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Naija's Top 9


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P SQUARE
DANGER

2.
WANDE COAL
I KNOW YOU WANT IT

3.
BRACKET
YORI YORI

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AY-COM FT TERRY G
PASS ME YOUR LOVE

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Biography of Brenda Fassie PDF Print E-mail

 Brenda was a South African pop singer widely considered a voice for
disenfranchised blacks during apartheid. She was affectionately known as
the Queen of African Pop and her nickname amongst fans was Mabrr. Brenda
was born in Langa, Cape Town on 3rd November 1964 as the youngest of nine
children. She was named after Brenda Lee, an American country singer. Her
father died when she was 2, and with the help of her mother, a pianist,she
started earning money by singing for tourists.


In 1981, at the age of 16, she left Cape Town for Soweto, Johannesburg to
seek her fortune as a singer. Brenda first joined the group Joy and later
became the lead singer for the township pop group Brenda And The Big Dudes.
She had a son, Bongani, in 1985 by a fellow Big Dudes musician. Brenda
married ex-convict Nhlanhla Mbambo in 1989 but later in 1991 got divorced.
It was around this time that she became addicted to cocaine and her career
suffered.


With very outspoken views and frequent visits to the poorer townships of
Johannesburg, as well as songs about life in the townships, she enjoyed
tremendous popularity. Known best for her songs "Weekend Special" and "Too
Late for Mama", she was called by Time Magazine in 2001 "The Madonna of the
Townships".


In 1995 she was discovered in a hotel with the body of her lover, Poppie
Sihlahla, who had died of an apparent overdose. Fassie underwent
rehabilitation and got her career back on track. However, she still had
drug problems and returned to drug rehabilitation clinics about 30 times in
her life.


Since 1996 she released several solo albums like "Now Is The Time",
"Memeza" (1997, the bestselling album in South Africa in 1998 or
"Nomakanjani". Most of her albums became multi-platinum sellers in South
Africa.


On the morning of 26 April 2004, Brenda collapsed at her home in Buccleuch
and was admitted into the Sunninghill hospital in Johannesburg. The press
was told that she had suffered cardiac arrest but later reported that she
had slipped into a coma brought on by an asthma attack. The post-mortem
report revealed that she had taken an overdose of cocaine in the night of
her collapse, and this was the cause of her coma. She stopped breathing and
suffered brain damage from lack of oxygen. Fassie was visited in the
hospital by Nelson Mandela, Winnie Mandela, and Thabo Mbeki, and her
condition was front-page news in South African papers. Brenda died at age
39 on 9 May 2004 in hospital without returning to consciousness after her
life support machines were turned off. According to the South African
Sunday Times and the managers of her music company, the post-mortem report
also showed that she was HIV-positive. Her manager, Peter Snyman, denied
this aspect of the report.


She was voted 17th in the Top 100 Great South Africans.
Her son Bongani 'Bongz' Fassie followed in his mother's footsteps. He
performed on the soundtrack to the 2005 Academy Award-winning movie Tsotsi.
He dedicated his song "I'm So Sorry" to his mother.


Brenda Fassie’s songs
•       1994: Brenda Fassie
•       1997: Memeza
•       2000: Thola Amadlozi
•       2001: Brenda The Greatest Hits
•       2004: Gimme Some Volume