Anton Goosen Explained

Anton Goosen
Birth Date:1946 3, df=yes
Birth Place:Middelburg, Eastern Cape
Genre:Afrikaans Folk/Rock
Instrument:Guitar and voice

Anton Goosen (born 5 March 1946 in Middelburg, Eastern Cape)[1] is a South African musician and songwriter. He became a pivotal figure in Afrikaans music and is generally regarded as the father of Afrikaans Rock.[2] [3]

Early years

As a young boy in school, Goosen was not considered 'bright'. At the age of 9, his teachers sought to place him in a class for mentally challenged children as his behaviour became disruptive. When he was 17, a guidance counsellor suggested to Goosen that he abandon his music career.

In 1963, Goosen was expelled from boarding school after being caught in a bath playing guitar and smoking. His guitar was confiscated and its case filled with bricks. Despite this, Goosen persevered and formed his high school's first rock band that same year.[4]

Goosen attended the Teachers Training College Heidelberg, and qualified in Special Education after which he taught school for awhile, and worked as a writer and reviewer for Beeld, before becoming a full-time song writer.[5]

Career

Goosen wrote songs for other artists, most notably and prodigiously for Sonja Herholdt, but also for Carike Keuzenkamp, Laurika Rauch, Richard Clayderman, Francis Goya, and Koos Kombuis. He released his own first album, Boy Van Die Suburbs, in 1979, and it sold over 80,000 copies. He was noted for being the first to produce an album of his own works entirely in Afrikaans. He used irony and symbolism in his songs to protest against removals to Bantustans and to underline the injustices behind the Soweto riots.

Goosen is noted for two films for which he wrote music and directed: n Brief vir Simone (1980) and Sing vir die Harlekyn (1980).[6] He wrote the theme music for Die Laaste Tango (2013), n Pawpaw vir my Darling (2016) and Siembamba (Lullaby) (2017). As early as 1980 Goosen was referred to as the father of the Afrikaans chanson.

Discography

Singles

Albums

Appears On

Awards

Year Award Category
1979 Sarie Award Best composition for Kruidjie-Roer-My-Nie
1979 Sarie Award Best Singer of the Year[7]
1999 ATKV Contribution to Afrikaans music DECLINED
2001 Geraas Lifelong contribution to Afrikaans music, Producer award "om te breyten"
2001 SAMA Album of the year for Om te Breyten
2003 SAMA Best Afrikaans album of the year for Vis innie bos
2005 Vonk Oskar for Groen Blomme
2006 Volksblad Artist of the year
2009 Academy of Arts and Science Centenary Medal
2009 SAMA Lifetime achievement award
2010 ATKV East Pretoria Songwriting award
2011 Voortrekkers Medal of Honour
2013 Inniebos Contribution to Afrikaans music
2016 Federasie van Afrikaanse Kultuur (F.A.K.) Lifelong achievement
2019 Krone Award

External links

Notes and References

  1. Welsyn . Willim . 21 June 2012 . Q&A: Anton Goosen . Rolling Stone . https://web.archive.org/web/20120623202341/http://www.rollingstone.co.za/opinion/item/1061-qaa-anton-goosen . 23 June 2012 . live . dmy . 17 July 2012 .
  2. 10 Questions For: Anton Goosen . Cape Town Magazine . https://web.archive.org/web/20170823231745/https://www.capetownmagazine.com/anton-goosen . 23 August 2017 . live . dmy.
  3. Web site: Sonja Herholdt: Harlekyn . South Africa Foreign Songs: Reviews . 17 December 2013 . Language Trainers . https://web.archive.org/web/20160420144659/http://languagetrainers.com/reviews/music-reviews/south+africa/harlekyn . 20 April 2016 . live . dmy.
  4. Web site: du Plessis . Jacques . Anton Goosen . Open Languages . https://web.archive.org/web/20140519073627/http://www.openlanguages.net/afrikaans/culture/op-afrikaans/songs/artists-a-d/anton-goosen/ . 19 May 2014 . dead . dmy .
  5. Web site: Anton Goosen at Royal Show . 29 May 2017 . Art Smart.
  6. Web site: Anton Goosen. IMDb. 21 July 2018. 25 September 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160925054010/http://www.imdb.com/name/nm4853443/bio. dead.
  7. Don. Albert . S. Africa's Sarie to Smith . Nielsen Business Media . . 3 November 1979 . 76 .