(Left: Dr Thokozani Mhlambi with
cello. Pic supplied)
An evening of Afrofuturism: the music of John Knox Bokwe
Internationally-acclaimed cellist, vocalist, and cultural pioneer, Dr Thokozani Mhlambi, will present a one-of-a-kind concert, playing music by John Knox Bokwe at the KZNSA Gallery, on Friday November 28, 2025, at 18h00.
Entitled, Thokozani Mhlambi: Playing John Knox Bokwe Today, Mhlambi will be joined by special guest, award-winning storyteller Dr Gcina Mhlophe. He says: “I hope that this performance is more than a concert; it’s an invitation to witness a stunning exploration of sound, words, and shared history.”
“We hope guests will experience a genre-bending evening where tradition meets the future,” says Mhlambi who plays a custom-made baroque cello and sings in isiZulu, blending the rhythms of African traditional anthems like indlamu and umtshotsho with the ethereal soundscapes of Afrofuturism.
With fellowships at prestigious institutions in Germany and France, and as an honorary member of the Vancouver Folk Song Society, Mhlambi’s influence spans continents. He has performed at renowned venues in Chicago, Berlin, New Orleans, New York, and São Paulo, but his return to Durban audiences promises an intimate and immersive experience.
The show coincides with the release of Mhlambi’s new single, Plea for Africa, a heritage piece originally composed by John Knox Bokwe. Mhlambi explains the influence of the piece on his work:
“John Knox Bokwe was a South African journalist, Presbyterian minister and one of the most celebrated Xhosa hymn writers and musicians (March 15, 1855 – February 22, 1922). A writer on the Imvo Zabantsundu newspaper ("African Opinion") in (what was) King Williams Town, he is best known for his compositions Vuka Deborah, Plea for Africa, and Marriage Song. Bokwe is recognized as the first-known Black South African composer to have notated his own music, marking a significant point in South African musical history.
“Back in the 1870s, John Knox Bokwe, while at Lovedale Missionary Institute, started to compose music fusing the Western hymn-style with Xhosa lyrics. I consider John Knox Bokwe the Father of African composition. He is my role model. His music is timeless and imagine the music of the future.”
The performance in Durban promises to be informative and entertaining—creating an unforgettable evening of connection and collaboration.
In his album Zulu Song Cycle (2019), Mhlambi explores the limits of creative expression by blurring the distinction between European early classical music and African ancient sounds, this is in ways that defy the orthodoxy of his own classical education. Contending with orthodoxies and the rules they impose is what Mhlambi does best, by inverting, subverting what (to some) might be the norm.
Mhlambi has dedicated his time to retrieving historical sounds from archives, based on collections in Africa and elsewhere. The result has been compositions that reflects different epochs, different time zones in human evolution.
He has an interest in the relationship between art and technology, an interest he explores through his research on African traditions of metallurgy. This has allowed Mhlambi to think about the nature of artistic expertise in correlation with metallurgical expertise, in his musical compositions. Chief amongst Mhlambi’s theoretical concerns is about thinking beyond the colonial sound archive, in imagining a sonic past and future.
In 2023, Mhlambi was invited to be part of the Reimagining America Program 2023, where he worked with youth string-players from the city of Providence (Rhode Island).
He is an Honorary Member of the Vancouver Folk Song Society and has also been a visiting lecturer at Simon Fraser University also in Vancouver, where he performed at the World Arts Centre. He has performed at the venues such as Elastic Arts in Chicago, Prachtwerk in Berlin, Minneapolis, New Orleans (Tulane), São Paulo, Maputo (Mozambique) and New York (Performa).
Tickets through Webtickets - https://www.webtickets.co.za/v2/event.aspx?itemid=1580090440
Thokozani Mhlambi: Playing John Knox Bokwe Today takes place on November 28, 2025, at 18h00 at the KZNSA Gallery, 166 Bulwer Road, Berea, Durban.
For more information visit his website at thokozanimhlambi.com















