Bright Blue

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Bright Blue is a sporadic South African band that was prominent on the progressive scene in the final years of apartheid. The band's name "reflected the paradox of being bright in a very blue time" but was also a tribute to Chelsea FC.[1]

They are best known for the protest song "Weeping", written by keyboard-player Dan Heymann, that the band recorded incorporating strands of Nkosi Sikelel' iAfrika at a time when public performance of the ANC anthem could lead to summary arrest. However the powers that be seemed to notice neither the reference to a banned tune nor that the song was an allegory about then State President PW Botha and the state of emergency that he'd imposed.[2]

In 1999, Weeping was voted the "All-time favourite South African song" in a poll by SA Rock Digest/Amuzine.[3] In 2000, Weeping was voted the Radio 5 'song of the century'.[citation needed]

An early forerunner of the Rainbow Nation or crossover sound, that blends rock, pop and mbaqanga with occasional lyrics in indigenous languages, they were contemporaries of Juluka, éVoid,Mango Groove, Johannes Kerkorrel, and Kalahari Surfers.[citation needed]

[edit] Musicians

  • Ian Cohen - bass, vocals
  • Peter Cohen - drums, vocals
  • Tom Fox - guitar, vocals
  • Dan Heymann - keyboards
  • Robin Levetan - vocals (first album only)


  • Basil Coetzee - saxophone on 'Weeping'
  • McCoy Mrubata - saxophone on 'Yesterday Night'
  • Peter Barnett - percussion on first album
  • Scorpion Madondo - saxophone on 'Time On My Own'
  • Terri Cohen: backing vocals (1996, 2001)
  • Tonia Selley: backing vocals (1996)
  • Mark Goliath: keyboards (2001)
  • Buddy Wells - saxophone on 'Madiba 1990'

[edit] Albums

  • Bright Blue (1984)
  • The Rising Tide (1988)
  • Every Now And Then - The Best So Far... 1984-2001 (2001)

[edit] References

General references
Specific references
  1. ^ Bright Blue (2003). Bright Blue History. The Official Bright Blue Website. Retrieved on 2007-07-14.
  2. ^ Heymann, Dan. Weeping Lyrics. Weeping, The South African Anti-Apartheid Protest Song. Retrieved on 2007-07-14.
  3. ^ South African Rock Lists. Retrieved on 2008-02-10.