Sunday Tribune

‘Gallo Vaults Sessions’ unpacks rich history with the likes of Hugh Masekela and Simphiwe Dana

SHINGAI DARANGWA shingai.darangwa@inl.co.za

ONE of the first things Zara Julius did once she got access to the Gallo Vault was explore its vast archives for apartheid propaganda music and music that is sympathetic to the apartheid regime.

Having just come off an episode of the Talking Drum podcast, where Sudanese musician and ethnomusicologist, Alsarah, spoke about the weaponization of music as propaganda by a repressive state and how the government tightly controls music production, she was eager to interrogate this same theme in South Africa.

“I think we don’t often think about South African music history in this way,” she said.

“I was thinking about that and how those questions apply to the South African context. And that for me is really, really interesting because we never think of the construction of Afrikanerdom and the construction of white superiority.

“We just know that it is a thing but what is the nitty-gritty of how this thing got built.”

Julius’s access to the Gallo Vault was granted as part of her podcast series Gallo Vault Sessions which takes listeners through Gallo Records’ history as home to some of the continent’s greatest legacy artists.

The series, which started rolling out in March as part of the record company’s 95th anniversary, explores themes such as race, expropriation and exploitation in South African music, while also celebrating the rich history of South Africa’s longest-running record label.

With a roster that includes the likes of Miriam Makeba, Ladysmith Black Mambazo, Lucky Dube, Simphiwe Dana, Oliver Mtukudzi, Thandiswa Mazwai and Skwatta Kamp, the Gallo Vault is a vast reservoir of information on all sorts of stories about the country’s musical history.

Through six intriguing episodes, Gallo Vault Sessions unpacks the journey of the songs and the artists through the lens of the people who were close to the process when the music was made.

Julius’s interest leads to an exploration that unfolds neatly in episode 2(Radio, Race & Genre in South Africa) as well as episode 3 (Afrikanerdom: Dysfunction & Aspiration).

Episode 3 is a particularly fascinating look at Gallo Music’s Afrikaans language catalogue that considers how the sound of whiteness and in particular, “Afrikanerdom”, was a conscious construction by the SABC and by extension, the Broederbond.

It explores how music, in particular, was used as a means of forming Afrikaner conscience in the wake of the Anglo-boer war, and how various musicians reacted against the Broedebond’s idea of what it meant to be a “good Afrikaner” through chats with the likes of musician and music historian Schalk van der Merwe, critical whiteness studies scholar Thandiwe Ntshinga, legacy artist Anton Goosen and Gallo Music’s resident archivist Rob Allingham.

The final episode in the first season of the podcast wrapped up a few weeks ago with an episode looking at the music industry under transition post-independence through bubblegum, kwaito and, now, amapiano.

It neatly brings to a close a sprawling

re-examining of SA’S complex musical past with insights from Don Laka, Simphiwe Dana and Dr Sipho Sitole.

The episode unpacks South African music from the late ’80s by considering how technology affected its sound and how music finally broke free of SABC radio censorship to the rise of powerful black female voices.

Despite these strides, it reflects on how we still hear more American music on the radio than South African.

This period also saw the rise of black women occupying new spaces in the wake of household names like Miriam Makeba.

A short while later, Brenda Fassie kicked down the doors of respectability politics in the bubblegum era paving the way for singers like Lebo Mathosa to walk right through them.

Mathosa’s legacy and influence on aesthetics, in particular, can still be seen today with how women in amapiano are currently dictating the fashion and dance styles of the scene.

Nuggets of insightful information on not just Gallo’s history but also the history of SA music are given throughout the season.

One particularly insightful episode is the fourth one, which explores how talent scouts, producers and loafers shaped the sound of township music.

The episode shares how they were used as proxies for white-owned record labels and their influence in shaping the sounds of ‘black music’ in South Africa.

It also unpacks how labels exploited black recorded music and artists bore the brunt of a financially exploitative industry.

Here, the legendary penny whistler and organ jive player Bra Lulu Masilela from The Boyoyo Boys shares how despite writing many major hits he never received any songwriting credits.

Sipho “Hotstix” Mabuse, Bra Mike Swaratle, Gallo archivist Rob Allingham also speak on the journey of Mam Hilda Tloubatla, the original soprano from The Mahotella Queens.

These and other incredible stories on many of the most impactful artists on the continent make this a one-ofa-kind podcast series.

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2022-09-18T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-09-18T07:00:00.0000000Z

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