Abacothozi
1976
Night In Pelican
01. Dolly's Dish 13:37
02. Night In Pelican 13:10
Artwork – Zulu Bidi
Bass – Berthwel Maphumulo
Drums – Innocent Mathunjwa
Guitar – Joe Zikhali
Organ – Mac Mathunjwa
Some live albums try to recreate a concert. Live at the Pelican by Abacothozi feels more like it smuggles the entire venue into your living room, chairs, chatter, electricity, and all. Released in 1976, it is less a tidy document and more a living pulse from a scene that refused to be quiet, even when the world around it insisted otherwise.
Abacothozi were part of South Africa’s rich and resilient jazz tradition during the apartheid era, a time when artistic expression was both constrained and, paradoxically, supercharged. Like many groups of the period, they operated within a network of clubs, community spaces, and occasional recording opportunities that functioned as cultural lifelines. Their name, which loosely evokes “the chosen ones” or “those set apart,” feels fitting. Bands like this were not just entertainers. They were carriers of sound, identity, and a kind of coded conversation that could slip past barriers even when words could not. Precise documentation of the lineup, as with many groups from this scene, is a bit like trying to pin down smoke. Musicians came together in shifting constellations, often overlapping with other ensembles in the broader South African jazz ecosystem. What matters is less the fixed roster and more the shared language they spoke.
To understand Live at the Pelican, you have to step into the broader current of South African jazz during the 1960s and 70s. This was a movement shaped by restriction but driven by extraordinary creativity. Artists blended American jazz influences with local traditions, church music, township rhythms, and a deep sense of spiritual and communal expression. While some musicians went into exile, others stayed and built a vibrant, if often under-documented, scene at home. Venues like the Pelican Club were more than just places to hear music. They were spaces of gathering, release, and subtle resistance. The music could be joyful, mournful, defiant, or all three at once, often within the same tune.
On Live at the Pelican, Abacothozi function as a collectiv e rather than a star system. You hear saxophones that speak in long, searching lines, keyboards that shimmer and anchor, bass that walks and occasionally runs, and drums that seem to understand both time and how to bend it. There is a strong sense of listening throughout. Solos emerge organically, not as spotlight moments but as extensions of a group conversation. It is less “now featuring” and more “now continuing.” The interplay suggests musicians deeply attuned to each other, able to pivot, stretch, and settle without losing cohesion. It is the kind of chemistry that cannot be faked and rarely survives outside of live performance, which makes this recording all the more valuable.
The rhythm section provides a steady, often danceable foundation, but it is not rigid. There is a looseness to the groove, a slight elasticity that gives the music its warmth. The bass lines are melodic as well as functional, often acting as a bridge between rhythm and harmony. The drums are responsive rather than domineering, shaping the flow of the music without dictating it. They nudge, accent, and occasionally push, like a conversation partner who knows exactly when to interject. Melodically, the horns and keyboards carry much of the emotional weight. Themes are introduced and then explored through improvisation, expanding and contracting like breath. There are moments of intensity where the music swells into something almost overwhelming, followed by passages of restraint that feel like a collective exhale.
The recording itself has that slightly rough, live quality. It is not pristine, ut it is honest. You hear the room, the audience, the small imperfections that remind you this is happening in real time. In a way, the imperfections are part of the charm. They are the fingerprints on the glass. In 1976, albums like Live at the Pelican existed within a complicated landscape. Locally, they resonated with audiences who understood the cultural and emotional context. The music spoke directly to lived experience, offering both escape and reflection. However, broader recognition was limited by the realities of apartheid-era South Africa. Distribution was restricted, international exposure was minimal, and much of the scene remained under the radar globally. Within its immediate environment, though, this kind of music mattered deeply. It was not background sound. It was part of the social fabric.
Over time, recordings like Live at the Pelican have taken on greater significance as documents of a vital musical tradition. The influence of South African jazz, including artists who remained in the country and those who went into exile, has rippled outward into global jazz and beyond. The blending of local rhythms with improvisational freedom has inspired musicians across continents. As more archival material has surfaced and been reissued, there has been a growing appreciation for the depth and diversity of this scene. Albums like this are now heard not just as historical curiosities, but as living music that still has something to say.
Listening to Live at the Pelican is a bit like stepping into a room where the air itself seems to hum. It is not polished, it is not overly structured, and it does not try to impress you with technical fireworks at every turn. Instead, it draws you in with feel, connection, and a sense of shared space. You can almost picture the musicians, the audience, the moment unfolding. It is a reminder that jazz, at its core, is about communication. Sometimes that communication is subtle, sometimes it is exuberant, and sometimes it carries meanings that go far beyond the notes themselves. And if you find yourself wishing you had been there in person, well, that is probably the highest compliment a live album can receive.

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