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Johannes Kerkorrel

Musical artist

Johannes Kerkorrel (27 March 1960 – 12 November 2002), born Ralph John Rabie, was a South African singer-songwriter, journalist and playwright.

Contents

  • 1 Career
  • 2 Death
  • 3 Awards
  • 4 Discography
  • 5 Tributes
  • 6 Covers
  • 7 Legacy
  • 8 See also
  • 9 References
  • 10 Further reading

Career

Rabie, who was born in Johannesburg, worked as a journalist for the Afrikaans newspapers Die Burger and Rapport. In 1986, Rabie started performing politically themed cabaret at arts festivals under his new stage name (kerkorrel meaning church organ in Afrikaans). At that time, apartheid was at its nadir under State President P.W. Botha's National Party-led government.

In 1987, Rabie was fired by Rapport for using quotes from Botha's speeches in his music; he then became a full-time musician and performer under the name Johannes Kerkorrel en die Gereformeerde Blues Band (Johannes Kerkorrel and the Reformed Blues Band), a deliberate reference to the Reformed Church. The band also included the Afrikaans singer-songwriter Koos Kombuis. Their brand of new Afrikaans music was dubbed alternatiewe Afrikaans (alternative Afrikaans) and exposed divergent political views to a new generation of Afrikaners.

In 1985, they released the album Eet Kreef (Eat Crayfish) on the now-defunct Shifty Records label, which was a commercial success despite its tracks being banned from radio airplay by the state-controlled South African Broadcasting Corporation, which was the government mouthpiece. Colloquially, 'Eet Kreef' is ambiguous, meaning either 'Enjoy!' or 'Get lost!'. The subsequent regional tour of college campuses and art festivals was called Voëlvry (literally free as a bird but here meaning outlawed), and Rabie's controversial reinvention of Afrikaans popular music became known as the Voëlvry movement.

In 1990, Rabie visited Amsterdam, and almost simultaneously the track "Hillbrow" from the Eet Kreef album became a hit in Belgium, and Rabie followed its success with a solo tour. In subsequent years he enjoyed substantial artistic success in Belgium and the Netherlands, and spent much of his time in Belgium. Here he also befriended Stef Bos, a Dutch cabaret artist, with whom he would share a number of concerts.

Death

Rabie hanged himself on 12 November 2002 in Kleinmond, near Herm* on the Western Cape coast on a tree that is alien to South Africa. He was survived by his long-term partner, and by his ex-wife and son.

The South African singer songwriter Valiant Swart wrote the song "Sonvanger" dedicated to the artist with Kerkorrel's mother Anne in mind, longing for her lost son.

Awards

  • 1995 SAMA – Best Pop Music Performance for Cyanide in the Beefcake
  • 1997 SAMA – Best Male Vocalist and Best Adult Contemporary Album: Afrikaans for Ge-trans-for-meer
  • 2001 Geraas – Best pop album and Best adaptation for Die Ander Kant
  • 2013 SAMA – Lifetime Achievement Award

Discography

  • Eet Kreef (1989)
  • Bloudruk (1992)
  • Cyanide in the Beefcake (1994)
  • Ge-trans-for-meer (1996)
  • Tien Jaar Later (1998)
  • Sing Koos du Plessis (1999)
  • Die Ander Kant (2000)
  • Voëlvry Die Toer (2002)
  • Kerkorrel – Best Of: Pêrels Voor Die Swyne (2003)
  • Hoe Ek Voel (2012) – issued to commemorate the 10 year anniversary of Rabie's death

Tributes

After Rabie's death, several artists recorded tribute songs to his life and work. An incomplete list follows:

  • Stef Bos – Pelgrimsrus
  • Riku Lätti – Ysbeer
  • Amanda Strydom – Ek Het Gedroom
  • Karen Zoid – Foto Teen Die Muur
  • Jak De Priester – Kerkorrel
  • Kristoe Strauss – Sit Dit Self Af
  • Jan Blohm – Johnny K
  • Valiant Swart - Sonvanger
  • Valiant Swart en Koos Kombuis – Kleinmond Koebaai
  • Koos Kombuis - Johnny is nie dood nie

Covers

Rabie is a much covered artist. Among the cover versions that exist are:

  • Stef Bos – Hillbrow
  • Riku Lätti – Somer
  • Amanda Strydom – Hoe Ek Voel and Halala Afrika
  • Van Coke Kartel - Energie
  • af:Refentse Morake - Halala Afrika

Legacy

The film Johnny is nie dood nie portrays a fictional group of friends meeting up after his suicide, looking back to the events leading up to the Voëlvry movement, and how his music inspired and influenced them.

See also

  • Bernoldus Niemand
  • Koos Kombuis

References

    Further reading

    • Laubscher, Leswin (2005). "Afrikaner iden*y and the music of Johannes Kerkorrel". South African Journal of Psychology. Psychological Society of South Africa. 35 (2): 308–330. doi:10.1177/008124630503500209. S2CID:143530308. Retrieved 21 April 2013. As old iden*y verities are dislodged, post-apartheid South Africa is witness to dramatic iden*ary flux. This study examines Afrikaner iden*y and particularly that of the generational cohort who witnessed the end of apartheid as young adults. Employing a hermeneutic semiology, the study provides a reading of Johannes Kerkorrel's music, arguing that, as cultural text, it enacts iden*ary discourse and tension. As such, several iden*ary moments and motifs are noted across a period of roughly 20 years, including that of iden*y as rebellion, location and individualising interiority. Finally, it is suggested that the law-of-the-father, as apartheid bequest, organises and animates iden*y struggles for this generation.
    • Viljoen, Martina (1 November 2005). "Johannes Kerkorrel en postapartheid-Afrikaneriden*eit" . Literator (in Afrikaans). Literator Society of South Africa. 26 (3): 65–82. doi:10.4102/lit.v26i3.237. ISSN:0258-2279. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
    • Hopkins, Pat (2006). Voëlvry the movement that rocked South Africa. Cape Town: Zebra Press. ISBN:9781770071209.
    • Uys, Hendrick Michael Grobler (2011). A psycho-biographical study of Ralph John Rabie (MA). NMMU. hdl:10948/1366.
    • "Johannes Kerkorrel" (in Afrikaans). roekeloos.co.za. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
    • "Music Artists: Johannes Kerkorrel". Entertainmentafrica Mobile. Archived from the original on 29 October 2013. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
    • "Voëlvry". Shifty. Archived from the original on 29 October 2013. Retrieved 22 April 2013. Ralph Rabie, who was at that time a journalist on an Afrikaans paper, went down to Cape Town to interview André when Vêr van die ou Kalahari was released. There was a meeting of minds which eventually led to both of them playing in the first incarnation of the Gereformeerde Blues Band. A short while later, André left to forge a solo career as Koos Kombuis, while Ralph, by then known as Johannes Kerkorrel, went on to record the seminal Eet Kreef album with the remaining members of the GBB. Both artists featured on the Voëlvry compilation, which came out around this time.
    • "Johannes Kerkorrel & GBB". Shifty. Retrieved 22 April 2013. Slashing their way out of the Nationalist Party ideology, the GBB charted the wide open spaces of a new Afrikaner rebellion. This time the insurrection was a musical one, with the GBB as rock & roll outlaws slinging guitars and stinging criticism against the laager mentality of volks kultuur and the apartheid way of life. Moving conventional rock into the realm of political theatre and satire as successfully as they did proved that if the GBB were to be seen as cultural upstarts, they were upstarts with a vision both innovative and lucid that could not be ignored.