Abdullah Ibrahim obituary
South African jazz pianist, composer and improviser who cast a spell on audiences all over the world
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The pianist Abdullah Ibrahim, who has died aged 91, was among the first musicians from South Africa to achieve and sustain a major reputation with the international jazz audience. Listeners around the world, at first in small clubs and later in the grandest concert halls, fell under the spell of his compositions and improvisations, which took a sophisticated idiom originally created by the descendants of enslaved Africans and reinfused it with a primal warmth.
He was still known as Dollar Brand, a combination of his nickname and his family surname, when he and his wife-to-be, the singer Bea Benjamin, arrived in Europe in 1962 as refugees from the apartheid state.
In Zurich he was heard by Duke Ellington, his idol, who became an early patron. During subsequent spells in New York he played with many important American musicians, quickly convincing them that an African voice could add something different, at once ancient and brand new, to their music.
Back home, his music played a part in the freedom struggle. His tune Mannenberg, recorded during a return visit in 1974, became an anthem of the movement, its title referring to a Cape Flats township created under the Group Areas Act to house black South African people evicted when Cape Town’s District Six was designated a whites-only area.
After the Soweto uprising of 1976 he left South Africa again, declaring his support for the African National Congress. Nelson Mandela was said to have described him as “our Mozart”.
A handsome, imposing man who seemed to radiate wisdom and strength, he gave concerts that stirred the spirit and could create imperishable memories, particularly when he was alone at the piano.
One afternoon in 1973, at his friend Ornette Coleman’s loft in New York, he transfixed a small invited audience with a passage of music that began with a melody that might have come from the hymnal of the African Methodist Episcopal church, absorbed during his Cape Town childhood. He then moved through a dance tune plucked from the townships, thence into a thunderous passage of huge rolling chords, eventually splintered by lightning bolts of jagged asymmetrical phrases before reversing the process and winding back through the various stages, ending with the hymn tune and a long moment of awestruck silence before the applause began.
He was born Adolph Johannes Brand and grew up in Kensington, a suburb of Cape Town largely inhabited by the group known as “Cape coloureds”, or people of mixed race. His father, a black housepainter named Sentso, was killed in an unexplained shooting when he was four. He was raised by his “coloured” grandmother, Margaret, alongside his mother, Rachel, whom he believed was his sister.
Both women played the piano, and he began lessons at the age of seven, absorbing music from the church (where his grandmother played), from local dances, and from the neighbouring black township. He also mastered the cello and the saxophone.
At 17 he left home and began playing the piano professionally, first with a swing band, the Tuxedo Slickers. Turned down by Cape Town University, probably on racial grounds, he moved to Johannesburg, where he met the trumpeter Hugh Masekela, the alto saxophonist Kippie Moeketsi and the trombonist Jonas Gwangwa.
In 1959 the four of them recruited the bassist Johnny Gertze and the drummer Makaya Ntshoko to become a sextet called the Jazz Epistles, whose album, titled Verse 1, was released the following year, becoming the first South African modern jazz record. Although clearly influenced by the aggressive New York hard bop style of bandleaders such as Art Blakey and Horace Silver, it also contained hints of a distinctively different flavour, something that would become more pronounced in the pianist’s music as the years went by.
In 1965, after the move to Europe, he and Benjamin were married; they would have a son, Tsakwe, and a daughter, Tsidi (now the rap artist known as Jean Grae). Under Ellington’s patronage they had both recorded albums for Frank Sinatra’s Reprise label, but only Ibrahim’s was released at the time, titled Duke Ellington Presents the Dollar Brand Trio. Ellington invited both of them to perform with his band and convinced the promoter George Wein to include them in the programme of the 1965 Newport jazz festival.
Following a conversion to Islam in 1968, Dollar Brand became Abdullah Ibrahim, while his wife was now known as Sathima Bea Benjamin. A pilgrimage to Mecca in 1970 was later reflected in one of his major compositions, Hajj (The Journey).
Moving between New York, Europe and Cape Town, he recorded frequently for various labels. His early repertoire, which included tunes by Ellington and Thelonious Monk, began to incorporate more of the original compositions that increasingly emphasised African elements.
A solo recording made at the Jazzhus Montmartre, Copenhagen, in 1969 included several of what would become his most popular pieces, including Bra Joe from Kilimanjaro, Jabulani (Easter Joy) and Tintiyana.
Released in 1973 under the title African Piano, the recording created a stir of approval, as did the subsequent African Space Program, recorded with a 12-piece band made up of New York musicians. A year later came Mannenberg (Is Where It’s Happening), recorded in Cape Town with four local musicians and featuring the immensely popular 13-minute title track, an impromptu performance based on a lightly grooving piano riff and infectious horn phrases, which left no doubt that South African jazz possessed a flavour of its own.
In 1978 a concert at Alice Tully Hall in New York and a subsequent album, titled The Journey, brought Ibrahim together with the trumpeter Don Cherry and the Panamanian alto saxophonist Carlos Ward, who became a regular collaborator. There would also be duo recordings with the drummer Max Roach and the saxophonist Archie Shepp. Another album recorded in New York, titled Water from an Ancient Well (1986), opened with a jaunty tune named after Mandela, then still imprisoned.
In the 1980s Ibrahim put together a band called Ekaya, which would take various forms over the next four decades. Now based largely in Germany, he recorded with the Munich Symphony Orchestra (African Symphony, 2001) and the orchestras of the German radio stations NDR in Hamburg and WDR in Cologne.
He composed the soundtracks for films by the French director Claire Denis (Chocolat, 1988, and S’en Fout la Mort, 1990), and one by the Burkino Faso director Idrissa Ouédraogo (Tilaï, 1990).
As he reached his 80s, audiences primed for the surging energy of his earlier years could be disconcerted when confronted by the far gentler and more reflective music of Ekaya, which had become a chamber-jazz trio completed by the flautist Cleave Guyton and the cellist Noah Jackson. They were usually won over. His final appearance in London, at a sold-out Barbican in 2023, was recorded and released a year later by the Gearbox label.
His marriage to Benjamin ended in divorce; she died in 2013. He is survived by his partner, Marina Umari, and his son and daughter.
• Abdullah Ibrahim (Adolph Johannes Brand), pianist, composer and bandleader, born 9 October 1934; died 15 June 2026

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