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Hugh Masekela - Hope (1993)

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Hugh Masekela - Hope (1993)

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1.Abangoma (The Healers)
2.Uptownship				play
3.Mandela (Bring Him Back Home!)
4.Grazing in the Grass
5.Lady
6.Until When				play
7.Languta
8.Nomali
9.Market Place
10.Ntyilo Ntyilo (The Love Bird)
11.Ha le Se (The Dowry Song)
12.Stimela [Coal Train]

Musicians:
Hugh Masekela (trumpet, flugelhorn); 
Ngenekhaya Mahlanghu (vocals, saxophone, flute, percussion); 
Themba Mkhize (vocals, keyboards); 
Lawrence Matshiza (vocals, guitar); 
Bakithi Kumalo (vocals, bass); 
Remi Kabaka (vocals, percussion); 
Damon Duewhite (drums); 
Los Ballederos Hornas Africanos de Townsheep (background vocals).

 

In the `60s, the South African-born trumpeter, producer, and composer Hugh Masekela played a pivotal role in introducing African music to western audiences. His albums made explicit the connection between African folk forms and African-American musical idioms like blues, jazz and soul. HOPE is a live album that captures Masekela performing in D.C. with an accomplished, all-African band in 1993. On HOPE, Masekela revisits many of the highlights of his career, including his tribute to South Africa, "Uptownship," and the strident protest number, "Mandela." --- cduniverse.com

 

Now happily resettled in South Africa, Masekela assembled a seven-piece group there and recorded an informal guided tour of his life and repertoire live in Washington D.C.'s Blues Alley. The songs stretch over a period of nearly five decades and several countries and composers -- from an incantatory Alexandria township tune, "Languta," which he learned in 1947, to a fairly ordinary piece written by keyboardist Themba Mkhize in 1993, "Until When." "Abangoma" starts the CD out on the right track, hearkening back to the early fusion of African music and jazz that Masekela was playing back in 1966. "Mandela (Bring Him Back Home)" may have lost some of its political raison d'etre by 1993, but it remains a good tune, and the band plays it with enthusiasm. Yet Masekela's biggest hit, "Grazing in the Grass," sounds a bit tired in this live rendition. There are two songs by the prolific South African composer Caiphus Semenya, "Nomali" and the driving "Ha Le Se," and the late Nigerian idol Fela Anikulapo-Kuti is represented by "Lady." Clearly the resolution of the political struggle in South Africa had mellowed Masekela; he sounds happier, perhaps less fiery, certainly more polished and refined on the trumpet and flugelhorn than when he started out. But when you hear his bitter narration on "Stimela," describing the life of formerly conscripted coal miners, you suspect that not all of the old wounds have healed. ---Richard S. Ginell, allmusic.com

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