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ANTON GOOSEN Singer and musician (South Africa)01 January 2001 |
"They called me a White Kaffer and the secret police were tapping my phone," tells Anton Goosen, the South African singer/composer who was considered a traitor amongst the white Afrikaaner community.
Anton Goosen was Interviewed in South Africa in 1998 by Mr. Ole Reitov. |
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| Read more: |
| Anton Goosen |
| Interview with Anton Goosen about music censorship in South Africa. (Recorded in 1998) |
| 01 January 2001 |
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| 1960s |
Freemusepedia timeline: Africa: 1960s: South Africa: Miriam Makeba, Dolly Rathebe, and Dorothy Masuka. National anthem: 'Nkosi Sikele Africa'. Zimbabwe: Stella Chiweshe and Beuler Djoko |
| 01 January 2001 |
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| South Africa: 'The Censored meet their Censor' |
| 1998: Sipho Mabuse and Ray Phiri, musicians from South Africa, in a first face to face meeting with former censor, Ms. Cecile Pracher, manager of the record library at SABC. |
| 01 January 2001 |
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| 1980s |
Freemusepedia timeline: Africa: 1980s: Mauritania: Malouma Mint El-Meidah. Somalia: Maryam Mursal. Sudan: Balabil, Hanan Bulu-bulu. Gisma and Nasra. South Africa: Pink Floyd, Mzwakhe Mbuli, Mbongeni Ngema, Lucky Dube. DR Congo: Tabu Lay Rochereau |
| 01 January 2001 |
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| 1990s |
Freemusepedia timeline: Africa: 1990s: D. R. Congo: Tabu Lay Rochereau. South Africa: Mbongeni Ngema |
| 01 January 2001 |
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| Roger Lucey |
| Video interview with musician and journalist Roger Lucey about his personal experience of music censorship in South Africa in the 1970's. "It is death to the artist", he says. |
| 06 February 2007 |
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| Shoot the Singer! Book |
| "Shoot the Singer! Music Censorship Today". The first worldwide presentation of contemporary cases of music censorship, with cases from i.a. Burma, Mexico, Middle East, France, Algeria, Zimbabwe, USA, South Africa, Turkey. Edited by Freemuse director Marie Korpe, published by Zed Books, May 2004. |
| 25 May 2004 |
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| Cultural Boycott - of any use? Freemuse Conference |
| The recent initiative to boycott Israel is controversial, so is the Arab initiative to boycott cultural events which include Israeli artists. Yet the cultural boycott on apartheid South Africa did have an effect. And what about Cuba? Listen to the panel discussion from WOMEX 2003. |
| 30 November 2003 |
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