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Mzwakhe Mbuli

Mzwakhe Mbuli

Mzwakhe Mbuli has been played on NTS in shows including The Do!! You!!! Breakfast Show w/ Charlie Bones, featured first on 12 July 2016. Songs played include Change Is Pain and Now Is The Time.

Mzwakhe Mbuli, known as "The People's Poet", is a popular poet and mbaqanga singer in South Africa.

"South African pop moves cozy up to African American notions of sophistication, and South African pan-Africanist moves graft a fabricated tradition onto a musical history with no parallel in Africa or anywhere else. Mbuli's fusions are more visionary and more local. Singing or chanting mostly in English or Zulu but occasionally in Xhosa or Venda, his relaxed, pantribal township jive owes all the urban South African styles--mbaqanga, kwela, marabi, even a little mbube. It's pop on South Africa's own terms, too swinging for retro and too jumpy for slick. What's more, this man didn't start out as a musician--like Linton Kwesi Johnson, he's just a poet who loves music enough to do it right. Although he's not as learned as LKJ, his songs are as complete a tour of the apartheid struggle as you're likely to get without reading--and his lyric sheet is a good place to begin." - Robert Christgau

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Mzwakhe Mbuli

Mzwakhe Mbuli has been played on NTS in shows including The Do!! You!!! Breakfast Show w/ Charlie Bones, featured first on 12 July 2016. Songs played include Change Is Pain and Now Is The Time.

Mzwakhe Mbuli, known as "The People's Poet", is a popular poet and mbaqanga singer in South Africa.

"South African pop moves cozy up to African American notions of sophistication, and South African pan-Africanist moves graft a fabricated tradition onto a musical history with no parallel in Africa or anywhere else. Mbuli's fusions are more visionary and more local. Singing or chanting mostly in English or Zulu but occasionally in Xhosa or Venda, his relaxed, pantribal township jive owes all the urban South African styles--mbaqanga, kwela, marabi, even a little mbube. It's pop on South Africa's own terms, too swinging for retro and too jumpy for slick. What's more, this man didn't start out as a musician--like Linton Kwesi Johnson, he's just a poet who loves music enough to do it right. Although he's not as learned as LKJ, his songs are as complete a tour of the apartheid struggle as you're likely to get without reading--and his lyric sheet is a good place to begin." - Robert Christgau

Original source: Last.fm

Tracks featured on

Most played tracks

Change Is Pain
Mzwakhe
Shifty Records1986
Now Is The Time
Mzwakhe
Shifty Records1986