Ladysmith Black Mambazo

CONCERT GUIDELINES:
By purchasing a ticket, you agree to comply with all health and safety protocols that are in place at the time of the performance. Please check the policies and guidelines prior to your performance for the most up-to-date information.
All tickets are ‘Will Call’. You do not need a mobile or printed ticket. Your name will be on a list at the venue and will be checked by a Payomet volunteer or staff member. Doors will open 1 hour prior to the event.
Note that all tickets are 'General Admission' meaning you are guaranteed a seat within your selected section, however not a specific seat. General Admission seats are first some, first served. Please arrive no earlier than 1 hour before the show.
Tickets are non-refundable.
No smoking is permitted on-site.
By purchasing a ticket, you agree to comply with all health and safety protocols that are in place at the time of the performance. Please check the policies and guidelines prior to your performance for the most up-to-date information.
All tickets are ‘Will Call’. You do not need a mobile or printed ticket. Your name will be on a list at the venue and will be checked by a Payomet volunteer or staff member. Doors will open 1 hour prior to the event.
Note that all tickets are 'General Admission' meaning you are guaranteed a seat within your selected section, however not a specific seat. General Admission seats are first some, first served. Please arrive no earlier than 1 hour before the show.
Tickets are non-refundable.
No smoking is permitted on-site.
"Undulating rhythmic phrases that push and pull … harmonising that is both ethereal and earthy." - World Music UK
“Above all LBM leave their audience in awe of the power and variety of the human voice and its ability to conjure up sounds which evoke the beauty and atmosphere of a land far away. What a gift.” - Yorkshire Post
"They are musical uniters and global boundary-crossers and, especially now many of the members are of a second generation even as the rest of world has grown less connected, their warm-centered presence and harmonics both soothe and offer hope for a more empathetic world" - Chicago Tribune
Ladysmith Black Mambazo has performed for millions of people, singing a message of peace, love and harmony– and we're blessed to have them back on the Payomet stage Sunday, August 28.
For 60 years, South Africa’s five-time Grammy Award winners, Ladysmith Black Mambazo has warmed the hearts of audiences worldwide with uplifting vocal harmonies, signature dance moves and charming onstage banter. It was Paul Simon’s 1987 Graceland album that introduced Ladysmith Black Mambazo to the world. The late former South African President Nelson Mandela designated the group “South Africa’s cultural ambassadors to the world,” a title the members carry with them with the highest honor. In 2018 the group received not one but two Grammy Award nominations for two separate albums, a first in the history of World Music. These two nominations brought their career total to 19 Grammy Award nominations. One of these albums, Shaka Zulu Revisited, won Best World Music Album. This was the group’s fifth Grammy Award win, the most for any World Music group.
Tickets: $45-$75 // Members: $40-$70
“Above all LBM leave their audience in awe of the power and variety of the human voice and its ability to conjure up sounds which evoke the beauty and atmosphere of a land far away. What a gift.” - Yorkshire Post
"They are musical uniters and global boundary-crossers and, especially now many of the members are of a second generation even as the rest of world has grown less connected, their warm-centered presence and harmonics both soothe and offer hope for a more empathetic world" - Chicago Tribune
Ladysmith Black Mambazo has performed for millions of people, singing a message of peace, love and harmony– and we're blessed to have them back on the Payomet stage Sunday, August 28.
For 60 years, South Africa’s five-time Grammy Award winners, Ladysmith Black Mambazo has warmed the hearts of audiences worldwide with uplifting vocal harmonies, signature dance moves and charming onstage banter. It was Paul Simon’s 1987 Graceland album that introduced Ladysmith Black Mambazo to the world. The late former South African President Nelson Mandela designated the group “South Africa’s cultural ambassadors to the world,” a title the members carry with them with the highest honor. In 2018 the group received not one but two Grammy Award nominations for two separate albums, a first in the history of World Music. These two nominations brought their career total to 19 Grammy Award nominations. One of these albums, Shaka Zulu Revisited, won Best World Music Album. This was the group’s fifth Grammy Award win, the most for any World Music group.
Tickets: $45-$75 // Members: $40-$70