Skip to main content
Part of complete coverage on

Vusi Mahlasela: 'The Voice' on spreading African spirit through song

From Jessica Ellis, CNN
updated 6:16 AM EDT, Wed May 9, 2012
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • With over 20 years experience, Vusi Mahlasela is one of Africa's most lauded singers
  • Through his international success, he focuses on spreading African philosophy, Ubuntu
  • He has established a foundation nurturing young African talent and providing music lessons

Editor's note: African Voices highlights Africa's most engaging personalities, exploring the lives and passions of people who rarely open themselves up to the camera.

Watch the show: Friday 0730, Saturday :1430, Sunday : 0800,1730, Monday : 0930,1630, Tuesday : 0430 (all times GMT)

(CNN) -- He is lauded as one of Africa's most unique voices, with a fanbase stretching across the world, but South African singing sensation Vusi Mahlasela remains faithful to his roots.

For more than 20 years, the legendary singer has been celebrated globally for his powerful vocals and universal messages of freedom and human kindness. He has toured the world extensively and collaborated with major music stars such as Sting, Paul Simon and Dave Matthews.

But despite all his success and international acclaim, Mahlasela still resides in Mamelodi, the small township northeast of Pretoria where he grew up and nurtured his passion and talent for music.

He says it all started for him here.

"Quite a lot of inspirations and also some of the songs that I wrote, I penned them here in Mamelodi," says Mahlasela, who is known in South Africa as "The Voice." "I still have very strong connections with this place," he adds. "I feel rooted and connected to this place, I love it."

A humble star, Mahlaselaʼs roots are reflected in his songs and lyrics, many written during one of the toughest times in South Africaʼs history -- the fight against apartheid.

Vusi Mahlasela with artists including Joss Stone and Angelique Kidjo at the 2007 Live Earth press conference in South Africa.
Vusi Mahlasela with artists including Joss Stone and Angelique Kidjo at the 2007 Live Earth press conference in South Africa.

Somali rapper K'naan makes songs in the key of love

Perhaps his most famous song, "When You Come Back," has become an anthem in the country, celebrating the return of those who escaped apartheid and lived in exile.

Mahlasela says the song's hopeful lyrics, written years before South Africaʼs democratic change, were also for those arrested, like former South African president Nelson Mandela -- not surprisingly, Mahlasela was asked in 1994 to perform at Mandelaʼs inauguration.

With Dave Stewart, Cyndi Lauper, Angelique Kidjo, Tim Robbins, Morgan Freeman, Baaba Maal and Jesse Clegg during the Mandela Day concert.
With Dave Stewart, Cyndi Lauper, Angelique Kidjo, Tim Robbins, Morgan Freeman, Baaba Maal and Jesse Clegg during the Mandela Day concert.

Passionate about spreading the traditional African philosophy, Ubuntu, many of Mahlaselaʼs global tours throughout his career have been benefit concerts. He has also become an ambassador to the 46664 foundation -- named after Mandelaʼs prison number and dedicated to raising awareness about HIV/AIDS.

"That spirit of collective good, it's still in the principle of ubuntu," he says. "Everyday kindness, love, forgiveness, reconciliation, so everything about us that makes us human."

[The foundation provides] music lessons, but also to develop even those who are playing already and we do have outreach programs for primary schools.
Vusi Mahlasela

Honoring a career that spans 20 years and 10 albums, Mahlasela was recently given a lifetime achievement award in South Africa.

Watch: Vusi Mahlasela's creative process

The singer is now focusing on helping younger generations, supporting Africaʼs future generation of musicians and songwriters through the foundation he created in 2000.

"It is to give music lessons, but also to develop even those who are playing already and we do have outreach programs for primary schools," says Mahlasela.

"They're trying to encourage the schools and the governments to give lessons to the young ones and to encourage also the musicians or the students to start picking up folk, indigenous, traditional instruments, because it's something that they really have to be proud of and to infuse them with Western instruments."

On stage, Ubuntu shines through. Mahlaselaʼs distinctive vocals blend in wonderfully with his enchanting music, taking the listeners on an emotional journey.

"My music is sort of more accessible to every listener, young and old, they love my music," he says.

"And I've seen it also happen that I have also gotten that energy back from the people -- performing and after that when I'm going out there to sign CDs people will come to me with quite a lot of different great compliments, so it gives me the pleasurable feeling that I can really give something to the people and that will really change their lives to the better."

ADVERTISEMENT
Part of complete coverage on
African Voices
updated 9:38 AM EDT, Fri July 27, 2012
Johny Akinyemi, 23, is Nigeria's first Olympic canoeist.
Canoeist Johny Akinyemi, 23, is the first athlete to paddle for Nigeria at the world's major sport event.
updated 5:44 AM EDT, Tue July 24, 2012
Senegalese-born Marieme Jamme is renowned in the Africa tech scene and beyond.
Senegalese-born Marieme Jamme is at the forefront of the technology revolution that is slowly transforming Africa.
updated 8:05 AM EDT, Thu July 19, 2012
Toumani Diabate is a Malian kora legend, well-known internotianally for his daring and innovative musical partnerships.
updated 9:28 AM EDT, Thu July 12, 2012
Zimbabwean-born artist Kudzanai Chiurai is one of the fastest-rising talents in the contemporary African art scene.
updated 9:27 AM EDT, Tue July 3, 2012
Eric Kabera helps Rwanda build new identity. He founded the first film school in Rwanda, as well as an annual Rwandan film festival.
updated 8:35 AM EDT, Fri June 29, 2012
As the first female judge appointed to the High Court in Botswana, Unity Dow is paving the way for other women fighting for equality and justice.
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf liberia
Africa's women are increasingly taking center stage in Africa's politics, occupying positions of power across the 54-strong continent.
updated 5:39 AM EDT, Fri June 22, 2012
Gahaya Links is a handicraft company that is transforming women who were once enemies from warring tribes into business partners.
updated 5:41 AM EDT, Fri June 22, 2012
For Omara Moctar, the electrifying Tuareg guitarist better known as "Bombino," there is no better place to play music than the desert.
updated 5:38 AM EDT, Fri June 22, 2012
Cameroonian journalist Ntone Edjabe has set up an exciting media platform that mixes culture and politics to present an unconventional portrayal of the continent.
updated 5:44 AM EDT, Fri June 22, 2012
It's often said "behind a strong man there is a strong woman" -- and in the case of Kenya's prime minister and his wife, the saying seems to be true.
updated 5:46 AM EDT, Fri June 22, 2012
By giving dance therapy to people of all ages in refugee camps, Ahmed believes he's helping them regain self-confidence.
A group of young men gather on a dusty, makeshift soccer field, the beat of a skin drum surrounding them. But the men are not here to play football. They are here to dance.
updated 5:49 AM EDT, Fri June 22, 2012
CNN brings you an insight into the life of South Africa's first black dean, Professor Jonathan Jansen and his moral code: reconciliation over retribution.
updated 6:16 AM EDT, Wed May 9, 2012
Vusi Mahlasela is one of Africa's most unique voices, with a fanbase stretching across the world.
updated 9:20 AM EDT, Mon May 14, 2012
What five things do the women of Africa need? Caroline Mutoko answers that question using her mother as her point of reference.
Each week African Voices brings you inspiring and compelling profiles of Africans across the continent and around the world.
ADVERTISEMENT