This site has limited support for your browser. We recommend switching to Edge, Chrome, Safari, or Firefox.

FREE SHIPPING IN NZ ON ORDERS OVER $70

JOIN OUR RECORD CLUB - GET FREE SHIPPING ON ALL ORDERS & 10% OFF PRE-ORDERS

Cart 0

No more products available for purchase

Products
Free shipping in Aotearoa! You are $70 away from free shipping.
Add Gift Wrap & Card
Leave an order note or gift card message
Pair with
Subtotal Free
View cart
Shipping, taxes, and discount codes are calculated at checkout

Your Cart is Empty

NATIONAL WAKE

Walk In Africa 1979-81

$51.00
FORMAT

IMPORTED TITLE - This product is sourced from overseas. Usually ships within 2-3 weeks

Earn 5 F|O Points on this item

Free Shipping on NZ orders over $70

The South Africa of the late 1970s was neither the right place nor time to launch a mixed-race punk band. Yet, following the student-inspired Soweto Uprising of 1976, it was also exactly the right conditions to foster a band like National Wake, one formed in an underground commune, and one whose very name exists in protest at the divisive, racist apartheid regime. Never before collected together, Light In The Attic is set to release National Wake’s full body of work as Walk In Africa 1979-81.

Featured heavily in the recent documentary Punk In Africa , National Wake played punk, reggae and tropical funk, equally at home in the city’s rock underground and the township nightclub circuit. Ivan Kadey started the band with two brothers, Gary and Punka Khoza. The three were from different worlds – while Ivan was an outsider, a Jewish orphan born in the traditional Johannesburg immigrant neighborhood, Gary, Punka and their family were forcibly moved to the troubled township of Soweto under the apartheid regime. Later joined by guitarist Steve Moni, the whole band grew up against a backdrop of township unrest, social upheaval and suburban tedium that characterized apartheid-era South Africa.

National Wake released just one album, in 1981. It sold approximately 700 copies before being withdrawn under government pressure. The band subsequently disintegrated, but their influence could be traced in the racially mixed post-punk underground centered around Rockey Street in Johannesburg throughout the 1980s, their legacy transmitted through fanzines and underground cassette trading.

Tracklisting

  1. International News
  2. It's All Right
  3. Walk In Africa
  4. Time And Place
  5. Corner House Stone
  6. Mercenaries
  7. Wake Of The Nation
  8. Supaman
  9. Speed It Up
  10. Beat Up The Lights
  11. Black Punk Rockers
  12. Stratocaster
  13. Everybody
  14. Vatsiketeni

[{"variant_id":"39698445828158" , "metafield_value":""}]