Born in 1953, Moses Mchunu hails from the village of Nkandla in the Province of Kwa-Zulu Natal, South Africa. His style of music falls into the neo-traditional form of Mbaqanga - infectious and complex four-bar sequences of acoustic guitar, vocals and harmonies, strong baselines, drums and usually an accordion and/or a fiddle. To many Black South Africans Mchunu’s music will be familiar from his hit track "Qhwayilahle" on the Indestructible Beat of Soweto album in 1985. The roots of this music echo and resonate deep into the 60’s and 70’s where lone maskandi musicians would commune with guitars or concertinas while they walked the white suburbs and industrial areas of Durban. Mchunu’s records bought mostly by migrant workers sing of matters and moments in rural traditional African life – cattle, religion, harvest, praising clans and chiefs, marriage and death – but not too obviously close to the social conditions pertaining to apartheid at the time.
1991
Teal Records
LP, Album
1987
Quavers
LP
1985
Teal Record Company
LP, Album
1985
Indumezulu
LP, Album
1984
Motella
12"
1983
Ezom Dabu
LP
1982
Ezom Dabu
LP
1981
Ezom Dabu
7", Single
1981
Ezom Dabu
LP, Album
1980
Motella
LP, Album
1978
Motella
LP, Album
1975
Motella
LP
1999
Stern's Music, Earthworks
CD, Comp
1997
1986
New Sounds (4)
12"
1986
1985
Rufaro
LP, Album
1985
Rufaro
LP, Album
Phoenix Records (16)
LP
1999
Music Of One World
CD, Comp
1995
1989
1987
Quavers
LP, Album
1987
1985
Gallo
LP, Album
1985
1976
Gallo
LP, Comp
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