Skip to main content
Part of complete coverage on

Marching to their own beat: Brass band keeps youngsters from gang life

By Monique Rivalland, for CNN
April 3, 2013 -- Updated 1058 GMT (1858 HKT)
Set up in Limpopo, a deprived region of South Africa, Bezzi's Youth Brass Band has 60 members from local villages. Set up in Limpopo, a deprived region of South Africa, Bezzi's Youth Brass Band has 60 members from local villages.
HIDE CAPTION
Bezzi's Youth Brass Band
Bezzi's Youth Brass Band
Bezzi's Youth Brass Band
Bezzi's Youth Brass Band
Bezzi's Youth Brass Band
Bezzi's Youth Brass Band
Bezzi's Youth Brass Band
Bezzi's Youth Brass Band
<<
<
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
>
>>
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Bezzi's Youth Brass Band was set up in one of South Africa's poorest regions
  • The band was put together to give bored youngsters something to do
  • There are now 60 members who rehearse every week
  • The band is so popular that there are 30 people waiting to join

(CNN) -- Every Friday morning 17-year-old Sarel Ramphele puts on his gold-trimmed suit, grabs his trumpet and walks the 6 kilometers from his home in Blood River to the neighboring village.

Under a makeshift iron roof in the yard of an unused house he meets with scores of other young people to rehearse for what has become an improbable musical success story in one of South Africa's poorest regions.

Based in Limpopo, a rural region whose lifeblood is its eponymous river, Bezzi's Youth Brass Band is one local woman's answer to a distinct lack of youth engagement in the area.

"There are absolutely no entertainment facilities for young people around here," says Janet Bezuidenhout, 42, who set up the band just under three years ago. "The teenagers are just idling around."

Janet Bezuidenhout set up the brass band three years ago.
Janet Bezuidenhout set up the brass band three years ago.

Ramphele joined the band when he was just 14 and last year was appointed lead trumpet player. He relishes having something to work towards. "I used to spend a lot of time on the streets doing nothing. The band keeps my mind fresh and helps me develop," he says.

Read more: Beethoven in the Congo: Kinshasa's classical orchestra

It was Bezuidenhout's music-loving nephew Rondo who inspired her to start the group. He was looking to join a local band but there was no such thing. As a former drum majorette at school, she shared his passion and decided to buy 10 instruments with her pension fund so he could set up his own group.

When Rondo called the first meeting at his late grandfather's empty house in Makgofe village, he would have been delighted to see even one person turn up. But young people in the neighboring towns had caught wind of the new band and that morning there was a group of 30 boys and girls crowding around the yard.

Moved by the youngsters' new-found zest, Bezuidenhout was reluctant to send anyone home. "I heard them playing and it touched me. It touched me so much to see these kids so excited."

Aware of the potential of her project but unable to finance it she applied to a government tender scheme that allows small businesses or individuals to bid for one-off jobs with public bodies, such as cleaning or construction contracts. Bezuidenhout, a retired administrator, won her bid and spent a month installing cabinets in a nearby hospital for a lump sum of 20,000 rand ($2,170).

With that money, Bezuidenhout upped her inventory of instruments and bought suits, skirts and blouses for the band. She modifies the uniforms at home with gold thread trimmings and a badge with the group's name. Today, the band has 60 trained members who share 16 trombones, six side drums, four tubas and a bass drum.

Read more: Oliver 'Tuku' Mtukudzi -- healing Zimbabwe through music

Training is run by four "band leaders" who are slightly older and able to show the younger members how to play. One of them is 26-year-old Nokie Nthoke who got involved so that he could "get off the streets and stay out of trouble."

Limpopo is plagued by high crime rates and unemployment. "After 7 or 8 o'clock at night it is difficult to walk around," says Bezuidenhout. "Men lurking on the streets will stab you and take everything in your possession."

Oliver Mtukudzi is a world-renowned Zimbabwean musician with an illustrious career spanning four decades. Oliver Mtukudzi is a world-renowned Zimbabwean musician with an illustrious career spanning four decades.
Oliver 'Tuku' Mtukudzi
HIDE CAPTION
<<
<
1
2
3
4
>
>>
Oliver \'Tuku\' Mtukudzi Oliver 'Tuku' Mtukudzi
Violin player Pauleth Masamba has been playing with the Orchestre Symphonique Kimbanguiste since the mid-1990s. "Music is one of the things that comforts me, takes off the stress and makes me happy," she says. Violin player Pauleth Masamba has been playing with the Orchestre Symphonique Kimbanguiste since the mid-1990s. "Music is one of the things that comforts me, takes off the stress and makes me happy," she says.
Orchestre Symphonique Kimbanguiste
HIDE CAPTION
<<
<
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
>
>>
Kinshasa\'s symphony orchestra Kinshasa's symphony orchestra

With little opportunity for development, Bezuidenhout says it's not unusual for boys as young as 13 to join gangs in the area. But in recent years, a handful have gone from gang member to band member and mellowed under Bezuidenhout's's no-nonsense guidance.

If a member misbehaves, even outside the confines of rehearsals, a meeting will be called and Bezuidenhout and a handful of members will quiz the culprit on their actions and agree on an appropriate punishment. "There is a lot of respect between comrades," she says.

Both Ramphele and Nthoke speak of the importance of their band's community and count their large pool of friends as one of the best things about being a member.

But the popularity of the band is becoming a problem -- Bezuidenhout has a waiting list of 30 under 15-year-olds who at the moment cannot be catered for. Ultimately, she would like 100 in her troop but without donations the future of Bezzi's Youth is uncertain.

"Some of the instruments are broken, the uniforms are getting old and affording transport, even to local events, is a problem," she says.

Read more: Afrobeats -- the new sound of West Africa that's going global

The band and its unique take on gospel songs have become a favorite for local events such as weddings and the unveiling of tombstones, but paying for the bus trip to the performance is not always possible.

"It's very painful for me" says Bezuidenhout. "I cannot tell them that it has to stop because we have no money. Even when there's no rehearsal they'll be there. I'll send 60 messages telling them not to come because it is pouring with rain, but some of them will still turn up." Many of the band members walk from villages as far as 12 kilometers away just to practice.

Despite financial barriers Bezuidenhout remains a source of hope for her young musicians, who share her dream of playing beyond Limpopo.

She says: "I want us to march the main street in Cape Town at Christmas or Easter time when thousands of people line the streets to watch the parades."

To find out more, contact Janet Bezuidenhout at janetharris007@gmail.com

ADVERTISEMENT
Part of complete coverage on
May 7, 2013 -- Updated 1246 GMT (2046 HKT)
Pedro Matos Darfur Sartorialist 9
Portuguese aid worker Pedro Matos launched The Darfur Sartorialist project after being amazed by the fashion he saw in Sudan.
May 2, 2013 -- Updated 1554 GMT (2354 HKT)
Half a century ago, the quest for interplanetary exploration between the Earth's superpowers gained a new, self-proclaimed, contender.
April 23, 2013 -- Updated 1020 GMT (1820 HKT)
Growing up opposite a garbage heap inspired Kenyan artist Cyrus Kabiru to create stunning artworks from waste.
April 21, 2013 -- Updated 1926 GMT (0326 HKT)
Last year, 60 park rangers were killed in the line of duty. But rangers in Cameroon are willing to risk their lives to save the African forest elephant.
April 9, 2013 -- Updated 1628 GMT (0028 HKT)
A competitor crosses the erg Znaigui during the second stage of the 26rd edition of the 'Marathon des Sables', on April 4, 2011, some 300 Kilometers, South of Ouarzazate in Morocco. The marathon is considered one of the hardest in the world, with 900 participants having to walk 250 kms (150 miles) for seven days in the Moroccan Sahara.
Would you pay thousands of dollars to spend seven days running under the scorching sun of the Sahara Desert?
April 4, 2013 -- Updated 1034 GMT (1834 HKT)
Barefeet Theatre is aiming to transform the lives of street children in Zambia by using performing arts as a way of engaging youths.
March 28, 2013 -- Updated 1153 GMT (1953 HKT)
Waayaha Cusub is a hip-hop group famous for their hardcore songs attacking Somali warlords.
The jarring sounds of war have longed echoed over Mogadishu. Now it's time for music to rock the Somali capital.
March 22, 2013 -- Updated 1028 GMT (1828 HKT)
Saran Kaba Jones is the founder of FACE Africa, a group implementing clean water projects in rural Liberia.
Saran Kaba Jones is the founder of FACE Africa, a group working to improve access to clean water in rural Liberia.
March 22, 2013 -- Updated 1300 GMT (2100 HKT)
Developers, designers and big thinkers gather together on the rooftop of the Co-Creation Hub in Lagos to discuss ideas.
The Co-Creation Hub in Lagos is a place for young, creative and tech-savvy Nigerians to collaborate and innovate.
March 12, 2013 -- Updated 1051 GMT (1851 HKT)
Rooti Dolls has introduced a range of talking dolls, aimed at helping African children stay in touch with their heritage, Ama is a
A new range of talking dolls has has been created to help African children connect with their roots.
February 26, 2013 -- Updated 1352 GMT (2152 HKT)
Richard Turere, 13, has devised an innovative system to protect his family's livestock from the wild beasts.
February 22, 2013 -- Updated 1030 GMT (1830 HKT)
Photographer Peter Magubane attends the 26th annual International Center of Photography Infinity Awards at Pier Sixty at Chelsea Piers on May 10, 2010 in New York City.
South African photographer Peter Magubane chronicled the cruelties of apartheid.
February 19, 2013 -- Updated 1214 GMT (2014 HKT)
In the last 30 years a vibrant Senegalese community has found a new home away from home in New York's diverse district of Harlem.
February 15, 2013 -- Updated 1216 GMT (2016 HKT)
Supporters of the Ghanaian national football team cheer in the stands in Accra 03 February 2008 during the 2008 African Nations Cup football match Nigeria vs Ghana.
Exploring Ghana's rich history, culture and natural beauty: Exotic wildlife, historic castles, vibrant markets and a golden coastline.
February 7, 2013 -- Updated 1653 GMT (0053 HKT)
Empowering African youth through sport: Senegalese academy SEEDS offers basketball scholarships to U.S. colleges.
Each week Inside Africa highlights the true diversity of the continent as seen through the mediums of art, music, travel and literature.
ADVERTISEMENT