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David Kramer (singer)

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South African songwriter and playwright

David Kramer
Kramer in 2010
BornWorcester, South Africa
Alma materLeeds University (textile)
University of Cape Town (hon)
Occupation(s)Singer, songwriter, playwright and musical director
Years active1980—
AgentMountain Records
Known forRed veldskoen shoes
Volkswagen Microbus adverts
StyleFolk, solo guitar
Awards11 gold and 1 platinum record
Websitewww.davidkramer.co.za

David Kramer (/krɑːmə/) is a South African singer, songwriter, playwright, and director, notable for his musicals about the Coloured communities in the Cape, and for his early opposition to apartheid.

Early life and education

The Kramer family's surname was initially Karabelnik. It was changed to Kramer by his grandfather, who arrived in South Africa from Lithuania in 1899 and made a living as a salesman, walking from farm to farm selling goods.

David Kramer was born in Worcester, South Africa, to a furniture merchant and a hairdresser, and spent his formative years in Worcester. While there, he had some music lessons with the classical composer Cromwell Everson. He played in a South African band named The Creeps in the 1960s, and then travelled to England in 1971 to study textile design at Leeds University on a bursary.

His brother, John Kramer, is an artist.

Career

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Early musical career

Kramer began his music career in the mid-1970s, singing at folk clubs and campus concerts in South Africa. He pioneered the use of Cape Afrikaans and South African English in his lyrics, often using both languages in the same song. He focused on small-town South Africa and employed gritty realism and dark satire to tell his stories and describe his characters. On stage, Kramer portrayed himself as a rural everyman who travelled the dusty roads of small-town South Africa with an old bicycle and a cheap guitar. He told stories and sang in the Boland patois of his youth as well as in English.

Mountain Records issued his first six albums. The first album, BAKGAT!, was released in 1980 and was immediately banned in its entirety by the SABC because it was considered too political and vulgar.

Kramer's follow-up album, Die Verhaal van Blokkies Joubert, a portrait of a has-been Springbok rugby player, quickly climbed the music charts and made him a household name. Notable singles from the album were Blokkies Joubert and Die Royal Hotel. Both sat at the top of the charts on various South African radio stations. The album reached number 11 on the South African LP charts.

Despite initial setbacks, his albums received 11 gold and one platinum record for sales.

Musical theatre

In 2001, Kramer launched a show called Karoo Kitaar Blues, presenting the eccentric guitar styles of the Karoo - the music of marginalised people who live in remote villages in the semi-desert areas of South Africa. The show aimed to document an almost lost part of South Africa's musical heritage, featuring unknown musicians and instruments from the Northern Cape hinterland. One of these "forgotten" artists, Hannes Coetzee, became an overnight YouTube sensation, and was invited to participate in a teaching workshop for slide and steel guitar in Port Townsend, WA.

Kramer and Taliep Petersen first met in the mid-'70s at a folk concert staged by Des and Dawn Lindberg at the University of Cape Town. In 1986 he collaborated with Petersen on the acclaimed stage musical District Six: The Musical, a politically influenced musical telling the story of the people of District Six in Cape Town, South Africa who were forcibly removed from the area during apartheid. It was produced by the Baxter Theatre and his wife, Renaye Kramer, and ran until 1990 with 550 performances, also touring internationally and returning to the Baxter in 2002.

With Petersen, he created Fairyland, Poison, and Kat & the Kings, all to critical acclaim, the latter having successful runs on Broadway and in London's West End.

The friendship and working relationship continued until Petersen's murder in 2006. To honour Petersen's memory, a Kramer Petersen Songbook production was staged at the Baxter Theatre to sold-out houses.

Other activities

In 1983, David licensed his idiosyncratic image to Volkswagen South Africa to use on their Microbus (called a "Kombi"). This was the beginning of a television and print campaign that won the hearts of South Africans. The campaign turned David Kramer into a household name and was to continue for 13 years. With his trademark red veldskoen shoes, bicycle and guitar, he became a household name as the face of the SA Volkswagen Microbus advertisements.

Recognition and awards

Kramer was awarded an honorary doctorate in literature by the University of Cape Town in 2007, and an honorary doctorate by the University of Stellenbosch in 2014.

In 2023, Kramer was awarded a Fleur du Cap Lifetime Achievement Award.

Albums

  • Bakgat! (1980)
  • Die Verhaal van Blokkies Joubert (1981)
  • Delicious Monster (1982)
  • Hanepootpad (1983)
  • Jis Jis Jis (1983)
  • Kwaai (1984)
  • Van Der Merwe P.I. (1985) (Soundtrack to a movie of the same name)
  • Laat vir die Dans (1986)
  • Baboondogs (1986)
  • Cape Town (1988)
  • Eina (1989)
  • Klassic Kramer (compilation) (1996)
  • Alles Vannie Beste (1997)
  • Kliphard (2001)
  • Karoo Kitaar Blues (2002)
  • Huistoe (2004)
  • Hemel en Aarde (2007)
  • Wakkerslaap (2017)
  • Sharttendorrf (2019)

Musicals

  • District Six (1986)
  • Fairyland (1991)
  • Poison (1992)
  • Crooners (1992)
  • Klop Klop (1996)
  • Kat and the Kings (1995)
  • Die Ballade van Koos Sas (2001)
  • Ghoema (2005)
  • The Kramer Petersen Songbook (2007)
  • David Kramer's Breyani (2010)
  • Some Like It Vrot (2011)
  • Blood Brothers (2013)
  • Orpheus in Africa (2015)
  • Langarm (2018)
  • Danger in the Dark (2018)

See also

References

  1. "David Kramer, South African Cultural Observatory - Living Treasures". Archived from the original on 6 January 2009. Retrieved 9 February 2009.
  2. Maureen Barnes. Brother of the more famous David Archived 3 April 2017 at the Wayback Machine. Fair Lady, 18 August 1999.
  3. ^ Media Release by University of Cape Town Archived 1 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine, 25 September 2007
  4. Hannes Coetzee Spoon Guitar Demo on YouTube
  5. Thamm, Marianne (14 February 2016). "District Six Kanala: Commemorating the void that still remains". Daily Maverick.
  6. Braid, Mary (15 March 1998). "Sing and dance, the beloved country". The Independent. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
  7. "David Kramer History". Retrieved 9 May 2023.
  8. "David Kramer an honorary Matie". 25 April 2014.
  9. "Winners of 2023 Fleur du Cap awards announced". News24. 27 March 2023.
  10. "Local theatre gets off to good start". www.iol.co.za.
  11. "Kramer's 'Langarm' set be a hit". www.iol.co.za.
  12. "David Kramer's Danger in the Dark returns to Baxter Theatre". www.news.uct.ac.za.

External links

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