2017년 6월 6일 화요일

Miriam Makeba

Miriam Makeba

Miriam Makeba (Miriam Makeba, from March 4, 1932 to November 10, 2008 [2]) is a Grammy award prize winner in singers of the Republic of South Africa. Even the name of mom Africa is known.

Miriam Makeba
Miriam Makeba10.JPG
Concert (1991) with Dizzy Gillespie
Basic information
Birth name Zenzile Miriam Makeba[1]
Another name Mom Africa
The birth 1932March 4
South African flag Federal Johannesburg, South Africa
Death (2008-11-10) November 10, 2008 (76 years old death)
Italian flag Italy Castile ヴォルトゥルノ
Occupation Singer
Activity period 1954-2008
Label マンテカ, RCA, Mercury, Kapp Records, Collectables Records, Suave Music, Warner brothers record, polygram, Drg, Stern's Africa, Kaz, Sonodisc
Official site Official Website

Table of contents

Origin

I raised international fame by success of the musical "King cong" and a hit of "Pata Pata". However, I am ousted by anti-apartheid activity overseas in 1967. I am invited as the Guinean セク トゥーレ President in 1969 and it is the third husband and moves to Guinea with Stokely Carmichael of the exercise activist of black. I received the support of the President and worked on a performance with カンテット ギネエンヌ.

Swaddling clothes

ザンジール Miriam Makeba was born in Johannesburg on March 4, 1932. Mother was sun sesame of the Swazi (person of traditional divine spirit treatment / Chinese medicine healer). Father is from the Xhosa, and Miriam dies at the age of 6 years old. Miriam is arrested for local brew sale such as the beer that mother is said to be アンコンボチ (umqombothi) during 18 days after birth and is sentenced to the punishment of penal servitude six months. Miriam will spend six months after birth with mother at a prison. [3][4] spend elementary school days of 8 years afterwards in the chorus club of the kill melton training school. [5][6]

At the age of 18 years old, Miriam Makeba delivers only daughter, Anjelica Bonghi マケバ. Father is James クバイ in the first husbands of Miriam. [7] マケバ had a diagnosis of breast cancer afterwards, and, after a short-term married life, James left the cause of マケバ. [8]

The activity as the professional of マケバ becomes a main vocal of South African jazz group, Manhattan Brothers in the 1950s and begins because her face appears in a poster for the first time. She left Manhattan Brothers, and all members by oneself cut a record as a group for women, the skylarks [9] and sang the fused music of the melody of jazz and the traditional South Africa music afterwards. [3] Single "Pata Pata",[6] which I released in 1956 is introduced in all radio stations of South Africa, and her name will be known in South Africa. [10]

Discography

Studio album

  • Miriam Makeba, 1960, RCA LSP2267
  • The Many Voices of Miriam Makeba, 1960, Kapp KL1274
  • The World of Miriam Makeba, 1963, RCA LSP2750
  • Makeba, 1964, RCA LSP2845
  • Makeba Sings, 1965, RCA LSP3321
  • An Evening with Belafonte/Makeba (with Harry Belafonte), 1965, RCA LSP3420
  • The Magic of Makeba, 1965, RCA LSP3512
  • The Magnificient Miriam Makeba, 1966, Mercury 134016
  • All About Miriam, 1966, Mercury 134029
  • Miriam Makeba in Concert!, 1967, Reprise RS6253
  • Pata Pata, 1967, Reprise RS6274
  • Makeba!, 1968, Reprise RS6310
  • Live in Tokyo, 1968, Reprise SJET8082
  • Keep Me in Mind, 1970, Reprise RS6381
  • A Promise, 1974, RCA YSPL1-544
  • Live in Conakry - Appel A L'Afriqu, 1974, Sonodisc SLP22
  • Miriam Makeba & Bongi, 1975, Sonodisc SLP48
  • Live in Paris, 1977, CD6508
  • Country Girl, 1978, Sonodisc ESP165518
  • Comme Une Symphonie d'Amour, 1979
  • Sangoma, 1988, Warner Bros. 25673
  • Welela, 1989, Gallo CDGSP3084
  • Eyes on Tomorrow, 1991, Gallo CDGSP3086
  • Sing Me A Song, 1993, CDS12702
  • Homeland, 2000, Putumayo PUTU1642
  • Live at Berns Salonger, Stockholm, Sweden, 1966, 2003 Gallo Music GWVCD-49
  • Reflecting, 2004, Gallo Music GWVCD-51
  • Makeba Forever, 2006, Gallo Music CDGURB-082

Compilation

  • The Queen of African Music -17 Great Songs, 1987
  • Africa 1960-65 recordings, 1991
  • Eyes on Tomorrow, 1991
  • The Best of Miriam Makeba & The Skylarks: 1956-1959 recordings, 1998
  • Mama Africa: The Very Best of Miriam Makeba, 2000
  • The Guinea Years, 2001
  • The Definitive Collection, 2002, Wrasse Records
  • The Best of The Early Years, 2003

Re-F Lance

  1. ^ Miriam Makeba official website
  2. ^ Some sources (e.g. [1]) give 9 November as her date of death, however her official website gives 10 November
  3. ^ a b Nkrumah 2001.
  4. ^ Schwarz-Bart 2003, p. 208.
  5. ^ Kaufman 2006, p. 333.
  6. ^ a b AllSands.
  7. ^ Rudo Mungoshi, "Hamba kahle, Mama Africa ", Joburg official website: www.joburg.org.za, 14 November 2008.
  8. ^ Ewens, Graeme (November 11, 2008). "Obituary: Miriam Makeba". The Guardian. 26 March 2012 reading.
  9. ^ Planet, Janet. "Miriam Makeba". Africanmusic.org. November 12, 2010 reading.
  10. ^ Schwarz-Bart 2003, p. 213.

This article is taken from the Japanese Wikipedia Miriam Makeba

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