Trumpeter and singer Hugh Masekela,
known as the “father of South African jazz” who used his music in the fight
against apartheid, has died from prostate cancer, his family said on Tuesday.
He was 78.
In a career spanning more than five
decades, Masekela gained international recognition with his distinctive
Afro-Jazz sound and hits such as “Soweto Blues”, which served as one of the
soundtracks to the anti-apartheid movement.
Following the end of white-minority
rule, he opened the 2010 FIFA Soccer World Cup Kick-Off Concert and performed
at the event’s opening ceremony in Johannesburg’s Soccer City stadium.
“Hugh’s global and activist contribution
to and participation in the areas of music, theater, and the arts in general is
contained in the minds and memory of millions,” a statement on behalf of the
Masekela family said.
“Rest in power beloved, you are forever
in our hearts.”
His song “Bring Him Back Home (Nelson
Mandela)”, written while Masekela was in living in exile, called for the
release of the-then imprisoned Mandela and was banned by the apartheid regime.
South African President Jacob Zuma said
the nation would mourn a man who “kept the torch of freedom alive”.
“It is an immeasurable loss to the music
industry and to the country at large. His contribution to the struggle for
liberation will never be forgotten,” Zuma said in a statement.
Arts and Culture Minister Nathi Mthethwa
tweeted: “A baobab tree has fallen; the nation has lost a one of a kind.”
After honing his craft as a teenager,
Masekela left South Africa aged 21 to begin three decades in exile.
His global appeal hit new heights in
1968 when his instrumental single “Grazin’ in the Grass” went to number one in
the U.S. charts.
As well as close friendships with jazz
legends like Miles Davis, John Coltrane and Charlie Mingus, Masekela also
performed alongside stars Janis Joplin, Otis Redding and Jimi Hendrix in the
1960s.
He was married to singer and activist
Miriam Makeba, known as “Mama Africa”, from 1964 to 1966. (NAN/Reuters)

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