Makaya Ntshoko

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Makaya or Makhaya Ntshoko (b. October 29, 1939, Cape Town) is a South African drummer.

Ntshoko played with Dollar Brand's trio in 1958, and recorded in a sextet with Hugh Masekela and John Mehegan in 1959. Ntshoko plays on the Jazz Epistles album Jazz Epistle: Verse 1, one of the most prominent examples of South African hard bop. After the breakup of the group Ntshoko founded his own group, the Jazz Giants, with Kippie Moeketsi, Dudu Pukwana, Gideon Nuxmalo, and Martin Mgijima.

Ntshoko left South Africa in 1962, moving to Switzerland and playing with Johnny Gertze and Dollar Brand at the Club Africana in Zurich from 1963-65. This trio appears in the 1966 Danish documentary Portrait of a Bushman. Following Brand's move to New York City, Ntshoko played in Copenhagen (1966, 1969-70) and recorded with Stuff Smith (1967), Benny Bailey (1968), Dexter Gordon (1968-69), and Ben Webster (1969).

Ntshoko embarked on a tour of the United States and the Bahamas in the early 1970s. He and Masekela recorded again in 1972. In 1974, he founded an ensemble he called Makaya and the Tsotsis with Heinz Sauer, Bob Degen, and Isla Eckinger (later Jürgen Wuchner). Concomitantly he played in Nicra with Nick Evans and Radu Malfatti in 1975. He played with Joe McPhee and Pepper Adams at the Willisau Jazz Festival in 1975. He and Mal Waldron collaborated from 1977 to 1979.

Little is known of Ntshoko's whereabouts in the 1980s. He played at the Montreux Jazz Festival with Stephan Kurmann in 1991, but appears to have left music after 1993.

[edit] References

Languages