- Source: Makaya Ntshoko
Makaya Ntshoko (29 September 1939 – 27 August 2024) was a South African drummer.
Biography
Makaya Ntshoko was born in Cape Town, South Africa, on 29 October 1939. He grew up in Langa.
He played with Dollar Brand's trio in 1958, and recorded in a sextet with Hugh Masekela and John Mehegan in 1959. He performed on The Jazz Epistles album, Jazz Epistle: Verse 1. After the breakup of the group, Ntshoko founded The Jazz Giants with Kippie Moeketsi, Dudu Pukwana, Gideon Nxumalo, and Martin Mgijima. Ntshoko left South Africa in 1962, moving to Switzerland and playing with Johnny Gertze and Dollar Brand at the Club Africana in Zurich from 1963 to 1965. He later settled in Basel.
Following Brand's move to New York City, Ntshoko played in Copenhagen (1966, 1969–70) and recorded with Stuff Smith (1967), Benny Bailey (1968), Dexter Gordon (1968–69), and Ben Webster (1969). He embarked on a tour of the United States and the Bahamas in the early 1970s. He and Masekela recorded again in 1972. In 1974, he founded Makaya and the Tsotsis with Heinz Sauer, Bob Degen, and Isla Eckinger (later replaced by Jürgen Wuchner). Concomitantly, Ntshoko played in Nicra with Nick Evans and Radu Malfatti. In 1975, he appeared alongside Joe McPhee and Pepper Adams at the Willisau Jazz Festival. He collaborated with Mal Waldron (1977–79) and Johnny Dyani (1978).
Ntshoko died on 27 August 2024, at the age of 84.
Discography
= As leader or co-leader
=Makaya & the Tsotsis with Heinz Sauer, Bob Degen, Isla Eckinger (Enja, 1974)
Happy House (SteepleChase, 2008)
= As sideman
=With Pepper Adams
Twelfth & Pingree (Enja, 1975)
Julian (Enja, 1976)
With Dollar Brand
Duke Ellington Presents the Dollar Brand (Reprise, 1961)
Dollar Brand Plays Sphere Jazz (Continental, 1962)
Anatomy of a South African Village (Fontana, 1965)
The Dream Trio (Freedom, 1979)
Round Midnight at the Montmartre (Black Lion, 1988)
Blues for a Hip King (Kaz, 1988)
With Johnny Dyani
Song for Biko (SteepleChase, 1979)
Grand Mother's Teaching (Disques Jam, 1982)
With Hugh Masekela
Home Is Where the Music Is (Blue Thumb, 1972)
The African Connection (MCA, 1980)
With Joe McPhee
The Willisau Concert (Hat Hut, 1976)
Tenor (Hat Hut, 1977)
With Marvin Peterson
In Antibes (Enja, 1977)
Tribute (Baystate, 1979)
With Mal Waldron
One-Upmanship (Enja, 1977)
Moods (Enja, 1978)
With Ben Webster
Ben Webster Plays Ballads (Storyville, 1988)
Plays Duke Ellington (Storyville, 1988)
With others
Benny Bailey, Soul Eyes (SABA, 1968)
Sathima Bea Benjamin, A Morning in Paris (Enja, 1997)
Bob Degen, Sequoia Song (Enja, 1976)
Dexter Gordon, Stella by Starlight (SteepleChase, 2005)
Keith Jarrett, Charles Lloyd, Dollar Brand, Michael White, Europa Jazz (Europa Jazz, 1981)
Jazz Epistles, Jazz Epistle Verse 1 (Continental, 1960)
Gideon Nxumalo, Jazz Fantasia (Renown, 1962)
Stuff Smith, Hot Violins (Storyville, 1991)
John Tchicai, Irene Schweizer, Willi the Pig: Live at the Willisau Jazz Festival (Willisau Live, 1976)
References
Sources
Lars Rasmussen, "Makaya Ntshoko". Grove Dictionary of Jazz online.
External Links
Makaya Ntshoko discography at Discogs
Makaya Ntshoko at IMDb
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Makaya Ntshoko
- Abdullah Ibrahim
- Makaya
- 2024 in African music
- The Jazz Epistles
- Song for Biko
- List of 2024 deaths in popular music
- Deaths in August 2024
- 2024 in music
- List of Xhosa people