A reflection on two decades
Mail & Guardian
|May 30, 2025
Simphiwe Dana talks about her long career, her legacy and the spirit guiding what could be her final album
I have experienced Simphiwe Dana's compelling presence on stage many times. Not to say that was her entire personality — no, Dana is much more.
But there are only a few people we meet in life, from close or from a distance, and can instantly tell — they do not walk alone.
Their spirit is that of our forefathers. It carries weight and respect. It announces itself quietly, with humility, yet with a magnitude impossible to ignore.
Now imagine having those thoughts first thing on a Monday morning. My nerves were jittering so intensely, I forgot to have breakfast. It's not every day that one gets to speak to a voice that has held us through joy, through protest, through heartbreak and healing.
At 10am sharp, as agreed with her PR person, I dialled her number. No answer. I stared at the phone. What now? Before I could decide my next move, the phone rang. Dana.
"I am so sorry I missed your call; I was just making breakfast," she said, her voice as textured and calm as I had remembered it from countless interviews and performances.
"Do you want a few minutes to eat? I also haven't had breakfast yet," I offered.
"Perfect," she responded. "Go make food and a cup of tea or coffee and I will call you back in a few," she said.
I had to pause. Am I about to have a telephonic breakfast with Simphiwe Dana? Surely, I have lived a full life.
She called me back in 10 minutes. Coffee on her end. Rooibos on mine. What followed was an encounter with a soul who has been documenting the collective inner life of a nation for over two decades.
Dana's debut album Zandisile, released in 2004, earned her instant acclaim and multiple South African Music Awards (Samas).
I was so young but I still remember how Ndiredi played on every radio station and on every music show on TV like an anthem. It was a moment — a feeling. Maybe I didn't understand it fully then but I felt it. We all did.
This story is from the May 30, 2025 edition of Mail & Guardian.
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