A Jazz Standard Tribute To Feya Faku

Loading player...
Faku was born in Port Elizabeth's New Brighton. Faku was mentored by South African jazz musicians Patrick Pasha, Dudley Tito, and Whitey Kulumani, who supported his early musical ability. After that, he enrolled at the University of Natal in Durban, where, in the early 1980s, Darius Brubeck founded the nation's first jazz and popular music school. Despite the restrictions of apartheid, Brubeck and his wife Catherine permitted Faku and the other three new students to remain in their home because they recognised their emerging talent and their unofficial student status. Joining several local jazz groups in the 1990s, he soon gained recognition for his extraordinary talent, which led to partnerships with South African jazz greats like Zim Ngqawana, Bheki Mseleku, and Abdullah Ibrahim.
Faku passed away on June 23, 2025, in Basel, Switzerland, at the age of 63. There, at the Bird's Eye Club, he was scheduled to perform.
29 Jun 2025 English South Africa Music History · Music Commentary

Other recent episodes

Author David Africa on The Jazz Standard with Brenda Sisane

We’re joined by David Africa, author of Lives On The Line, to unpack a covert chapter of South African history, the realities of urban terrorism, and what it means to live - and listen - inside the tension between order, survival, and conscience. Lives On The Line is not the…
1 Feb 52 min

Kujenga On The Jazz Standard With Brenda Sisane

Kujenga is a Black improvised music collective based in Cape Town. Their name, which means "to build" in Swahili, reflects their mission of creating meaningful experiences and connections with their audiences.
7 Sep 2025 49 min