Brenda Fassie was born on November 3, 1964 in Cape Town and named after the singer Brenda Lee. As a toddler she began earning money singing for tourists and at church events. At 16, she left Cape Town for Soweto to pursue a singing career. She first joined the group Joy and later became lead singer for the group Brenda and the Big Dudes. She had a son in 1985 and was married briefly from 1989-1991.
SONGs with the big dudes 👇🏾👇🏾
1983: Weekend Special
1984: Cool Spot (EP)
1984: Let’s Stick Together
1985: Higher and Higher
1985: Touch Somebody (EP)
1986: No No Señor
Solo albums: 👇🏾👇🏾
1987: Brenda
1987: Ag Shame Lovey
1988: Umuntu Ngumuntu Ngabantu
1989: Too Late for Mama
1990: Black President
1991: I Am Not a Bad Girl
1992: Yo Baby
1993: Mama
1994: Abantu Bayakhuluma
1995: Umuntu Uyashintsha
1996: Now Is the Time
1997: Paparazzi
1998: Memeza
1999: Nomakanjani
2000: Thola Amadlozi
2001: Myekeleni
2002: Mina Nawe: Ngohlala Ngi Nje
2003: Mali
2004: Gimme Some Volume
Her biggest hits include “Weekend Special”, “No No No Seňor”, and “Too Late for Mama”. In 1990, the outspoken singer released the single “Black President”, a tribute to the still imprisoned Nelson Mandela. She then declared that she would stop singing in English, declaring: “I am proud to be an African.” Her subsequent songs were in Zulu, Xhosa and Sotho. Soon crack cocaine began to harm her career. In 1995, she was the subject of lurid press scrutiny when she was discovered in a hotel with the body of her then lesbian lover, Poppie Sihlahla, who had died of an apparent overdose. The incident prompted Fassie to enter rehab. The Afropop star would return to rehab facilities several times in her life. She released several solo albums, most of which became multi-platinum best sellers including “Now Is the Time”, “Nomakanjani”, and most notably, “Memeza”, which was the best-selling album in South Africa in 1998 and earned her numerous South African Music Awards (SAMAs). In 2001, Time Magazine wrote a feature on Fassie, dubbing her The Madonna of the Townships
On the morning of April 26, 2004, Fassie was rushed to the hospital after collapsing at her home due to a cocaine overdose. She had stopped breathing and as a result suffered brain damage. The Mandelas visited her and her comatose condition was front-page news. On May 9, 2004, her life support machines were turned off. The woman once called South Africa’s first black pop star was dead at age 39 with her family, including her long term partner, Gloria Chaka, at her bedside.