South African Jazz from the 1940s -1950s | Miriam Makeba / The African Ink Spots / Manhattan Brothers / Drum magazine

1
drum2Bmagazine
Drum magazine, 1955                                                                                                     Drum magazine, 1956
.
Apartheid was an inescapable fact of daily life in 1950s South Africa. But when the staff of Drum magazine got to the Johannesburg offices, the feeling was of having ‘‘walked into a different world, a world outside South Africa,’’  says Jürgen Schadeberg, the art director there in the 1950s. Inspired by the American magazines Life and Look, Drum’s documentary portrayals of black urban life, arts, politics and culture were revolutionary. (…)
South2BAfrica25E225802599s2BDrum252C2B1950sRhodesia2527s2BDarling2B 2BDorothy2BMasuku.Drum252C2BSeptember2B1957
Drum magazine, 1955                                                   Drum magazine, 1957
Miriam2BMakeba2Bposing2Bfor2BDrum2BCoverDrum2Bmagazine2Bfrom2BSouth2BAfrica252C2B1950s.
Miriam Makeba posing for Drum Cover, 1955
Miriam Makeba & The Manhattan Brothers – Lovely Lies, 1956        Miriam Makeba  &The Skylarks – Holilili, 1950
J25C325BCrgen2BSchadeberg252C2BTownship2BShuffle252C2BSophiatown252C2B1955
Jürgen Schadeberg, Township Shuffle, Sophiatown, 1955
The2BThree2BJazzolomos
The Three Jazzolomos, 1953

The African Ink Spots – I’m Jealous Of You, 1948                              Manhattan Brothers – Pesheya’ Kwezo Ntaba, 1948
Kids2Bjamming2Bin2Bthe2Bstreets2Bof2BSophiatown
Kids jamming in the streets of Sophiatown, Johannesburg
Dancing2Bto2Bmarabi2Bin2B50s
Dancing to marabi in 1950s Johannesburg
.
Marabi was the first form of jazz native to South Africa, possibly named after the Pretoria town,
Marabastad. Marabi is characterised by piano jazz and flourished in the Sophiatown era, where
it was played in shebeens and dance halls..

The Marabi subculture stood in stark contrast to the values of the so-called oppressed elite
of South Africa, the African middle-level population with mostly missionary educational
background. They criticized the Marabi and the jazz imported at the same time from America
for their proximity to crime and for their non-Christian values, in the process coming into conflict
with the main mediators of music, namely music teachers. These taught their students more and
more American jazz hits, which were perceived as modern. Well-known African intellectuals
spoke out against the phenomenon of Marabi and promoted the choral tradition of South
Africa supported by the missions.(…)

Sophiatown
Jürgen Schadeberg, Sophiatown, 1955
Peter2BMagubane252C2BNanny2Band2BChild252C2BJohannesburg252C2B1956.
Peter Magubane, Nanny and Child, Johannesburg, 1956.

On 1 August 1954 the the Natives Resettlement Act was passed. This law enabled the apartheid
 government to remove people of colour from their residential areas. A few months after the law
was passed black, coloured, Indian and Chinese people were forced to leave Sophiatown.
South African Jazz Under Apartheid

1 thought on “South African Jazz from the 1940s -1950s | Miriam Makeba / The African Ink Spots / Manhattan Brothers / Drum magazine

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *