Bhekizizwe Joseph Shabalala was born on 28 August 1940, in the town of
Ladysmith (eMnambithi district) in the
KwaZulu-Natal region of South Africa. His parents, Jonathan Mluwane Shabalala and Nomandla Elina Shabalala, raised Joseph and his six siblings on a white-owned farm called Tugela. His father died in the late 1940s; Joseph, being the eldest, had to take care of the family. He left the farm, however, in 1958 to search for work in the nearby city of
Durban. During this time, he was spotted by a well-known group, the Durban Choir, after he delighted audiences with his smooth guitar playing and soprano voice. When he joined the choir, he attempted to teach them some of his new compositions, namely his first song "Nomathemba" (which was made into a play in 1995). They refused, and so he left them after only two years. In 1958 Shabalala discovered an
isicathamiya group, The Highlanders, led by his hero Galiyane Hlatshwayo. Hlatshwayo was the man who encouraged Shabalala to use his voice powerfully. Shabalala formed his own group the following year 1959, Ezimnyama ("The Black Ones"). A series of dreams he had in his sleep in December 1960 was a major turning point in the formation of the group; when he saw how well his group did in the once-weekly
isicathamiya competitions, he renamed them
Ladysmith Black Mambazo, "Mambazo" meaning
axe, referring to how the group chopped down the other choirs by winning almost every time. After local radio airplay (on the
SABC station
Radio Zulu), Shabalala accepted a recording contract that was offered in 1972 by
Gallo Music producer
West Nkosi. The group sold over 40,000 copies of their first album Imbongi. and continued to do so through other recordings. In 1976, he became a
Christian, and the songs in the Mambazo repertoire were shuffled to one side to include generalized Christian,
Methodist, and
Zionist hymns sung in the Zulu language. ==Rising to stardom==