We use the term “” very loosely these days, for anybody even slightly multi-talented. But Lesotho-born jazz drummer, novelist and development scholar Morabo Morojele was the genuine article.
He not only worked across multiple fields, but achieved impressively in all. Morojele died on May 20, aged 64.
As a into South African jazz, I encountered him initially through his impressive live performances. I was surprised to hear about his first novel and then – as a of writing – bowled over by its literary power.
Celebrating a life such as Morojele’s matters, because a pan-African polymath like him cut against the grain of a world of narrow professional boxes, where borders are increasingly closing to “foreigners”.
This was a man who not only played the jazz changes, but wrote – and lived – the social and political ones.
Economist who loved jazzBorn on September 16, 1960 in Maseru, Lesotho, Morojele schooled at the Waterford Kamhlaba United World College in Swaziland (now Eswatini) before being accepted to study at the London School of Economics.
In London in the early 1980s the young economics student converted his longstanding jazz drumming hobby into a professional side gig. There was a vibrant African diasporic music community, respected by and often sharing stages with their British peers. Morojele worked,...