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
    Ugandan opposition leader Bobi Wine leaves the country after two months of hiding
    March 14, 2026
    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
  • Business
    BusinessShow More
    Ghana targets major Economic Policy shift
    May 1, 2026
    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
  • 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
    Carlos Queiroz unveiled as new Black Stars head coach
    Portuguse tactician Carlos Queiroz unveiled as new Black Stars Coach ahead of World Cup
    April 24, 2026
    Lamine Ndiaye, USM Alger coach
    USM Alger coach Ndiaye warns of ‘tough battle’ against Zamalek in CAF Confederation Cup final
    April 20, 2026
    CAF strips Senegal of AFCON Crown
    March 17, 2026
    Ghana sports journalist criticises lack of national museum during IShowSpeed visit
    January 28, 2026
    Salim Lawal signs for FC Viktoria Plzeň 
    OFFICIAL: Nigerian forward Salim Fago Lawal signs for FC Viktoria Plzeň 
    January 27, 2026
  • 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
    UK and Nigeria sign agreement to speed up deportation
    March 20, 2026
    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: National anthems: how composers in South Africa and India are reimagining them
Share
Notification Show More
Latest News
Ghana targets major Economic Policy shift
May 1, 2026
Carlos Queiroz unveiled as new Black Stars head coach
Portuguse tactician Carlos Queiroz unveiled as new Black Stars Coach ahead of World Cup
April 24, 2026
Lamine Ndiaye, USM Alger coach
USM Alger coach Ndiaye warns of ‘tough battle’ against Zamalek in CAF Confederation Cup final
April 20, 2026
Ghana’s Mahama leads tribute to enslaved Africans at New York burial ground
March 25, 2026
UK and Nigeria sign agreement to speed up deportation
March 20, 2026
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 > Culture > National anthems: how composers in South Africa and India are reimagining them
Culture

National anthems: how composers in South Africa and India are reimagining them

Posted Africanews360 May 17, 2023 8 Min Read
Updated 2023/05/17 at 11:03 AM
Hamilton Dhlamini in The Head & The Load, a production in which composer Philip Miller reworks the British national anthem. Stella Olivier/The Head & The Load
SHARE

The rousing notes of the British national anthem God Save The King rang loudly in London’s Westminster Abbey when King Charles III was crowned – and in official and informal celebrations in many other places, though not always to an enthusiastic reception. The song is still sung in many Commonwealth countries. But its place and the oppressive imperial legacy trailing it are increasingly questioned.

That debate can be extended beyond one song. What baggage does any music acquire when it shifts from being – in South African literature scholar Zoë Wicomb’s phrase – “national culture to official culture”?

As a researcher into South African music, I’m often struck by how dominant the past is in my interviews about the present, particularly in relation to the current anthem. South Africa’s national anthem is a composite of the African liberation hymn Nkosi Sikelel’ iAfrika and the apartheid-era Afrikaans hymn Die Stem (The Call of South Africa). Does a similar burden of history weigh down other national anthems and perhaps prevent us from hearing them simply as music?

In recent work, two prominent contemporary composers, Philip Miller in South Africa and Amit Chaudhuri in India, have explored fresh ways of interpreting national anthems. Their projects suggest that anthems can be freed from historical baggage to reflect contemporary realities.

Phillip Miller
Miller grew up during apartheid with the enforced singing of Die Stem at school. In an interview with me he recalls:

Coming from a very liberal home instilled almost a horror of national anthems in me.

Yet Nkosi Sikelele doesn’t stir similar feelings, because “it’s a really beautiful song” that “has a historical genesis in African liberation, so the meanings it carries are very different”.

RECOMMENDED FOR YOU  Nigerian drummer nurtures children to preserve use of local instruments

Miller and co-composer Thuthuka Sibisi had explored the meaning of singing South Africa’s former colonial anthem, God Save the King, for Victorian-era African choristers in an earlier project. That work formed the foundation for the version of the anthem in their score for the stage production The Head & The Load, about the unacknowledged role of African labour in the colonial armies of the first world war.

A man sits on a chair reading from papers on a music stand, music equipment all around him in a wooden-floored studio.
South African composer Philip Miller. Madelene Cronje

Their arrangement, he explains, allowed singers to add complexity to God Save the King “with varied rhythms, drones, fragments and layers, building to a moment of almost isicathimiya (traditional Zulu song) harmony”. As God Save the King breaks apart on stage, the song is passed from singer to singer “almost as if it’s too painful for anybody to sing it for too long”.

Some triumphalist, violent verses of God Save the King are no longer sung even in the UK – in particular those written during the 1745 Jacobite rebellion imploring God’s help to “like a torrent crush” the “rebellious Scots”. At the coronation, the imperial music of the ceremony’s traditions was balanced with 12 new commissions from contemporary British composers.

And even the postcolonial South African anthem Miller finds so beautiful can jar with some. He concedes that:

When political regimes sour, even beautiful anthems can lose their beauty, and we can start feeling alienation instead.

University students during South Africa’s Fees Must Fall protests created what they christened a “decolonised” national anthem. They retained Nkosi Sikelele’s opening verse but set it to a new melody. New lyrics highlighted “hard times … when we are painfully abused”.

RECOMMENDED FOR YOU  South African diamonds adorn the crown of King Charles III – why they’re unlikely to be returned

Amit Chaudhuri
Nkosi Sikelel’ iAfrika is not the only contemporary national anthem with roots in early anticolonial struggles. India’s national anthem is Jana Gana Mana. It was composed by poet, artist and thinker Rabindranath Tagore in 1911. Its Bengali lyrics invoke a spirit of unity in diversity.

A man sits on a chair in a room with musical instruments.
Amit Chaudhuri, Indian musician and author. Indranil Bhoumik/Mint via Getty Images

Chaudhuri, a novelist, critic and classically trained Hindustani singer, reimagines Jana Gana Mana on his most recent album, Across the Universe. Chaudhuri’s project explores what he calls musical “convergences”: music grounded in the sonic contact he hears between compositions from diverse traditions.

His version of Jana Gana Mana is released from its former strict, anthemic marching rhythm into free time. It flowers out of a composition by Austrian keyboardist Joe Zawinul of the jazz fusion group Weather Report. The way the sound develops is paralleled on the accompanying video, where an image of the Indian flag flowers from shadowed and superimposed partial views.

Chaudhuri told me in email correspondence he is treating Tagore’s composition as a piece of music. He views it not as a nationalistic commodity but as an aesthetic creation by “the greatest songwriter of our time”, rich with possibilities. The originality of Tagore’s own musical approach – “always gathering and repositioning the material he was collecting from every source in his songs” – encouraged Chaudhuri to create an open-ended “sense of estrangement, surprise, and unexpectedness that situates the anthem in history, but not in the history that we are told, one way or another, about ourselves or our country through books and historiography”.

RECOMMENDED FOR YOU  South Africa votes in 2024: could a coalition between major parties ANC and EFF run the country?

Burden of history
Miller isn’t sure it’s possible to shear away the baggage from music, however beautiful, once it’s been appropriated to power. He points out that before Nkosi Sikelele was adopted, the ANC anthem was South African composer Reuben Caluza’s iLand Act. This was a far more strident anti-colonial protest song. Miller recorded it with a choral collective in 2020, “at the very moment when the City of Cape Town was evicting informal settlers – including dragging a man naked out of his home. That was ironic – who’s to say what South Africa’s people’s anthem really is?”

Many Britons, equally, view God Save the King as contested territory. Some urge a replacement. They cite British poet William Blake’s Jerusalem (invoking reform of industry’s “dark satanic mills”), Land of Hope and Glory – or the even more bloodthirsty Rule Britannia.

And while Miller hears “the beauty start to fray” under the pressure of political appropriation of songs, Chaudhuri suggests that “beauty has to be ‘frayed’; that’s what one is aiming for” to move away from restrictive visions. Anthems, it seems, are what a country’s rulers, peoples – and artists – make them.

RSS EDITORS’ SUGGESTIONS

TAGGED: composers in South Africa, India, National anthems, South Africa
SOURCES: The Conversation
Africanews360 May 17, 2023
Share this Article
Facebook Twitter Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Telegram Email Print
Previous Article Kenya Cult Killings: Senate committee to tour crime scene on Friday
Next Article Congolese refugees start journey back home
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Latest on AfricaNews360

  • Ghana targets major Economic Policy shift
  • Portuguse tactician Carlos Queiroz unveiled as new Black Stars Coach ahead of World Cup
  • USM Alger coach Ndiaye warns of ‘tough battle’ against Zamalek in CAF Confederation Cup final
  • Ghana’s Mahama leads tribute to enslaved Africans at New York burial ground
  • UK and Nigeria sign agreement to speed up deportation

More recommendations for you

  • Kwadwo Asamoah: I didn’t enjoy playing as a left-back
  • Ghana FA President Kurt Okraku leads Ghana delegation to 76th FIFA Congress in Canada
  • Medeama, Gold Stars set for title-deciding clash in Tarkwa
  • “Win over Kotoko is past; time to concentrate on Gold Stars game” – Ibrahim Tanko
  • Premier League Matchday 31 officials announced; Nathan Anafo takes charge of Medeama SC VS Gold Stars clash

You Might Also Like

Soccer

South Africa edge Zimbabwe 3-2 to seal knockout berth

December 29, 2025
Soccer

Salah’s controversial penalty sends 10-man Egypt through to last 16

December 26, 2025
Soccer

Egypt v South Africa: Hassan respects ‘favourites’ Bafana as Broos plays down Salah threat

December 26, 2025
Soccer

South Africa beat Angola to end 21-year AFCON opening-match wait

December 22, 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?