to the places he grew up. It was Sal’s first trip to his father’s homeland.
Masekela is involved in several social initiatives, and serves for instance as a Director on the board of The Lunchbox Fund, a non-profit organization that provides a daily meal to students of township schools in the biggest Black community of South Africa, Soweto (South Western Townships).
Some of his honours include the Order of Ikhamanga: 2010 South African National Orders Ceremony, 27 April 2010 by the Government of South Africa; Ghana Music Awards: 2007 African Music Legend award; 2005 Channel O Music Video Awards: Lifetime Achievement Award; 2002 BBC Radio Jazz Awards: International Award of the Year; and nominated for Broadway’s 1988 Tony Award as Best Score (Musical), with music and lyrics collaborator Mbongeni Ngema, for “Sarafina!
Photo Credit: Tom Beetz, 23 May 2009, http://www.flickr.com/photos/9967007@N07/6580953101/in/photostream/
SOURCE: Africa Business Magazine
For more information on Bra Hugh you can visit: http://www.hughmasekela.co.za/
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