Johannesburg (song)

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ReleasedNovember 1975
RecordedSummer 1975[1]
"Johannesburg"
Song by Gil Scott-Heron and Brian Jackson
from the album From South Africa to South Carolina
ReleasedNovember 1975
RecordedSummer 1975[1]
StudioD&B Sound (Silver Spring, Maryland)[1]
Genre
Length4:52
LabelArista
Lyricist(s)Gil Scott-Heron[1]
Producer(s)The Midnight Band[1]
Official audio
"Johannesburg" (live) on YouTube

"Johannesburg" is a song by Gil Scott-Heron and Brian Jackson, with music provided by the Midnight Band. It is the first track on Scott-Heron and Jackson's collaborative album From South Africa to South Carolina, released in November 1975 through Arista Records. The lyrics to "Johannesburg" discussed opposition to apartheid in South Africa, and likened apartheid to the disenfranchisement of African Americans in the United States.[2] The song became a popular hit, reaching No. 29 on the Billboard R&B chart in 1975.[3][4] According to Nelson George, "Johannesburg" played a role in spreading the cultural awareness of apartheid.[5]

Gil Scott-Heron and Brian Jackson met and began collaborating while they were both students at Lincoln University in Oxford, Pennsylvania.[6] The duo formed the Midnight Band,[7] which Jackson led as a keyboardist.[3] Several members of the Midnight Band had previously played with the Black & Blues, a musical group Scott-Heron and Jackson had formed as students.[6] The Midnight Band played the music on Scott-Heron's 1975 albums The First Minute of a New Day and From South Africa to South Carolina, and was important to their success.[3][4]

From South Africa to South Carolina explored contentious political issues: "Johannesburg" examined the apartheid system in South Africa.[8] At the time, South Africa was witnessing a struggle between the African National Congress, which sought to dismantle apartheid, and the government of the National Party, which sought to maintain it.[7] Black South Africans were being denied the right to vote, to assemble, and to form trade unions.[2] The lyrics of "Johannesburg" do not criticize apartheid directly, but pose questions, asking whether the listener has heard the news from Johannesburg, and suggesting that black South Africans were rising up.[2] In doing so Scott-Heron makes frequent use of phrases from black vernacular.[2] Musically, the song has been associated with disco,[3] funk protest,[9] and jazz-funk.[10]

The song frequently refers to the scarcity and unreliability of information in the West about opposition to apartheid within South Africa, and calls for a continued awareness of events in South Africa.[6] The refrain "What's the word? Johannesburg!" represents a musical crescendo within the song, during which Scott-Heron engages in a call and response with band members.[2] The refrain parodies a jingle for Thunderbird wine, a cheap wine sold by Gallo: "What's the word? Thunderbird!".[2] Scott-Heron's lyrics expressed his Pan-African and transnational leanings, likening apartheid to the disenfranchisement of African Americans in the United States.[2] The song ends by comparing Johannesburg to a number of cities in the US, thereby noting the "absence of an achieved freedom on American soil", according to scholar Stéphane Robolin.[6]

Release, reception, and legacy

References

Sources

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