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Padkos - Guitarist Tony Cox revisits some popular South African songs

Hamburg, March 2026 - NOT FOR PUBLICATION before 15/5/26 - 

Tony Cox is not only a very talented guitar player, he also shines as an arranger. In this collection he looks for inspiration from some of the iconic South African popular songs from recent years.

Essentially an instrumental album Tony does add a little vocal accompaniment to three of the songs. The album title, is an Afrikaans word that refers to food one might take with you on the road for a journey - this is indeed the case with this collection.

Always tongue in cheek, Tony Cox with his picnic basket (c) Songwrights Publishers

Here is a review from the time of the original album release.

Review: Richard Haslop

7 April 2014


The music of South Africa’s consistently brilliant fingerstyle guitarist Tony Cox has always been influenced by his geographical roots, full of mainly instrumental statements about where he’s from and who he is. But quite a lot of what he has played – as well, it must be said, as anybody anywhere – is South African by virtue of the nationality of the player, rather than its inherent musical nature.


“Padkos” is different. On eight of its eleven tracks, Cox covers iconic local songs directly, arranging them, with two sung exceptions, for his highly distinctive solo guitar. These include well-known compositions from a cross-generational pop world that includes Juluka, P J Powers, Hotstix Mabuse, Nico Carstens and even a John Fahey-like take on the easy listening Bert Kaempfert Orchestra, each of them performed with remarkable skill and elan, of course, but also with respect, care, imagination and, most importantly, a huge sense of fun.


Singing for the first time in a long while, he contrasts his own politically bleak blues, Invisible, with Hugh Masekela’s Bring Back Mandela and resurrects Edi Niedelander’s wonderful Ancient Dust Of Africa from decades of obscurity.


The record closes with a gorgeous version of Bright Blue’s Weeping, with orchestra, but, ironically perhaps, the highlight may be his own maskanda inflected Long Walk To Nkandla.

 The release date is  15/5/2026

 Music link (after release) >

 Mountain Records


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