





OFFICIAL STATEMENT FROM THE FAMILY OF JAMES MTUME
TED Talk with James Mtume – www.youtube.com/watch?v=7t8sA5xgDKo
The Mtume family sadly announce the passing of James Mtume (Forman) – sunrise January 3rd, 1946, sunset January 9th, 2022.
The biological son of jazz saxophone great Jimmy Heath, James Mtume was raised by incredible parents James and Bertha Forman. He pursued training as a swimmer while attending Pasadena City College and was recruited for the 1968 Olympics but decided to instead take a different direction and joined the Cultural Nationalist Organization US. It was during this time that heād taken the namesake of Mtume (Swahili for āmessengerā). In the early 1970ās Mtume shifted towards music as a solid percussionist who went on to tour and record with Miles Davis. Mtume would eventually record with his own group the Mtume Umoja Ensemble as well as on sessions with Duke Ellington, McCoy Tyner, Freddie Hubbard, Sonny Rollins and a host of other jazz greats.
By the mid-late 1970ās with longtime musical partner Reggie Lucas, Mtume forged a path combining soul, jazz and funk (he called it āSophistifunkā). The result was a slew of hit productions with Roberta Flack/Donny Hathaway (āThe Closer I Get to Youā, āBack Together Againā), Phyllis Hyman (āYou Know How to Love Meā) and Stephanie Mills (āWhatcha Gonna Do With My Lovināā, āNever Knew Love Like This Beforeā).
In the early 1980ās Mtume formed the group that bore his namesake and created five best selling albums as well as eleven R&B hits, including the #1 multiplatinum smash āJuicy Fruitā (1982) and the Top 3 hit āYou, Me and Heā (1984). It was during this time that Mtume took his āSophistifunkā sound and combined it with the emerging technology of drum machines and synthesizers
In the 1990ās Mtume made his way into the world of soundtracks, creating music for films such as scoring for the film āNative Sonā and served as the music supervisor for the television series āNew York Undercoverā (producing the music for scenes at the fictional nightclub Natalieās). At the same time, Mtumeās activism continued via his co-hosting duties on NYCās WBLS-FMāS community talk series Open Line, a role he served for eighteen years.
The millennium found Mtume sharing his knowledge regarding the business of music in arenas such as the Red Bull Academy in Tokyo and TED Talks.
James Mtume is survived by his wife Kamili Mtume; brother Jeffrey Forman; sons Faulu Mtume, Richard Johnson; daughters Benin Mtume, Eshe King, Ife Mtume, Sanda Lee; grandchildren Sukari Mtume, Yamani Mtume, Craig McCargo, Mazi Mtume, Aya Mtume, Jhasi Mtume.
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