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Brenda Fassie - South African pop Diva dies in hospital Print E-mail

Brenda Fassie, South African singer dies in hospital in Johannesburg, South AfricaBrenda Fassie passes away after suffering cardiac arrest.


Brenda Fassie, South Africa's undisputed Queen of the Vocals and the country's biggest selling artist ever, passed away on Sunday at Sunninghill Hospital in Johannesburg, South Africa. Brenda was admitted to the Intensive Care Unit on 26 April after she suffered a cardiac arrest and subsequently collapsed. Her condition has been critical ever since and she had been lying in coma..


Since news of her condition was first known, thousands of well wishers flocked to the hospital prompting doctors to ask she be left in peace. Among the wellwishers who visited Brenda in the hospital include former President of South Africa, Nelson Mandela, the incumbent President, Thabo Mbeki as well as Winnie Madikizela Mandela. Others are singer Yvonne Chaka Chaka and prominent members of government.Hailed by the Time Magazine as "The Madonna of the Townships" Brenda Fassie lived a life full of controversies coupled with drugs and alcohol abuse as well as broken relationships. But all that have known this petite Diva of South African music agree on one thing: she was a person with a great heart, unselfish and always helpfull towards the poor.

Brenda Fassie also known as "the girl with the golden voice", "South Africa's queen of pop" and "undisputed queen of the vocals", was at the forefront of black South African popular music for 20 years, a carrier that began in earnest with her first huge hit "Weekend Special" way back in 1983. "Weekend Special" entered the Billboard Black Chart in 1986 and was o­ne of the fastest selling records of the time.

Brenda Fassie short biography - Courtesy Wayua Muli

Born in Langa, Cape Town, in 1964, Brenda's first musical endeavour was at the age of four, when, inspired by her pianist mother, she formed a singing group. By the time she was 14, she had already moved to Johannesburg to seek her fortune. Using the South Western Townships (Soweto) as her base, Brenda was asked to stand in for an absent member of o­ne of the hotter groups of that era, called Joy. Hers was instant success. Joining two other groups, Blondie and Papa then the Big Dudes in quick succession, it was not long before Brenda was recording her solo debut, 'Weekend Special'. Soon, the song was a hit even in Britain.

Never forsaking her township roots, Brenda stayed in Soweto even as she rose to become the country's biggest star. Reknown for her generosity and kindness of spirit, Brenda would leave her doors open for strangers to walk into her house and say hello. Never o­ne to hold money too dearly, she was overly generous with her possessions and her money. But by 1986, this 21-year old had become an old guard o­n the entertainment scene. And it was becoming obvious that fame had come to Brenda too early, too fast. Brenda herself, in characteristic openness and honesty soon confirmed rumours that she was a drug-addict and a lesbian. Unfortunately, the admission that she was a lesbian started to erode her image irrevocably.

South African singer Brenda FassieThe early nineties were turbulent times for Brenda. Introduced to drugs around this time by a Nigerian bodyguard, what started as an occasional indulgence for cocaine soon turned into an imprisoning addiction. The free-fall that her life had become gathered momentum in this period. In 1990, she was sued for fraud together with then husband, Nhlanhla Mbambo and former boyfriend Eric Mbeko.

Her marriage to Mbambo broke up the next year, when she called him a leech, a lecher and a wife-beater in the press. Various concert promoters also sued her and the public boycotted her music after she failed to attend scheduled concerts in Soweto. In 1992, she was convicted of assaulting a photojournalist. This was also the year that o­ne of her former lovers went public with an account of his miserable life with Brenda. In 1993, her mother died. Her long-time manager and friend, Sello Chicco Twala, abandoned her later that year, and she lost both her apartment and her house, located in up-market parts of Johannesburg. Her son Bongani was thrown out of school for non-payment of fees. And 14 years after her first hit, Brenda's o­nly claim to fame was the now-outdated 'Weekend Special'.

In 1994, in a cocaine-induced haze, Brenda barely got through the recording of her next album, 'Abantu Bayakhuluma'. The album immediately after this, titled 'Now is the Time', featured an ingenious duet with maestro Papa Wemba. o­nce asked about the experience of working with him, she said, "I can't remember a thing, I was so high." It was around this time that her closest friend and lover, Poppie Sihlahla, died of a drug overdose in Johannesburg's seedy Hillbrow suburb. Brenda and she had rented a room in a hotel in the area, where they would free-base and binge o­n cocaine. o­ne night, Poppie was discovered lying in bed unconscious, with Brenda next to her in a drugged stupor. Poppie was rushed to hospital, but died o­n the way there. Later, Brenda was reported to have said that Poppie died of asthma-related conditions, and that she had never been a drug-addict. Whatever the case, Poppie's death inspired Brenda to come out of her stupor and start some serious work.

In 1997, she started recording what was to be her comeback album, 'Memeza'. "Tell everyone Brenda's back," she said. It became her anthem. And when 'Memeza' went o­n to become South Africa's best selling album of 1998, this anthem became fact. But the spectre of her drug-addict life still haunted her, and there were occasional lapses. o­nce, scheduled to grace a fashion show in Johannesburg's Hyde Park Corner, Brenda arrived there late and drunk, and unfit to perform. Yvonne Chaka Chaka was called in to take her place, and Brenda's management company was left to refund the R4,000 (Sh40,000) fees that they had already been paid, plus the R1,500 (Sh15,000) that they had paid in airfare for Brenda, her then boyfriend Ludwe Gift Zikalala and her secretary, Oscar Tyumre, from Durban to Johannesburg.

Not long after that, she was in the news again. This time, another jilted girlfriend of hers, Karen Baker, was in the limelight with claims that Brenda had borrowed money and sundry items from her and refused to return them. The items included a cell-phone, a television set and a radio. "We stopped seeing each other last November," Karen said. "She knows deep in her heart that she owes me. I just want what's rightfully mine - I want my things back. She has used me and now she's reacting negatively." According to Brenda, Karen was just a scorned woman looking for revenge. "She wants to be my girlfriend - she wants me to sleep with her, to hold and touch her," she said o­n live radio o­ne evening. "I admit to selling the TV set and the cell-phone, but we sold those together - we wanted to buy drugs." Her hit song, 'Vulindlela', off the 'Memeza' album was, in the meantime, doing very well - so well that Brenda could now afford to start building a luxurious house in the suburbs of Jo'burg. It also seemed that Brenda had found lasting love again; having broken up with Ludwe earlier o­n, Brenda had now settled for a man 15 years her junior, called Landile Shembe.

Three months after they got together, he proposed to her at her 36th birthday bash...and dumped her five days later. This time Brenda was in the news again with claims that he was a con-man who was o­nly after her money, and that her son Bongani, now 14, was the person who had warned her against marrying Landile. This apparent heartache did not stop her star from rising; her recent album, 'Nomakanjani' went triple platinum in November of last year, and various saw her reach beyond her southern borders into east and central Africa. Brenda Fassie celebrated her 39th birthday recently with the release of her new album Mali. - Sapa

We at Kongoi Productions would like to send our condolences to Brenda Fassies's family.

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