Johnny Clegg (born June 7, 1953, Bacup, near Rochdale, England—died July 16, 2019, Johannesburg, South Africa) was a South African musician, popularly called the “White Zulu.” His innovative, ethnically integrated musical collaborations in the late 20th century constituted a powerful statement against apartheid, the enforced separation of Black and white peoples and traditions in South Africa.
Although born in England, Clegg was raised in southern Africa. When he was a small child, he moved with his mother to her homeland, Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), where she met and married a South African journalist. The family then moved to Johannesburg. Clegg’s home environment was both musical and politically liberal; his stepfather was an anti-apartheid crime reporter with a serious interest in Black African culture, and his mother was a cabaret singer. As a young adult, Clegg studied anthropology at the University of the Witwatersrand, and, after receiving a master’s degree, he taught at the institution for several years. During his time at the university, he was able to cultivate both his academic and his practical involvement with the arts and culture of the local Zulu population. In the 1970s he left his teaching position to focus on musical pursuits, with the ultimate aim of creating a blend of white and Black South African artistic traditions.
Clegg subsequently developed a friendship with Sipho Mchunu, a Zulu migrant worker and street musician in Johannesburg. From Mchunu, Clegg learned the Zulu language and traditional music, as well as the vibrant dance styles that later became a regular feature of his performances. Clegg and Mchunu performed as a duo for a few years before they assembled a band called Juluka (Zulu: “Sweat”). In 1979 Juluka released Universal Men, an album that spoke to the divided lives of the migrant workers who reside and work in the city, separated from their families and homes. Stylistically, the album was a fusion of Zulu music and various European traditions. Later albums were similarly blended. Ubuhle Bemvelo (1982), the group’s third album, was performed entirely in Zulu.
During the early 1980s Juluka gained not only a strong local audience but also an enthusiastic international following, particularly in France, where Clegg fondly was labeled “Le Zoulou Blanc” (“The White Zulu”). Juluka’s success was an especially significant achievement during the apartheid era, when music that was performed by mixed (Black and white) bands or that blended Black and white styles was barred from South African radio. Juluka’s music, then, circulated primarily through live performances, which, particularly in South Africa, often led to encounters with the police. The group’s appeal indeed lay as much in its innovative and engaging music as in the political statement—both explicit and implicit—it made against apartheid, a system that was increasingly condemned by the international community.
In 1985 Mchunu left Juluka and Johannesburg to return to his homeland in KwaZulu state (now KwaZulu-Natal), and Clegg formed a new group called Savuka (Zulu: “We Have Risen”). Again, the group included both Black and white South African musicians, but the music of Savuka was more noticeably influenced by such Western popular genres as rock, jazz, blues, reggae, and funk. The new band enjoyed extraordinary international success, with their album Third World Child (1987) selling hundreds of thousands of copies and Heat, Dust & Dreams (1993) receiving recognition by Billboard magazine for best world-music album in 1994. Savuka dissolved in 1993, and Clegg reunited with Mchunu to record just one album, Crocodile Love (1997).
Clegg subsequently embarked on a solo career and released a number of albums, including New World Survivor (2002), A South African Story (2003), and One Life (2007). In 2015 he was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. After undergoing treatment, he released the EP King of Time in 2017. That year Clegg embarked on a global farewell tour, called the Final Journey, and the last concert was held in 2018.
After apartheid officially ended in 1994, Clegg dropped from his repertoire most of the songs that were specific to that era. He remained a musical activist, however, advocating an array of humanitarian causes, including HIV/AIDS awareness. Clegg received numerous international honours for both his music and his philanthropic work.