bio                                                                                  


Mogauwane Mahloele
was born in Storomo and raised in Mamelodi ya Tshwane, South Africa. He is accomplished in both the making and playing of Dikonokono drums, Dundun, Stolotolo (mouth harps), Dipela (Kalimba), flutes, Kora, Doussin Gouni, Birimbau, Balafone, Algaita (traditional trumpet). He is also a sculptor and painter.

  Craftsmanship and musicianship - often seen as different disciplines here - were entwined in his upbringing. As the son of a musical family (with parents who themselves were children of musicians), he was watched closely as a child to see what talents he might have. His elders taught him not only how to play eight instruments, but also how to make them. It is through this intimate knowledge that he came to understand that the instruments themselves “dictate knowledge” to the musician: “If I had built a drum and carved it from - scratch - even before you can play, it already...is talking to you, so there is that relationship ba
ck and forth... Not only do I make drums...I come from a background where in order to know how to play this you also have to know how to make it. So you have a total relationship with that instrument.”

  In 1976, Mr. Mahloele left a family and a country that he loved, knowing that if he stayed, his life would be “wasted” in jail, where his close friends were incarcerated during the apartheid years. He has now been in exile 24 years. He has chosen not to live in fear and has vowed “not to negate the very strong things” he was raised with. In Philadelphia, he makes his living teaching music and performing. In the absence of other musicians from South Africa, he has begun to nurture an ensemble of diverse African and African American musicians, teaching them traditional music and his own compositions. Mr. Mahloele performs widely in Europe, America, and Africa, in many styles. He has performed and collaborated with such artists as Homer Jackson, Khan Jamal, Odean Pope, Famoudou Don Moye, Ari Brown, Habib Koite, Keletike, Byard Lancaster, Dudu Phukwana, Phillip Tabane, Joe Malinga, the Art Ensemble of Chicago, Rackham Symphony Orchestra, David Fanshawe, Montgomery County Community
College Choir, and Clayton White Singers. Mr. Mahloele has received grants from the PEW Fellowship in the Arts and the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, and has worked with Folklore Projects in Arts education residencies, “Philly Dance Africa”, and “Folk Arts of Social Change”. He also has started an organization dealing with performance stage at his house, called “Dikoma Aesthetics” dedicated to his son Lefawo
(the one to inherit the wealth).





This project is funded by Dikoma Aesthetics and by a grant from the Pennsylvania Performing Arts on Tour, a program funded
and developed by the Vira I. Heinz Endowment, the William Penn Foundation,
the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts and the Pew Charitable Trusts.
It is administered by Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation.
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