Post Description
Following a three-decade-long exile, Miriam Makeba's return to South Africa was celebrated as though a queen was restoring her monarchy. The response was fitting as Makeba remains the most important female vocalist to emerge out of South Africa. Hailed as the Empress of African Song and Mama Africa, Makeba helped bring African music to a global audience in the '60s. Nearly five decades after her debut with the Manhattan Brothers, she continues to play an important role in the growth of African music.
Makeba's life has consistently been marked by struggle. As the daughter of a sangoma, a mystical traditional healer of the Xhosa tribe, she spent six months of her birth year in jail with her mother. Gifted with a dynamic vocal tone, Makeba recorded her debut single, "Lakutshona Llange," as a member of the Manhattan Brothers in 1953. Although she left to form an all-female group named the Skylarks in 1958, she reunited with members of the Manhattan Brothers when she accepted the lead female role in a musical version of King Kong, which told the tragic tale of Black African boxer, Ezekiel "King Kong" Dlamani, in 1959. The same year, she began an 18-month tour of South Africa with Alf Herbert's musical extravaganza, African Jazz and Variety, and made an appearance in a documentary film, Come Back Africa. These successes led to invitations to perform in Europe and the United States.
Comme Une Symphonie D'amour-1994
Homeland-2000
live From Paris & Conakry-1996
Mama Africa-2000
Miriam Makeba-1960
Pata Pata-1967
Sangoma-1988
Sing Me A Song-1994
The Queen Of African Music-1991
Welela-1989
GENRES
International
Pop/Rock
Folk
STYLES
African Traditions
South African Folk
South African Pop
Worldbeat
African Folk
Afro-Pop
International Pop
Political Folk
Southern African
ACTIVE
1960s - 2000s
BORN
March 4, 1932 in Johannesburg, South Africa
DIED
November 9, 2008 in Castel Volturno, Italy
ALIASES
Zenzile Miriam Makeba
op verzoek. heel veel plezier ermee.
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