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Message = Message + ' Miriam Makeba is
beyond dispute one of South
Africa's true legends. There are many reasons
for that. With her voice and talent Mama Africa for instance put South African
music on the map, as she was the first African singer winning a Grammy Award
followed by being the first African artist scoring an international monster
hit. Besides using her
voice to entertain millions, Makeba used her most powerful asset to give a
voice to millions of fellow South Africans who were oppressed by the apartheid
regime. "listen to this live fragment of Miriam Makeba, performing in South Africa
for the first time after being in exile for 17 years...." Makeba used her voice to entertain, but
also to give a voice to millions of oppressed fellow South Africans who
suffered as a result of apartheid. The price she had to pay for her actions was
high, namely her South African citizenship. After she appeared in an
anti-apartheid documentary in 1960, the South African government banned her
from returning to her home country and took away her citizenship. Miriam Makeba
remained a ‘citizen of the world' for thirty years until she returned to South Africa
after Nelson Mandela was released from jail. The event didn't stop Mama Africa from
raising her voice against the apartheid regime. Between 1964 and 1975, as a
United Nations delegate of Guinea
where she was granted asylum, Miriam Makeba addressed the General Assembly of
the United Nations regularly on what was happening in South Africa. Meanwhile she
carried on singing, a process in which she put South African music on the map.
Over the years Makeba worked with artists as Joe Sample, Stix Hooper, Arthur
Adams, and David T. Walker of the Crusaders. In the late 1980's Miriam Makeba
joined Paul Simon and South Africa
's Ladysmith Black Mambazo during their world-wide Graceland
tour and in 1990 she joined Odetta and Nina Simone for the One Nation tour. Following
Nelson Mandela's release from prison Makeba returned to South Africa in
December 1990, thirty years after she went in exhile. In April 1991 she
performed her first concert in her homeland in three decades. The years
after were busy ones for Makeba. She appeared in the South African
award-winning musical, Sarafina, in the role of Sarafina's mother. Following,
she reunited with her first husband, trumpeter Hugh Masekela, for the Tour Of
Hope tour. Afterwards she performed at the Vatican's Nevi Hall during a world-wide
broadcasted show, Christmas In The Vatican. And in 2000 Makeba released her
first studio album in a decade, Homeland. After her
return to South Africa,
Makeba released over ten albums. In 2004, at 72 years of age, Miriam Makeba
relased ‘Reflections' honoring the tenth anniversary of the end of apartheid in
South Africa.
Read more on Miriam Makeba - Press conference
CLOSE'
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South African music
and little movies online every
month subscribe to the newsletter
to hear about them first...enjoy,
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Read more on Miriam Makeba - Concert Cape Town International Jazz Festival
Source: Miriam Mannak / Cape Town Magazine.com
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