Before his death, Gito had traveled extensively, working with a numerous musicians locally and internationally. Starting out in South Africa, Gito toured with a group called Pongolo during 1986. In 1987,
Tananas was formed by Gito, Ian Herman and
Steve Newman. The band gained global attention, leading them to perform in America, Australia, France, Japan, Sweden and various other countries around the world. On separate occasions, he shared the stage with
Paul Simon of
Simon & Garfunkel,
Peter Gabriel of
Genesis,
Sting of
The Police, as well as
Phil Manzanera,
Tracy Chapman and
Youssou N'Dour. Gito worked with Jason Armstrong in 1996 and 2000 on two albums, Desert Voices, and played bass in the band Somewhere Else along with Armstrong (keyboards), George Sunday (guitar) and Gaston Goliath (drums) during 1993. One particular project he was involved with was The Shuttle Band, which featured musicians from Europe and South Africa. He was also a part of world music group Mondetta, consisting of artists from Israel, Canada, Korea and South Africa. Baloi sang vocals for the song "Mountain Wind" on the album "Bush Telegraph" by Landscape Prayers, and was also credited on the album for production and mixing. In 2004, Baloi recorded "Sweet-Thorn", a duo album with Landscape Prayers guitarist, Nibs van der Spuy. In 2008, "Beyond", a posthumous album, was released, with a percentage of its proceeds going to the Gito Baloi Memorial Trust, which was set up for Baloi's children. Gito had begun recording the 10 tracks and the production was completed by Steve Newman (
Tananas), Paul Hanmer, Ian Herman (
Tananas), McCoy Mrubata, Moses Khumalo, Pedro Da Silva Pinto (
340ml), Tlale Makhene, Tony Cox, Frank Paco, Nibs van der Spuy, Deepak Ram, Rui Soeiro (
340ml), Bernice Boikanyo, Paulo Chibanga (
340ml), Thuli Mdlalose, Eliot Short, Vusi Maseko, Graeme Sacks and Dave Reynolds. == Personal life ==