The Library of Congress > Linked Data Service > LC Name Authority File (LCNAF)

Masuka, Dorothy


  • [Individual was an Afropop Hall of Fame inductee and an Order of Ikhamanga in Silver awardee.]
  • URI(s)

  • Variants

    • Auntie Dorothy
    • Aunty Dot
    • Dorothy, Auntie
    • Dot, Aunty
    • Sis Do
    • Masuku, Dorothy
  • Identifies LC/NAF RWO

  • Identifies RWO

      • Exact Matching Concepts from Other Schemes

      • Closely Matching Concepts from Other Schemes

      • Sources

        • found: Mango, 1992:label (Dorothy Masuka)
        • found: Int. dict. of Black composers, 1999(Masuko, Dorothy; b. 1935, Bulawayo, Zimbabwe; popularly known as Aunty Dot or Sis Do)
        • found: African musicians profiles website, viewed Sep. 4, 2013(Dorothy Masuka; father originally from Zambia, her mother was Zulu; family moved to South Africa when she was 12 and she attended school in Johannesburg; performed in exile in Malawi and Tanzania in 1960s and 1970s)
        • found: BBC, Music website, Dorothy Masuka: the definitive collection, released 2002, viewed Sep. 4, 2013("Auntie Dorothy"; technically Zimbabwean; many of her well-known songs are in Ndebele language, similar to Kwazulu)
        • found: Dictionary of African Biography, accessed February 21, 2015, via Oxford African American Studies Center database:(Masuka, Dorothy; Dorothy 'Notsokolo' Masuka; composer, arranger, popular singer; born in 1935 in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe; recorded with Troubadour Records, Johannesburg (1952); rose to fame with the Golden Rhythm Crooners; released Hamba Notsokolo (1950s); composed her own songs; reinvigorated career through album Pata Pata (1990); received the greatest acclaim with archival re-release of biggest hits on album Hamba Notsokolo (1995); was inducted into the Afropop Hall of Fame, New York (2002); received Order of Ikhamanga in Silver by the Presidency of South Africa (2006))
        • found: New York times WWW site, viewed Feb. 28, 2019(in obituary published Feb. 27: Dorothy Masuka; b. Dorothy Masuku, Sept. 3, 1935, Bulawayo, Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe); her name was misspelled Masuka on some early records, and the mistake stuck; d. Saturday [Feb. 23, 2019], Johannesburg, aged 83; vocalist and songwriter who blazed a trail for female pop stars in South Africa and became a dogged advocate of the struggle against apartheid; in 1961 she recorded Lumumba, addressing the assassination of the Congolese leader Patrice Lumumba; South African authorities tried to seize all copies of the record, and Ms. Masuka went into exile for more than 30 years; for a few years she traveled widely, performing on behalf of independence movements in Zimbabwe, Malawi, Tanzania, Uganda, and Kenya; lived briefly in New York and London, supported by A.N.C. sympathizers, before settling down in Zambia with her children; returned to live in Zimbabwe after it gained independence in 1980; moved back to Johannesburg in 1992, when apartheid was crumbling; considered a national hero in both South Africa and Zimbabwe, though she resisted aligning herself with any single country)
      • General Notes

        • [Individual was an Afropop Hall of Fame inductee and an Order of Ikhamanga in Silver awardee.]
      • Instance Of

      • Scheme Membership(s)

      • Collection Membership(s)

      • Change Notes

        • 1994-09-20: new
        • 2019-02-28: revised
      • Alternate Formats