Zulu Guitar Blues - VA (180G Vinyl LP)
Zulu Guitar Blues - VA (180G Vinyl LP)
Zulu Guitar Blues - VA (180G Vinyl LP)
Zulu Guitar Blues - VA (180G Vinyl LP)
Zulu Guitar Blues - VA (180G Vinyl LP)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Zulu Guitar Blues - VA (180G Vinyl LP)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Zulu Guitar Blues - VA (180G Vinyl LP)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Zulu Guitar Blues - VA (180G Vinyl LP)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Zulu Guitar Blues - VA (180G Vinyl LP)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Zulu Guitar Blues - VA (180G Vinyl LP)

Zulu Guitar Blues - VA (180G Vinyl LP)

Regular price
R 549.00
Sale price
R 549.00
Regular price
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Tax included.

Deluxe 180g gatefold vinyl edition pressed at Pallas Germany. Includes unseen photographs, essay and song translations. Vinyl housed in polylined inner sleeve.

Zulu Guitar's Pioneering Tricksters

But for this compilation of rescued songs masterfully restored from rare 78 rpm shellacs, few could imagine the diversely beautiful roots of Zulu Guitar Music emerging during the period 1950 – 1965. Story-tellers and master musicians appropriate outlaw personae, re-purpose country and western, Hawaiian and other styles, to stretch and challenge our notion of “the Zulu guitar”.

Twenty-five songs (18 on vinyl) plunge us into the depths of the migrant experience. Translations in the liner notes offer us glimpses of pugnacity, melancholy and heartache, all coloured by the paternalism that circumscribed the singers’ apartheid-dominated lives.

The early mbaqanga undertow in many of the songs subverts the wanderlust of Country and Western music into a fugitivity burdened by nostalgia. Something irretrievable has been lost, prompting a blending of ideas and cultures to make sense through thankless acts of musical divination. Inadvertently they have been thrust into the role of the antihero, where outwitting competition for lovers is as important as evading the Black Jacks (apartheid’s municipal cops) and their informants.

Considering the politically repressive period that this music emerges from, we can surmise that the specificity in the storytelling went a long way towards evading censure. But even when words are absent, there is a narrative arc suggested by the musical expression.

With most of the master tapes wilfully destroyed or lost, modern transcription and restoration techniques from the original shellac discs present the original sound most likely more clearly than ever heard before.
 


released May 16, 2025

Produced for reissue by Chris Albertyn and Matt Temple at
Matsuli Music, and Siemon Allen at Flatinternational.

Essay, song notes and translations by Kwanele Sosibo.

Artwork design and research by Siemon Allen.

Audio restoration and lacquers by Frank Merritt at The Carvery.

Original 78 rpm recordings sourced from the collections of
Chris Albertyn at Matsuli Music, and Siemon Allen at the
Flatinternational Archive.

Front cover image of Job Ndlangalala, aka The Play Singer
sourced from the Columbia EP, Africa - Music and Life Today Vol. 2
(SEYJ 103-104).

Page 2 and 3 images of Solomon Ndaba, aka Cowboy
Superman, sourced from Zonk, January 1952.

Tracks 1-18 are available on the vinyl release Zulu
Guitar Blues (MM130). Tracks 19-25 are digital-only
bonus selections.

all rights reserved