FILE -
In this March 2012 file photo, South
African jazz musician Hugh Masekela
performs during the Observance for
Commonwealth Day service at
Westminster Abbey in central London.
A family statement issued on Twitter
Tuesday Jan. 23, 2018, says South
African jazz musician and
anti-apartheid activist Hugh
Masekela, 78, passed away in
Johannesburg after a lengthy battle
against prostate cancer. (Leon
Neal/Pool Photo via AP, File)
South
African
jazz
musician
Hugh
Masekela
dies at
78 By
KRISTA
MAHR
APNews.com
JOHANNESBURG
-
Legendary
South
African
jazz
musician
Hugh
Masekela
has died
at the
age of
78 after
a
decade-long
fight
with
cancer,
according
to a
statement
from his
family
on
Tuesday.
Often
called
the
“Father
of South
African
jazz,”
Masekela
died in
Johannesburg
after
what his
family
said was
a
“protracted
and
courageous
battle
with
prostate
cancer.”
Trumpeter,
singer
and
composer
Masekela,
affectionately
known
locally
as “Bra
Hugh,”
started
playing
the horn
at 14
and
quickly
became
an
integral
part of
the
1950s
jazz
scene in
Johannesburg
as a
member
of the
Jazz
Epistles.
In
the
1960s he
went
into
exile in
the
United
Kingdom
and the
United
States,
where he
collaborated
with
American
jazz
legend
Harry
Belafonte
and used
his
music to
spread
awareness
about
the
oppressive
system
of
white-minority
rule in
South
Africa.
He also
scored
an
international
number
one hit
in 1968
with
“Grazing
In The
Grass.”
He
collaborated
with
many
musicians
including
Paul
Simon
and Herb
Alpert.
He was
married
to South
African
singer
and
activist
Miriam
Makeba
for two
years.
Many
of his
compositions
were
about
the
struggle
for
majority
rule and
full
democratic
rights
in South
Africa.
Masekela’s
catchy
composition
“Bring
Him Back
Home”
calling
for
Nelson
Mandela
to be
released
from
prison
became
an
international
anthem
for the
anti-apartheid
movement.
“Hugh’s
global
and
activist
contribution
to and
participation
in the
areas of
music,
theatre,
and the
arts in
general
is
contained
in the
minds
and
memory
of
millions
across
six
continents,”
the
family
statement
read.
In
October
last
year,
Masekela
issued a
statement
that he
had been
fighting
prostate
cancer
since
2008 and
would
have to
cancel
his
professional
commitments
to focus
on his
health.
He said
he
started
treatment
after
doctors
found a
“small
‘speck’”
on his
bladder,
and had
surgery
in March
2016
after
the
cancer
spread.
Masekela
also
said he
felt an
“imbalance”
and had
an eye
problem
after a
fall in
April in
Morocco
in which
he
sprained
his
shoulder.
He said
another
tumor
was then
discovered
and he
had
surgery.
“I’m
in a
good
space,
as I
battle
this
stealthy
disease,
and I
urge all
men to
have
regular
tests to
check
your own
condition,”
his
statement
said,
asking
the
media
for
privacy.
Condolences
from
fans
poured
out
Tuesday
on
social
media
paying
tribute
to the
influential
musician’s
career.
“A
baobob
tree has
fallen,”
Nathi
Mthethwa,
South
Africa’s
minister
for arts
and
culture,
wrote on
Twitter.
“The
nation
has lost
a one of
a kind
musician
. We can
safely
say Bra
Hugh was
one of
the
great
architects
of
Afro-Jazz
and he
uplifted
the soul
of our
nation
through
his
timeless
music.”
South
African
President
Jacob
Zuma
expressed
his
condolences,
saying
Masekela
“kept
the
torch of
freedom
alive
globally,
fighting
apartheid
through
his
music
and
mobilizing
international
support
for the
struggle
for
liberation
and
raising
awareness
of the
evils of
apartheid
... His
contribution
to the
struggle
for
liberation
will
never be
forgotten.”
Masekela
inspired
generations
of
musicians
in jazz
and
beyond
and
collaborated
in
recent
years
with
South
African
house
music DJ
Black
Coffee
and
others.
“I have
no
words,”
the DJ
said
Tuesday
on
Twitter.