Learn How To Make Money From Home Using Your Smartphone In 2025
By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
AfricaNews360AfricaNews360
  • Politics
    PoliticsShow More
    Ghanaian Court annuls 2024 Parliamentary Election over irregularities
    November 24, 2025
    The future is African – Ghana President declares at UN Assembly
    September 26, 2025
    Burkina Faso to ‘street honour’ late Ghanaian President Jerry John Rawlings
    May 19, 2025
    Burkina Faso honours late president Thomas Sankara with memorial park
    May 19, 2025
    Nigeria Presidency refutes Catholic leaders’ criticism of economic hardship
    March 11, 2025
  • Business
    BusinessShow More
    President Donald Trump, left, and Chinese President Xi Jinping, right, pose for photo before their US-China summit at Gimhae international airport in Busan, South Korea, on October 30, 2025 [Mark Schiefelbein/AP Photo]
    Trump says China’s Xi Jinping agreed to accelerate purchases of US goods
    November 26, 2025
    Ghana, Dalian deepen bilateral ties to boost education, culture and trade
    November 13, 2025
    Ghana secures additional $28m grant from China for infrastructure projects
    October 17, 2025
    Ghana’s President Mahama seeks investment partnerships during Singapore visit
    August 25, 2025
    Ghana’s Tourism Minister commends Emirates at grand opening of Travel Store
    May 15, 2025
  • Showbiz
    ShowbizShow More
    Davido releases ’10 Kilo’ Music Video
    August 13, 2025
    Nigerian Star Davido’s Foundation supports 500 orphanages in annual Charity drive
    February 13, 2025
    Nigerian president Tinubu celebrates Nollywood icon Nkem Owoh ‘Osuofia’ at 70
    February 8, 2025
    Burkina Faso’s Bissa music sensation Eunice Goula drops new Banger ‘Mariage’
    September 25, 2024
    Kenya’s president hosts national music festival
    August 16, 2024
  • Sports
    SportsShow More
    African Paralympic Committee President Samson Deen urges leaders to make Para Sports a continental priority
    November 28, 2025
    CAF appoints Match Officials for TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations Morocco 2025
    November 27, 2025
    Ghana’s Gov’t unveils 11-member team to drive Black Stars’ 2026 World Cup campaign
    November 26, 2025
    “Football is everything for me”- Ex- Juventus star Kwadwo Asamoah says
    November 26, 2025
    Morocco’s Ghizlane Chebbak voted 2025 African Female Footballer of the year
    November 19, 2025
  • Biographies
    BiographiesShow More
    Michael Gallup Bio, Age, Net Worth, Height, Parents, Siblings, Wife, Children
    July 25, 2024
  • Columns
    ColumnsShow More
    Ghana Government does not subsidize Hajj Pilgrims: Debunking the myth with facts
    March 7, 2025
    Full Speech: South African president’s address at first G20 Foreign Ministers’ meeting 2025
    February 22, 2025
    Ing. Abdullah Mohammed Billey: The Ghanaian road expert victimised for political reasons by the ousted Government
    February 3, 2025
    Ghana President Mahama’s speech at Africa Prosperity Dialogues 2025
    February 2, 2025
    An American opinion on the impending NDC Government structure
    December 17, 2024
  • Travel
    TravelShow More
    Ghana’s Tourism Minister commends Emirates at grand opening of Travel Store
    May 15, 2025
    Thousands of Ethiopian diaspora heed PM’s call to ‘come home’
    May 2, 2024
    Malawi and Ghana sign visa waiver agreement to enhance bilateral ties
    March 21, 2024
    Ghana signs visa waiver agreement with Bahamas
    February 22, 2024
    Malawi scrapes visa restrictions for 79 countries
    February 9, 2024
  • Editorial
    EditorialShow More
    FEATURE: Kigali City- A glittering jewel of Africa
    September 2, 2023
    All eyes on INEC as Nigeria decides
    February 26, 2023
    Feed Africa Summit: Continent Plans to Achieve Zero Hunger by 2030
    January 25, 2023
    Africa must speak with one voice at COP27
    November 8, 2022
    Nigerian headteacher sentenced to death after pupil’s murder
    July 28, 2022
  • World
    WorldShow More
    President Donald Trump, left, and Chinese President Xi Jinping, right, pose for photo before their US-China summit at Gimhae international airport in Busan, South Korea, on October 30, 2025 [Mark Schiefelbein/AP Photo]
    Trump says China’s Xi Jinping agreed to accelerate purchases of US goods
    November 26, 2025
    Robert Prevost
    American prelate Robert Prevost elected New Pope
    May 9, 2025
    Rwanda cuts diplomatic ties with Belgium amid Congo conflict tensions
    March 17, 2025
    ICC issues arrest warrants for Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu, Ibrahim Al-Masri
    November 21, 2024
    Voting underway in US as Donald Trump faces Kamala Harris for presidency
    November 5, 2024
Reading: South Africa’s hidden jazz history is being restored album by album
Share
Notification Show More
Latest News
Ghana’s Petroleum Authority visits Chief Imam in 20th Anniversary outreach
November 30, 2025
African Paralympic Committee President Samson Deen urges leaders to make Para Sports a continental priority
November 28, 2025
CAF appoints Match Officials for TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations Morocco 2025
November 27, 2025
Ghana’s Gov’t unveils 11-member team to drive Black Stars’ 2026 World Cup campaign
November 26, 2025
“Football is everything for me”- Ex- Juventus star Kwadwo Asamoah says
November 26, 2025
Aa
AfricaNews360AfricaNews360
Aa
  • Technology
  • Science
  • Education
  • Health
Search
  • Topics
    • Business
    • Columns
    • Gossip
    • News
    • Politics
    • Showbiz
    • Fashion
    • Climate
    • World
    • Videos
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
AfricaNews360 > Showbiz > Music > South Africa’s hidden jazz history is being restored album by album
ColumnsMusic

South Africa’s hidden jazz history is being restored album by album

Posted Africanews360 April 27, 2023 7 Min Read
Updated 2023/04/27 at 4:45 PM
The late Sathima Bea Benjamin, jazz singer and composer, has a track on As-Shams Archive Volume 1. Jack Vartoogian/Getty Images
SHARE

It’s fitting that Johannesburg is among 12 cities featured in the 2023 Unesco International Jazz Day, themed “jazz journey around the world”. The day, established in 2011 to celebrate the role of jazz in “uniting peoples across the globe”, is now marked annually on 30 April in close to 200 nations. It would have been hosted by Cape Town in 2020 had COVID-19 not intervened.

Even so, many jazz lovers elsewhere may be aware of the long history and uniqueness of South Africa’s jazz legacy through only a few names – Miriam Makeba, Abdullah Ibrahim, Hugh Masekela – who were driven out by apartheid to find world stages. Uncovering, documenting and showcasing more of the creativity that fought to flower inside the country remains a work in progress.

For writer and film-maker Calum MacNaughton of Cape Town-based Sharp-Flat Music, it’s vital work. He’s the archivist and curator of the historic As-Shams record label archive. MacNaughton told me, in an interview as part of my ongoing research into South African jazz histories, that he wants access to the archive not only for musicology researchers, but “enthusiasts and budding musicians in frivolous conversation late into the night”.

As-Shams/Ralph Ndawo

As-Shams has a 60-year history as South Africa’s first Black-owned record label, founded by music producer Rashid Vally out of a corner of his father’s Koh-i-Noor general store in central Johannesburg. As-Shams was responsible for an eclectic array of releases from the teenage township pop of the Beaters (who became Harari) to the iconic, implicitly subversive Mannenberg (Is Where its Happening) of Abdullah Ibrahim (then Dollar Brand).

Learn How To Make Money Online Using Your Smartphone In 2025

As part of opening access, As-Shams recently released the first volume of a planned series of archival compilations covering the label’s history. As-Shams Archive Vol. 1: South African Jazz, Funk & Soul 1975-1982 contains 10 tracks, 10 original compositions and 10 ensembles. More than 90 minutes of music spans eight deeply repressive apartheid years. Yet, in those years artists of the calibre of pianists Lionel Pillay, Tete Mbambisa and Pat Matshikiza, saxophonists Kippie Moeketsi, Basil “Manenberg” Coetzee and Mike Makhalemele, and vocalist Sathima Bea Benjamin were making original, innovative music.

RECOMMENDED FOR YOU  Ghanaian musician King Promise stuns crowd with iconic performance at Wizkid’s Tottenham Stadium Concert

The album
The compilation unites tracks from various albums As-Shams has already re-mastered and reissued, predominantly since 2020. But curating its contents, says MacNaughton, provided the opportunity for a fresh approach, to shape new sequences reflecting professional networks and shared thematic concerns.

For example:

On the vinyl edition Side A is dedicated to the remarkable connection between Moeketsi and Matshikiza. Dick Khoza (as leader is heard) on the heels of his performance with Mbambisa’s big band, Black Disco’s Night Express and Pillay’s Deeper in Black are thematically linked. And the compilation closes with Benjamin’s music, which ties everything together with a spiritual thread.

There’s also what he calls an “11th hidden track”: artwork on the vinyl from South African painter and graphicist Hargreaves Ntukwana, often the label’s cover artist of choice.

RECOMMENDED FOR YOU  South Africa: 10 killed in a mass shooting
Underground in Africa, iconic artwork included in the vinyl edition. As-Shams/Hargreaves Ntukwana

This restructuring works: tracks have a wholly new impact when heard in fresh company, rather than embedded in their original albums. By avoiding the “obvious” choices – often the title tracks – the collection conveys the collective music-making of a community and an era, rather than fondly remembered jazz hits.

Restoring the archive
Yet the process of recovering what MacNaughton counts as “some of South Africa’s most important cultural artefacts of the 20th Century”, wasn’t without problems. Despite fears about degradation, the tapes had not been damaged by constant moving.

Rather, the problem was getting the history right, revealing the meticulous detective work that restoring South Africa’s hidden musical history demands. Though most tapes had been carefully annotated, recording engineers sometimes did not name all players, and occasionally the paper record of names was absent. Just one example from the compilation was McNaughton being “presented the challenge of identifying which of the three bassists and two drummers who share the album credit appear on the specific track. I reached out to bassist Lionel Beukes, who spent a weekend listening to the track only to conclude that he couldn’t say for certain.

In other cases, artists remained unidentified because of contractual commitments to other labels, or the imprint faced restrictions because of conflicting licensing and distribution deals.

As-Shams

Perhaps the most complex detection trail surrounded another As-Shams re-release: Pillay’s Shrimp Boats. That first appeared in 1987 when As-Shams resurrected its Mandla imprint to issue out-of-print titles. Multiple tracks were brought together to round out the length of an album, not all the performer credits travelled with them and the cover artwork omitted Pillay in favour of Coetzee.

RECOMMENDED FOR YOU  The Cemeterians Times: a warning from Ghana’s founding fathers

By pure happenstance, this writer played the resulting album to the late Robbie Jansen in Botswana in the late 1980s. “Hey,” the saxophonist said, “that’s me playing saxophone on Birdland! I always wondered what happened to that session …” Yet Jansen was not named on the sleeve. When I communicated this to MacNaughton after the 2022 re-release, he contacted everybody still living he could find who might have memories to confirm the attribution. Having confirmed it, the label put new information online.

MacNaughton is extremely sensitive about the responsibilities of any reissue – not only to artists, but also to music historians and the truth.

Why this matters
MacNaughton is still digging through the archives. A second compilation in preparation features, among others, guitarist Themba Mokoena, 70s fusion group Spirits Rejoice and saxophonist Winston “Mankunku” Ngozi. Full releases are planned for forgotten sessions by Mbambisa and Moeketsi.

Restoring these masterworks to the public domain can change our conversations about South African jazz. Instead of isolated stars, we hear a community at work: the rich musical conversations disrupting what has sometimes been characterised as a “silent” cultural period under apartheid. Conversing with each other, with overseas jazz and with tradition, those players made the music what it is today.

RSS EDITORS’ SUGGESTIONS

  • GOC embarks on venue and facility inspection after Commonwealth Sports Congress in Glasgow
  • “He will be out for six weeks or so” – Frank Lampard confirms Brandon Thomas-Asante’s hamstring injury
  • Black Queens hold training in Southampton in readiness for England friendly
  • Safeguarding Unit sensitises U15 teams ahead of CAF Schools Football Championship WAFU-B qualifier
  • We’re going through a hell, but we will survive” — Kotoko assistant coach says after draw against Medeama
TAGGED: jazz history, Jazz Music, South Africa
VIA: the conversation
Africanews360 April 27, 2023
Share this Article
Facebook Twitter Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Telegram Email Print
Previous Article Algeria and Syria set to enhance bilateral ties in Oil and Energy
Next Article Slavery’s historical link to marriage is still at play in some African societies
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Latest on AfricaNews360

  • Ghana’s Petroleum Authority visits Chief Imam in 20th Anniversary outreach
  • African Paralympic Committee President Samson Deen urges leaders to make Para Sports a continental priority
  • CAF appoints Match Officials for TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations Morocco 2025
  • Ghana’s Gov’t unveils 11-member team to drive Black Stars’ 2026 World Cup campaign
  • “Football is everything for me”- Ex- Juventus star Kwadwo Asamoah says

More recommendations for you

  • 2025/26 GPL Matchday 12: Kotoko fight back as Hearts return to winning ways
  • GOC embarks on venue and facility inspection after Commonwealth Sports Congress in Glasgow
  • “He will be out for six weeks or so” – Frank Lampard confirms Brandon Thomas-Asante’s hamstring injury
  • Black Queens hold training in Southampton in readiness for England friendly
  • Safeguarding Unit sensitises U15 teams ahead of CAF Schools Football Championship WAFU-B qualifier

You Might Also Like

Soccer

Fifa sanctions SAFA with 3-0 defeat to Lesotho and £7,000 fine following Teboho Mokoena breach

September 30, 2025
Soccer

Nigeria held to frustrating draw by South Africa in World Cup qualifier

September 9, 2025
Soccer

Defiant Niger frustrate South Africa in crucial Group C stalemate

August 15, 2025
Music

Davido releases ’10 Kilo’ Music Video

August 13, 2025
  • Bereavement
  • Debt Management
  • Finance
  • Job Creation
  • Small Business
  • Climate
  • Education
  • Fashion
  • Health
  • Rights
  • Science
  • Sanitation
  • Mobilisation
  • Secondary Education
  • Celebrity News
  • Tertiary Education
  • Culture
  • Security
  • Corruption
  • Creed
  • Athletics
  • Basketball
  • Boxing
  • Formula 1
  • Rugby
  • Soccer
  • Tennis
  • Minning
  • Gaming
  • Technology
AfricaNews360AfricaNews360
Follow US

© 2024 - AfricaNews360 | All rights reserved.

  • About
  • Advertise with us
  • Contact

Removed from reading list

Undo
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Register Lost your password?