Abdullah Ibrahim, solo piano
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One of South Africa’s most distinguished pianists, a global jazz icon, his music inspired a generation and his most famous song, Mannenberg, became a theme song of the struggle against apartheid.
Ibrahim was born in 1934 in Cape Town. His early musical memories were of traditional African Khoi-san songs and the Christian hymns, gospel tunes and spirituals that he heard from his grandmother, who was pianist for the local African Methodist Episcopalian church, and his mother, who led the choir. The Cape Town of his childhood was a melting-pot of cultural influences, and the young Dollar Brand, as he became known, was exposed to American jazz, township jive, CapeMalay music, as well as to classical music. Out of this blend of the secular and the religious, the traditional and the modern, developed the distinctive style, harmonies and musical vocabulary that are inimitably his own.
After the notorious Sharpeville massacre of 1960, mixed-race bands and audiences were defying the increasingly strict apartheid laws, and jazz symbolized resistance, so the government closed a number of clubs and harassed the musicians. Ibrahim himself lived mostly in exile from the early ’60s, in New York and Europe, and is one of very few surviving artists of that era who continues to have a vibrant recording and performing career, well into his eighties.
For more than a quarter-century he has toured the world extensively, appearing at major concert halls, clubs and festivals, giving sell-out performances, as a solo artist or with other renowned artists (notably, Max Roach, Carlos Ward and Randy Weston).
His latest solo album, Dream Time, will be released on Enja Records in Spring 2019. It will be Ibrahim’s first solo release since 2014 and Matthias Winckelmann, founder of Enja Records, has already announced it to be a ‘breathtakingly beautiful recording’.
For audiences 12+. Those aged 12 – 14 must be accompanied by an adult. No refunds will be given for incorrectly booked tickets.
Duration: to be confirmed – we will update this page as soon as we have running times. Please do not call the Box Office as they do not have any further information than that currently on our website. Most events last 2 – 2½ hours, evening events generally finishing no later than 10pm Monday to Saturday and 9pm on Sundays.
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£50, £37.50, £30
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