Jimmy Dludlu
"Long before record companies became aware of the musical genius of Jimmy Dludlu,
the media were already celebrating him as the hottest and most stylish talent
amongst South Africa' new jazz generation. Expressions being used to describe
his extraordinary talent, his skills not only as a guitarist but as an
insightful composer and arranger, underline the music he creates on stage with
his outstanding style such as "jazz maestro", "guitar phenomenon" or "guitar
wizard of jazz" are known by now as synonyms for the self-taught musician Jimmy
Dludlu."
JIMMY DLUDLU was 13 years old when he first picked up a cousin's home made
guitar and started teaching himself to play by imitating the jazz and African
music he heard on the radio. His first performances were at township weddings
and functions with his cousin. His career took off in earnest in the mid-1980's,
when he worked with various southern African bands including Impandze from
Swaziland, featuring Jamaican singer Trevor Hall, Kalahari and Satari from
Botswana, as well as Anansi, featuring the Ghanaian saxophonist George Lee. A
highlight of this period was his performance with Anansi at the Botswana
Independence celebrations in 1986, alongside a range of African stars including
Thomas Mapfumo.In Johannesburg in 1990, Jimmy worked as a session musician. He
worked with McCoy Mrubata and his band Brotherhood, which a year later won the
Gilbey's Music of Africa Competition. In September 1990, he also took part in
the Market Theatre production Conversations with Canadian Bruce Cassidy on
Trumpet and EVI, and South African Barney Rachabane on sax. In 1991, he was a
founder member of the highly successful group Loading Zone, which went on to
tour across the continent, backing a range of South African stars including Hugh
Masekela, Miriam Makeba, Brenda Fassie, Chicco and Sipho Mabuse. During this
period, Jimmy also recorded with Miriam Makeba on the album "Eyes on Tomorrow",
and participated in the Sun City production Sax Appeal, appearing with the likes
of Rene McLean, Winston Mankunku, Robbie Jansen, Victor Ntoni and the late Duke
Makasi. A highlight of this period was Loading Zone's Namibian tour in 1992,
when they were spotted by Zairean world-music star Papa Wemba, who subsequently
asked the band to back him on several dates in Namibia.In July 1993, saxophonist
Morris Goldberg invited him to perform with his band Ojoyo at the Smirnoff Jazz
festival in Grahamstown. He returned to the festival the following year to
perform with jazz legend Herb Ellis, a long-time member of Oscar Peterson's
ensembles. Working with these jazz greats, Jimmy decided to pursue music
studies, and moved to Cape Town in order to enrol in the Jazz Programme at
University of Cape Town's College of Music. Unperturbed by the intensive media
coverage he was attracting, Jimmy was determined to focus on his studies at UCT,
and developing his original music. From 1994 onwards, his distinctive musical
style was becoming evident through a series of high-profile appearances, which
eventually caught the attention of the SA record industry. In September 1994, he
participated in Johannesburg's Arts Alive and Guinness Jazz festivals with his
own band, featuring Vusi Khumalo on drums, Fana Zulu on bass, Moses Molelekwa on
piano, McCoy Mrubata on sax and John Hassan on percussion. In April 1995, Jimmy
appeared in the Night of 100 Stars at Cape Town's Nico Malan Opera House, a
charity event which benefited organizations such as the Centre for Battered
Women and Street Children. In May 1995 he was one of 30 musicians - including
Hugh Masekela, Busi Mhlongo, Dolly Rathebe and Dorothy Masuka - selected to
participate in a festival in Paris La Villette celebrating South African
culture. An intimate documentary about Jimmy's career was produced by Cape
Town-based Revel Fox. Entitled The Birth of Jimmy Dludlu, the 30-minute portrait
was broadcast on NNTV in May 1995. In October 1995, Jimmy and his own band
C-Base Collective shared the stage with Senegalese singer and guitarist Ismaël
Lô's African Reconnection Tour in Cape Town. With C-Base Collective, Jimmy
performed 2 highly acclaimed shows alongside Courtney Pine at the 1996 Arts
Alive Festival in Johannesburg, and found himself a PolyGram recording artist by
the end of the year.His debut album for PolyGram, Echoes from the Past, was
released in September 1997 to a wealth of superlatives from the media. The album
was also well received by the industry, as Jimmy received 2 FNB SAMA Awards for
"Best Newcomer" and "Best Contemporary Jazz Album" in 1998, and by the general
public, as sales figures in January 1999 indicated sales in excess of 25 000
copies. The album has since been released in nine territories on the Verve
label, including United States, Italy, Switzerland, Sweden and Hungary. In March
2000, Jimmy was further acknowledged by the South African music industry,
winning the "Best Male Artist" category, and with "Essence of Rhythm" taking the
"Best Contemporary Jazz Album" prize at the SAMA Music AwardsJimmy Dludlu's
style includes wide-ranging influences, combining both traditional and modern
elements of jazz drawn from among others Wes Montgomery, George Benson and Pat
Metheny, to South African legends Miriam Makeba, Letta Mbulu, Hugh Masekela,
Themba Mokwena, and Allen Kwela. He is particularly drawn to the sounds of west
and central Africa, as well as Latin America, but says jazz remains his first
love. His numerous original compositions fall within the tradition of what has
been loosely termed Afro-Jazz.