Wear the History, Win the Art

Drum Logo T-Shirt Competition 

 

Buy any 2 drum logo T-shirts from our collection and sign up to our bi-monthly newsletter and stand a chance to win a striking Black & White A2 poster of your choice. Act fast as these images will no longer be available in A2 size once sold out. Promotion ends 30 November 2025.

T's & C's

Each sale of 2 or more Drum Logo T-shirts = 1 competition entry

To qualify, customers must join the Drum Community by signing up for our bi-monthly newsletter.

Competition Period: 1–30 November 2025

Prizes:
Three winners will each receive 1 x Framed A2 Black & White Poster of their choice, either - Dolly on the Beach, Mandela Boxer, Love Story Sophiatown or The Americans

Collection & Shipping:
Prizes can be collected in-store, or shipping can be arranged at the winner’s cost.
International winners will receive an unframed poster and are responsible for shipping and framing.

Limited Edition Notice:
Once these A2 posters are sold, they will be discontinued — no reprints.

Competition Draw Dates:

  • Round 1: 10 November 2025

  • Round 2: 20 November 2025

  • Final Round: 30 November 2025

    DRUM was described as "the first black lifestyle magazine in Africa”. It was a ground-breaking pan-African magazine, and a rare space in Apartheid South Africa, for black writers and journalists to capture and publish new, vibrant, African urban culture, and political injustices, like nelson Mandela’s arrest, and the death of Steve Biko. At its peak, in the 60s, it had the highest readership in Africa.

    The magazine was founded in 1951 by Bob Crisp. However, its first few issues presented an oversimplified image of black culture as somehow untouched by the external influences of an increasingly urbanised and modernised world. Articles looked at traditional African culture -such as historic African musical instruments- but this content landed flat with an African readership who already knew the information from their grandparents.

    Young, black South Africans wanted Jazz!

    They wanted to read about the sports, sex and scandal taking place in their very own neighbourhoods!

    Drum’s new publisher, Jim Bailey, and his editor Anthony Sampson quickly realised this, and Drum’s Black journalists and photographers led it in a new direction, building a magazine that both created and reported on a real, fresh, and distinctly African, pop-culture.


    The Bailey’s African History Archives (BAHA) holds 40 years of material from all the editions of Drum Magazine and its various sister publications - Golden City Post, Trust, True Love and City Press. The Archives contains a wealth of information from politics to culture and complexities of the vast Anglophone African nations.


    The Drum Archive Shop supports the digitisation of this incredible archive. Our mission is to protect, preserve, and share these incredible stories and photographs, making them accessible - online and for all.

    Vist the Archive