Confirmed - South African Jazz Legend Hugh Masekela dies at 78- Family
Hugh Masekela’s
long battle with prostate cancer ended on Tuesday in Johannesburg yesterday at
the age of 78, his family announced, triggering an outpouring of tributes
to his music, his long career, and his anti-apartheid activism.
“After a protracted and
courageous battle with prostate cancer, he passed peacefully in Johannesburg,
South Africa,” his family said in a statement.
In the released statement, the
family described his music as an “activist contribution” which “was
contained in the minds and memory of millions.”
According to Nathi Mthethwa,
the Minister for Arts and Culture, “He uplifted the soul of our nation through
his timeless music…the nation has lost a one-of-a-kind musician.”
Masekela fled
apartheid South Africa in the early 1960s and did not return for three decades
until after the release of Nelson Mandela in 1990.
Some of his greatest hits
include “Bring Him Back Home” a song demanding Mandela’s release from prison
and “Grazing In The Grass”.
Keeping up his international
touring schedule into his 70s with energetic shows, his concerts at home often
exploded into sing-alongs.
A teenaged Masekela was handed
his first trumpet — and later a Louis Armstrong hand-me-down — through
anti-apartheid activist priest Father Trevor Huddlestone.
“I took to it like a fish to
water. I was a natural,” he recalled.
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