Award-Winning South African Jazz Singer Gloria Bosman Dies

Jazz singer and writer, Gloria Bosman performs at the 22nd Joy of Jazz Festival in Johannesburg on Sept. 26, 2019. Smooth-voiced South African jazz musician Gloria Bosman has been lauded for her contribution to the countryā€™s music industry in a career spanning more than two decades. Bosman died on Tuesday March 14, 2023 following a short illness, her family announced. (AP Photo)

BY MOGOMOTSI MAGOME

JOHANNESBURG (AP)
ā€” Smooth-voiced South African jazz musician Gloria Bosman has been lauded for her contribution to the countryā€™s music industry in a career spanning more than two decades.

Bosman died on Tuesday following a short illness, her family announced.

ā€œAfter a short illness, she transcended peacefully at her home, surrounded by family,ā€ the family said in a statement. ā€œGloria had devoted her life, not just to her family, but to her music, she was loved and adored by many here in South Africa and beyond its borders.ā€

The Soweto-born Bosman was praised for her soothing, silky vocals and versatility in crossing over to various music genres.

South Africaā€™s ruling African National Congress party paid tribute to Bosman, saying the countryā€™s music industry will be poorer without her.

ā€œGloria Bosman belongs to a generation of female musical greats who refused to submit to patriarchal stereotypes in a male dominated industry. She was a fiery and militant revolutionary in the creative sector,ā€ the ANC said in a statement.


South African jazz legend Sipho ā€œHotstixā€ Mabuse was among the first to express sadness at her passing, tweeting that he was ā€œsad, gutted and shattered.ā€

Bosman started singing in church and theaters, but a scholarship to study opera at the then-Pretoria Technikon (now Tshwane University of Technology) was crucial in her development as an artist.

She returned to perform at the educational institution later in her career.

The award-winning musicianā€™s first album ā€œTranquilityā€ was released in 1999 to critical acclaim, winning her the Best Newcomer award at the South African Music Awards.

Her career took off and later she won a second Sama awards and 11 nominations, won two Africa-wide Kora awards and performed on many stages across the world.

Bosman performed and recorded with some of South Africaā€™s prominent musicians including the late Hugh Masekela, Sibongile Khumalo and Moses Molelekwa, as well as Zimbabweā€™s Oliver Mutukudzi.

In December last year she was appointed to the board of the South African Music Rights Organization, a body set up to protect the intellectual property of music creators by collecting licensing fees and distributing royalties.

ā€œAs a composer and a performing artist, in the short period that Ms. Bosman was a member of the board, she added a perspective that comprised of a rich blend of insights on member aspirations as well as the direction that our organization should continue to march towards,ā€ said Samro board chairman Nicholas Maweni.

Details for her memorial services and funeral have not been announced.

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