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Abdullah Ibrahim in 2026: A Living Legend Returns to Cape Town International Jazz Festival CTIJF

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MΓ€rz 9, 2026

Editorial feature Β· capetowndata.com Β· March 2026 Photo courtesy of Patrick Scales, Wikimedia Commons, licensed under CC BY 3.0
CTIJF 2026 Β· Cape Jazz Β· Feature

Abdullah Ibrahim Returns: A Living Legend at the Cape Town International Jazz Festival

At 91, South Africa's greatest pianist and the architect of Cape jazz comes home to the intimate Rosies Stage. From District Six to Duke Ellington to Mannenberg β€” why this performance is more than a concert. It is a homecoming of sound and memory.

Date 27–28 March 2026
Venue CTICC Β· Rosies Stage
Age 91 years old
Edition 23rd CTIJF
Published March 2026 Β· 12 min read
Abdullah Ibrahim performing at the piano
Abdullah Ibrahim. Nomo / michael hoefner http://www.zwo5.de, CC BY 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

The Homecoming

When the Cape Town International Jazz Festival announced that Abdullah Ibrahim would perform at its 2026 edition, the response was immediate and visceral. Fans rushed to Ticketmaster. Social media lit up. For many South Africans, the news wasn't just about another concert β€” it was about history, memory, and the living legacy of South African jazz returning to the stage in the city where it was born.

Ibrahim will perform on the intimate Rosies Stage on the evening of Friday 27 March β€” one of the festival's most exclusive settings, with limited capacity and separate surcharge tickets. (For the full lineup, tickets, venue maps, and travel tips, see our complete CTIJF 2026 festival guide.) The Rosies Stage is named with the same reverence that the festival gives to its other venues: Kippies (after Kippie Moeketsi), Manenberg (after the composition), and Moses Molelekwa (after the late pianist). That Ibrahim performs here β€” in a space that honours the very tradition he helped build β€” carries its own quiet symbolism.

91
Years Old
1934
Born in Cape Town
300+
Album Credits
66yr
Professional Career
Key takeaway: This is not simply a headline booking. It is a rare opportunity to witness a living archive of South African culture β€” an artist whose music has travelled through exile, political revolution, and the rebuilding of a nation's identity. Every performance at this stage of his life is an act of cultural preservation.

District Six to Dollar Brand

Abdullah Ibrahim was born Adolph Johannes Brand on 9 October 1934 in the Cape Town neighbourhood of Kensington, on the fringe of District Six β€” the vibrant, multiracial inner-city area that the apartheid government would later destroy. His grandmother Margaret founded a local branch of the African Methodist Episcopalian church and was its pianist; his mother led the choir. These were Ibrahim's first musical memories: Khoi-san songs, Christian hymns, gospel spirituals, and the sounds of a Cape Town that was still a melting pot.

The young Brand began piano lessons at seven. By fifteen he was performing professionally, playing with Cape Town big bands like the Tuxedo Slickers and the Willie Max Orchestra. He also played saxophone with the Minstrel Carnival β€” the annual Kaapse Klopse that still parades through Cape Town every January. When the University of Cape Town's College of Music refused him entry because of his race, he educated himself at the public library, devouring scores and histories of global music. At the docks, he obtained jazz records from visiting American sailors β€” the latest sounds of Monk, Ellington, and bebop reaching him through the back channels of a segregated city.

"We were inspired by American jazz musicians and popular songs, but most importantly the legitimacy and vibrancy of our own African tradition." Abdullah Ibrahim

In 1958, he formed the Dollar Brand Trio β€” the stage name derived from a brand of matches popular in Cape Town. A year later, in Johannesburg's Sophiatown, he co-founded the Jazz Epistles alongside Hugh Masekela (trumpet), Kippie Moeketsi (saxophone), Jonas Gwangwa (trombone), Johnny Gertze (bass), and Makaya Ntshoko (drums). In 1960 they recorded Jazz Epistle, Verse 1 β€” the first jazz LP by Black South African musicians. But the political landscape was darkening. After the Sharpeville massacre in March 1960, the apartheid government cracked down on mixed-race gatherings, shuttered jazz clubs, and harassed musicians. The Jazz Epistles disbanded. Ibrahim's world was closing in.

Duke Ellington and Three Decades of Exile

In 1962, Ibrahim and his future wife, vocalist Sathima Bea Benjamin, left South Africa for Europe. During a tour, Duke Ellington heard the Dollar Brand Trio playing at ZΓΌrich's Africana Club. Ellington was so struck by what he heard that he arranged a recording session with Reprise Records β€” the resulting album, Duke Ellington Presents the Dollar Brand Trio (1963), launched Ibrahim onto the international jazz stage. It was a transformative endorsement: the most influential figure in American jazz validating a young South African whose music blended traditions Ellington had never encountered.

The couple moved to New York. Ibrahim performed at the Newport Jazz Festival and Carnegie Hall in 1966, toured with the Elvin Jones Quartet, and received a Rockefeller Foundation grant to attend Juilliard. In New York's ferment he met Don Cherry, John Coltrane, Cecil Taylor, Ornette Coleman, and Archie Shepp β€” absorbing the avant-garde while never abandoning the Cape Town rhythms in his bones.

In 1968, searching for spiritual grounding in an increasingly fractured life, Ibrahim returned briefly to Cape Town and converted to Islam, taking the name Abdullah Ibrahim. He made a pilgrimage to Mecca in 1970. Music and martial arts β€” he is a black belt β€” further reinforced the spiritual discipline he found. This was not a reinvention but a deepening: the Islamic call to prayer that had always drifted across Bo-Kaap was now part of his own identity, and its modal patterns entered his compositions explicitly.

Key takeaway: Ibrahim's exile was not simply political displacement β€” it was a period of extraordinary artistic and spiritual growth. The musician who left Cape Town as Dollar Brand returned as Abdullah Ibrahim, carrying Ellington's blessing, Coltrane's influence, and a spiritual practice that would infuse every note he played for the next half-century.

Mannenberg: The Sound of Resistance

In June 1974, during one of Ibrahim's visits to Cape Town, producer Rashid Vally assembled a recording session at a studio in the city. The band β€” assembled by saxophonist Basil Coetzee and including Robbie Jansen β€” had been collaborating with Ibrahim on a series of sessions. On this day, Ibrahim began improvising at the piano and gradually invited the others to join. The track was recorded in a single take.

The piece was named "Mannenberg" β€” after the Cape Flats township where thousands of families forcibly removed from District Six had been dumped by the apartheid government. The three "n's" in the title (the township itself is spelled Manenberg) became a deliberate marker. Ibrahim later explained: "Manenberg was symbolic of the removal out of District Six, which is actually the removal of everybody from everywhere in the world."

"It's our music, and it's our culture… If you listen to it, it has the combination of everything in it." Abdullah Ibrahim on Mannenberg

Vally began playing the track from loudspeakers outside his Kohinoor record shop in Johannesburg before the album was even released. It sold 5,000 copies in its first week and 43,000 in seven months β€” extraordinary numbers for a South African jazz record at a time when 20,000 was considered a hit. "Mannenberg" became the unofficial national anthem of the anti-apartheid movement. It blended marabi, ticky-draai, langarm, and Cape jazz into something that spoke directly to the lived experience of dispossession and defiance. Two years later, after the Soweto Uprising of 16 June 1976, Ibrahim organised an illegal ANC benefit concert. He and his family fled to New York shortly after, beginning a second, longer exile.

Abdullah Ibrahim β€” "Mannenberg" (1974).

Abdullah Ibrahim β€” "Mannenberg" (1974). The composition that became the unofficial anthem of the anti-apartheid struggle.

Mandela, the Return, and the Presidential Stage

In 1990, when Nelson Mandela was released from prison, he personally invited Ibrahim to come home. The "homecoming" concerts that followed were fraught with emotion β€” the fraught process of reacclimatising to a South Africa in transformation is audible in recordings like Mantra Modes (1991) and Knysna Blue (1993). In 1994, Ibrahim performed at Mandela's presidential inauguration β€” a moment of symbolic closure that placed the Cape jazz tradition at the heart of the new South Africa's founding narrative.

Mandela called Ibrahim "South Africa's Mozart". The comparison, while flattering, misses the deeper truth: Ibrahim is not South Africa's version of a European genius. He is something Europe never produced β€” a musician whose art is inseparable from the political struggle that shaped his life, and whose sound cannot be understood apart from the specific geography of Cape Town's docks, churches, mosques, carnival routes, and demolished neighbourhoods.

In the decades since, Ibrahim has continued to build. He founded the M7 music academy in Cape Town in 1999, offering training in seven disciplines. In 2006, backed by the South African Ministry of Arts and Culture, he spearheaded the creation of the Cape Town Jazz Orchestra, an 18-piece big band. In 2019, he was honoured as an NEA Jazz Master by the United States National Endowment for the Arts β€” America's highest recognition in jazz. His discography exceeds 300 album credits. He divides his time between Cape Town and New York.

Performing at 91: Distilled, Not Diminished

At 91, Ibrahim continues to perform internationally. His 2024 world tour took him through Italy, South Africa, Germany, and the United States β€” a schedule that would exhaust artists half his age. In November 2024, he performed solo at Penn Live Arts in Philadelphia, with critics noting that his playing has become increasingly minimalist and distilled β€” pared down to essentials in a way that intensifies rather than diminishes its impact.

"Like well-matured brandy, you only need a sip and everything is there." Christine Lucia, Stellenbosch University, on Ibrahim's late-period playing

This is the Ibrahim that Cape Town audiences will encounter at CTIJF 2026: not the fiery young Dollar Brand of the Jazz Epistles era, but an elder whose every note carries seven decades of history. His solo concerts have been described as meditative, devotional, and spellbinding β€” continuous streams of composition that weave together familiar motifs ("Mannenberg," "The Wedding," "The Mountain," "African Marketplace") with new improvisations, creating a narrative arc that can last ninety unbroken minutes. The Cadogan Hall reviewer captured it perfectly: "You can hear a pin drop."

Ibrahim's longevity is rooted in discipline. A black belt in martial arts with a lifelong interest in Zen philosophy, he has made private pilgrimages to Japan to study with his martial arts master. The spiritual practice that began with his conversion to Islam in 1968 has remained constant β€” a through-line connecting the young Dollar Brand who hustled records at the docks to the NEA Jazz Master who now stands as one of the last living links to the foundational era of Cape jazz.

CTIJF 2026: The Full Picture

The 23rd edition of the Cape Town International Jazz Festival takes place on 27–28 March 2026 at the Cape Town International Convention Centre (CTICC). Often called "Africa's Grandest Gathering," the festival has grown from 6,000 attendees at its first edition in 2000 to peak audiences of 34,000 and a confirmed economic impact of R119 million in 2024 alone.

The 2026 lineup pairs Ibrahim with a roster that spans generations and geographies:

International

Jacob Collier (UK)

Grammy-winning multi-instrumentalist. Genre-defying sound blending jazz, soul, pop, and classical. Headline act for the 2026 edition.

International

Yellowjackets (USA)

Legendary jazz fusion band returning to CTIJF for the first time since 2005. Four decades of dynamic, influential performance.

International

Jasmine Myra (UK)

Saxophonist and composer making her South African debut. Melodic contemporary jazz with international critical acclaim.

International

Fatoumata Diawara (Mali)

Grammy-nominated Malian powerhouse bringing Wassoulou traditions into bold conversation with contemporary sound.

South Africa

Nduduzo Makhathini

Internationally acclaimed pianist presenting An Ongoing Rehearsal: Our-Ke(s)tra β€” spiritually rooted jazz with special guests.

South Africa

Sipho "Hotstix" Mabuse

SA music icon. Decades of influence spanning jazz, pop, and Afro-soul. A generational bridge on the festival stage.

South Africa

BCUC

Bantu Continua Uhuru Consciousness. High-energy collective blending indigenous traditions, Afro-psychedelia, and communal performance.

South Africa

Carlo Mombelli

Renowned bassist and composer. Emotional depth, improvisational strength, and experimental edge spanning decades.

🎟️ Tickets: General admission weekend passes grant access to the Kippies, Manenberg, and Moses Molelekwa stages. Rosies Stage requires a separate surcharge ticket (R30 per show) with very limited capacity β€” details released closer to the event. Book via Ticketmaster. Buy Now Pay Later options available through Loot.
πŸ“– Want the full festival breakdown? Our CTIJF 2026 Complete Guide covers every artist with video previews, stage maps, ticket tiers, travel packages, and practical tips for getting to the CTICC. And for the broader story of Cape Town's jazz tradition β€” the goema rhythm, the venues, the jam sessions β€” see What is Cape Jazz?
πŸ“Š CTIJF impact: Since 2000, the festival has hosted over 2,000 South African artists and 1,600 international artists, created more than 31,000 direct and indirect jobs, and anchored Cape Town's position as Africa's jazz capital. The free community concert at Greenmarket Square ensures live music remains accessible beyond the ticketed event.

What Comes Next: The Continuing Story

Ibrahim's appearance at CTIJF 2026 is more than a performance β€” it is a statement about continuity. The festival's four stages are named after the very tradition he helped create. The next generation β€” artists like Kyle Shepherd, Nduduzo Makhathini, Benjamin Jephta, the Camissa Knights β€” performs on those same stages, carrying forward the musical language Ibrahim and his contemporaries forged under impossible conditions.

Kyle Shepherd, the 38-year-old pianist and Artistic Director of the Journey to Jazz Festival, grew up in the orbit of Ibrahim's M7 music school. His mother worked there. The connections are not abstract β€” they are personal, intergenerational, and audible in the music. When Shepherd performs at the Montreux Jazz Festival Franschhoek on 28 March 2026 β€” the same weekend Ibrahim takes the Rosies Stage β€” the tradition at its most venerable and the tradition at its most restless sit within a short drive of each other through the Winelands.

After CTIJF, Ibrahim has further European concerts scheduled, including Stuttgart in April 2026. At 91, each performance is a gift β€” not because his faculties are failing, but because the sheer fact of his presence on stage represents something irreplaceable. He is a living archive of South African culture, carrying stories that stretch across forced removals, exile, liberation, and reconstruction. When the lights go down on the Rosies Stage on 27 March, and Ibrahim touches the keys, the room will hold more than music. It will hold the memory of a city, a struggle, and a tradition that refused to die.

Read More: Is Kyle Shepherd the New Abdullah Ibrahim?

Our companion feature explores how the next generation of Cape jazz pianists carries Ibrahim's legacy forward in 2026.

Read the Feature β†’

Abdullah Ibrahim: A Life in Milestones

1934
Born in Cape Town
Adolph Johannes Brand, born in Kensington on the fringe of District Six. Piano lessons begin at age seven.
1949
Professional debut at 15
Performs with the Tuxedo Slickers and other Cape Town big bands. Begins collecting jazz records from visiting American sailors.
1958
Dollar Brand Trio formed
Ibrahim creates his own ensemble, showcasing original compositions alongside jazz standards.
1959–60
The Jazz Epistles
With Hugh Masekela, Kippie Moeketsi, and Jonas Gwangwa. Records Jazz Epistle, Verse 1 β€” the first jazz LP by Black South Africans.
1962
Leaves South Africa
Departs for Europe with Sathima Bea Benjamin. Duke Ellington hears them in ZΓΌrich and arranges a recording session.
1963
Duke Ellington Presents the Dollar Brand Trio
International breakthrough. The album introduces Ibrahim to the global jazz audience.
1968
Converts to Islam
Takes the name Abdullah Ibrahim. Begins a spiritual journey through Islam, martial arts, and Zen philosophy.
1974
"Mannenberg" recorded
One take. One session. The track becomes the unofficial national anthem of the anti-apartheid movement.
1976
Second exile
After the Soweto Uprising and an illegal ANC benefit concert, Ibrahim and family flee to New York.
1990
Mandela invites him home
Triumphant "homecoming" concerts mark his return to a South Africa in transition.
1994
Mandela's inauguration
Performs at the presidential inauguration. Mandela calls him "South Africa's Mozart."
1999
M7 Academy founded
Establishes a music school in Cape Town offering training in seven disciplines.
2006
Cape Town Jazz Orchestra
Creates an 18-piece big band backed by the SA Ministry of Arts and Culture.
2016
Jazz Epistles reunion
Performs with Hugh Masekela for the first time in 60 years at Emperors Palace, Johannesburg.
2019
NEA Jazz Master
Honoured with America's highest recognition in jazz by the National Endowment for the Arts.
2024
World tour at 90
Performs across Italy, South Africa, Germany, and the United States. Latest album: 3 with the Abdullah Ibrahim Trio.
March 2026
CTIJF 2026 β€” Rosies Stage
Returns to headline the Cape Town International Jazz Festival at 91. The 23rd edition of Africa's Grandest Gathering.
Also on capetowndata.com:
🎹 Is Kyle Shepherd the New Abdullah Ibrahim? β€” How the next generation carries the Cape jazz torch forward
🎷 What is Cape Jazz? β€” The goema rhythm, the history, the venues, and where to hear live jazz in Cape Town
🎡 CTIJF 2026: The Complete Festival Guide β€” Full lineup with videos, tickets, stages, travel tips, and accommodation

Sources & References

Wikipedia: Abdullah Ibrahim Β· Wikipedia: Mannenberg Β· Official biography: abdullahibrahim.co.za Β· Cape Times: "Chills guaranteed! Abdullah Ibrahim to grace the CTIJF 2026 stage," March 2026 Β· Cape Times: "Why Abdullah Ibrahim at CTIJF 2026 marks a defining moment for Mzansi jazz," March 2026 Β· Capetowner: "CTIJF continues to unite Cape Town through music and culture," March 2026 Β· My Cape Town Stay: CTIJF 2026 lineup Β· Cape Town International Jazz Festival: capetownjazzfest.com Β· SA History Online: Abdullah Ibrahim biography Β· Wits University: Honorary Doctorate citation Β· The Kurland Agency: Artist biography Β· The Conversation Africa: "Abdullah Ibrahim: South Africa's master pianist is going on a world tour at 90" (2024) Β· Penn Live Arts: Ibrahim Trio event listing Β· WRTI: "Abdullah Ibrahim performs solo" (Nov 2024) Β· Songkick: Concert reviews and tour history Β· Kalamu.com: Breath of Life β€” Mannenberg analysis Β· Cal Performances: Artist biography Β· Facebook: CTIJF / Fatoumata Diawara announcement (March 2026)

Last updated March 2026 Β· capetowndata.com

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