Entertainment

Award-winning South African jazz singer Gloria Bosman dies

Her career began in 1999 with the acclaimed album Tranquility.
Her career began in 1999 with the acclaimed album Tranquility. Her career began in 1999 with the acclaimed album Tranquility.

Smooth-voiced South African jazz musician Gloria Bosman, who was lauded for her contribution to the country’s music industry in a career spanning more than two decades, has died, her family said.

Bosman’s relatives said in a statement: “After a short illness, she transcended peacefully at her home, surrounded by family.

“Gloria 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.”

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

South Africa’s ruling African National Congress party paid tribute to Bosman, saying the country’s music industry will be poorer without her.

“Gloria 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,” the ANC said in a statement.

South African jazz legend Sipho “Hotstix” Mabuse was among the first to express sadness at her passing, tweeting that he was “sad, gutted and shattered”.

Bosman started singing in church and theatres, 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 musician’s first album Tranquility was released in 1999 to critical acclaim, winning her the Best Newcomer award at the South African Music Awards (Samas).

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

Bosman performed and recorded with some of South Africa’s prominent musicians including the late Hugh Masekela, Sibongile Khumalo and Moses Molelekwa, as well as Zimbabwe’s Oliver Mtukudzi.

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

“As 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 organisation should continue to march towards,” said Samro board chairman Nicholas Maweni.