A Note to Taiwa: Reflective Essay on the Music of Moses Molelekwa
The musical life of Moses Molelekwa was one full of promise and unmatched genius. He changed the face of jazz and brought it to his young generation. He affected the kwaito genre in ways that no one artist has done to any other genre of music in South Africa. When he passed away – at the fine young age of 27 – Molelekwa was only beginning his grand musical journey. Following his first book – Sankomota: An Ode in One Album, Phehello Mofokeng has now written and published the first book on Moses Molelekwa, that towering yet young genius of jazz. A Note to Taiwa – A Reflective Essay on the Music of Moses Molelekwa is published by an independent publisher, Geko Publishing.
The musical life of Moses Molelekwa was one full of promise and unmatched genius. He changed the face of jazz and brought it to his young generation. He affected the kwaito genre in ways that no one artist has done to any other genre of music in South Africa. When he passed away – at the fine young age of 27 – Molelekwa was only beginning his grand musical journey. Following his first book – Sankomota: An Ode in One Album, Phehello Mofokeng has now written and published the first book on Moses Molelekwa, that towering yet young genius of jazz. A Note to Taiwa – A Reflective Essay on the Music of Moses Molelekwa is published by an independent publisher, Geko Publishing.
By referencing Moses Molelekwa’s first album Finding One’s Self, Mofokeng traces the impeccable trajectory of Molelekwa’s music. Mofokeng’s inquiry on Molelekwa’s music and its effect on South Africa’s music industry in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Mofokeng goes into detail about the jazz idioms and motifs employed by Molelekwa to open his musical account that became globally relevant while remaining rooted in the continent. Mofokeng uses kwaito intentionally because it points to Molelekwa’s outstanding musical expansiveness even though he was rooted in jazz.
“His involvement in the music of the people – both jazz and kwaito – Molelekwa brings the working-class blacks closer to the altar of jazz, even if only by distant association, enabling him to break ontological boundaries imposed by critics, cataloguists and the ‘jazz establishment.’”
Mofokeng references essential writers such as Amiri Baraka, Adorno and Allan Ginsberg, who saw themselves at the crossroads of a cultural revolution in the US. He positions Molelekwa’s music as a response to “the question of “why jazz matters” posed by Leroi Jones (Amiri Baraka). The book is a referential material that borrows from Bebey, Baraka, Hrebeniak and Porter, other jazz scholars and its influence on the continent’s music. It also indicates how Africa – as the root of all the founders of jazz – remains the spiritual home of the genre and why Molelekwa’s flavour of jazz found its place in the apex of the genre at the turn of the century.
A Note to Taiwa – A Reflective Essay on the Music of Moses Molelekwa is a worthwhile addition to the body of the intellectual and cultural production by black Africans in South Africa. Written with a tender passion for music and immaculate analysis, A Note to Taiwa will make you listen to while pondering on the genius and short but impeccable career of Taiwa Molelekwa and what could have been the potential of it all. A Note to Taiwa – A Reflective Essay on the Music of Moses Molelekwa will be officially released on 18 October 2021. A book tour will soon be announced, with dates, venues and other details released soon. The book is available at most major retailers in South Africa.
Phehello J Mofokeng is an author, editor, artist, creative director and film student. He lives in Bloemfontein and Johannesburg. He is involved in literature festivals in South Africa and Nigeria. He is influenced by Thomas Mofolo, the first novelist in the language of Sesotho.
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