Powered By Blogger

Friday 4 November 2022

You are here

South Africa’s Kwaito Music: New Language Of The Youth

South Africa’s Kwaito Music: New Language Of The Youth

Photo: Twitter

30 years on since Kwaito hit the streets of Soweto before spreading rapidly throughout South Africa, the music genre is sure to be the 'talk of town' for many years and decades to come.

Like all great and blossoming genres throughout history, the Kwaito industry would do well to welcome the wide variety of perspectives on its originality, its purpose or what it is about and the good, the bad and the untidy, learn and improve from these.

The Kwaito industry has been growing fast. Indeed Kwaito is becoming increasingly competitive.

Expert opinion is that the newfound freedom gave South African musicians easier access to international works and a greater ability to freely express themselves.

And as a result, Kwaito has also been known as the expression of this 'new freedom', and many anti-apartheid chants have been used as lyrics for Kwaito songs.

Kwaito has also been called the music that defines the generation who came of age after apartheid. Its pulsing dance beat evolved from styles such as mbaqanga and dancehall, as well as house and disco.

Schools in the townships were unable to fund programs such as music classes to enhance the learning experience of their students. As Kwaito did not require a formal knowledge of music theory, large spaces to rehearse, and expensive instruments, it was easily accessible to individuals in these downtrodden communities.

Moreover, Kwaito stars in South Africa are seen as celebrities who influence the culture, language, and economy of the nation in ways that were impossible during the years of governmentally imposed segregation.

TS, Ghetto Ruff, Kalawa Jazmee, and Bulldogs are the main recording companies that have discovered Kwaito musicians.

Jam Alley was a South African talent show that has been a venue for many young Kwaito artists like Mandoza, Mzambiya, and Zola, as well as other pop stars. Some Kwaito artists have even transcended a musical career. Zola, for instance, hosted a talk show called Zola 7 on SABC1.

Interestingly to know, is that the commonalities between dancehall and Kwaito are in fact rooted in a deeper relationship between South Africa and Jamaican music.

African Reggae artists like Côte d'Ivoire's Alpha Blondy and South Africa's own Lucky Dube were popular throughout the continent during apartheid.

And Alpha helped shed a negative light on the oppressive regime when he compared apartheid to Nazism.

Many currently renowned Kwaito musicians grew up listening to Jamaican music, and Stoan, a member of Bongo Maffin, explained in an interview just how necessary an outlet this kind of music was: the representations of Black people imported into the country during apartheid were singularly negative ones, and Jamaican music was one of the few imported forms that celebrated Blackness and gave ghettoized Black youth in South Africa something to embrace and identify with.

As he describes it, "If we had to look at any other example of Black people off the continent who have found their essence, it's Jamaicans. For us, for South Africans after the curtain was lifted, after we could see other things besides what was presented to us on television which was Blacksploitation movies and stuff like that, buffoons, you know the picture of us. Any other picture of a successful Blackman was him behaving like a caricature of himself. Jamaicans brought another element to a picture we had of us as an out of body experience. Yeah, so I think you'll find that a lot of people, you know, have been touched by the culture, in South Africa, within 10 years."

It is also important to incorporate the attitude that Kwaito musicians have. Many critics have a very biased and Western point of view on the genre. Kwaito rose from a ghetto culture, and most critics always look at Kwaito in a cultural-studies context rather than looking at the ethnomusicology side.

What makes Kwaito stick out is the fact that the music is always associated with a cultural context that brings out some extra meanings and messages. Furthermore, Kwaito is considered by some critics as aggressive township music.

In South Africa, some Kwaito music producers say that the genre is comparable to hip hop; it is only comparable because it has become more than just a genre of music but rather a movement in which people can create their own identities with their own values.

As Thokozani Mhlambi states in his article Kwaitofabulous, "In Kwaito music, the emphasis lies not in the poetic essence of the lyrics but rather in the instrumental arrangement and the 'danceability' of the composition. Therefore I disagree with writers such as Maria McCloy, the author of ‘'Kwaito: Its history and where it’s at now, who criticize Kwaito, claiming that very little time and effort is put into Kwaito production.... This criticism overlooks the music’s multiple social contexts such as parties, street bashes, and clubs. These are social venues where people are more in pursuit of leisure than engaging in intellectual discourse."

Not only does Kwaito resist a sense of Western based oppression by remaining apolitical, but it also resists trends and Western influence in and of itself via mode of production. Kwaito, as Mhlambi affirms, has remained the music of its people, which is the music of the South African youth after the struggle who wish to pursue rest and relaxation as opposed to dwelling on the past. The term Kwaito is a clear sign that oppression is not something to be, or that will be forgotten. The danceability and poetry inherent to Kwaito, however, shows a reversion to better times—to cultural integrity.

Through kwaito music, artists and youths collaborate to create, through music and dance, a realm where the struggle does not exist. 

 Home

 

 

AFRICAN MUSIC POWER

Entertainment

Orin Fund charts new era for African music

Dmce Orin Fund
Dmce Orin Fund

In three simple steps, any African artiste can acquire the funds they need for their project between 7-14 days

“With the accelerated popularity of African music globally, it is important that we develop our structures locally to support the global expansion of our artists. In a continent of 1.4billion+ people with 70% of its demography under 30, intellectual property is the next gold mine of the continent with music as one of its forerunners, it is important to create a decentralized marketplace for access to funds at whatever career level for an African artiste. I am excited to be working with several partners in creating unique financial solutions for each market. Chordcash has taken an early bet in the market and I am certain of its success.”

Oyinkansola Foza Fawehinmi, President Digital Music Commerce and Exchange Limited (DMCE) commenting on the partnership with chordCash, when announcing the launch of a new product — Orin Fund.

Orin Fund is an e-commerce marketplace holding various forms of financial products for artists across Africa.

Its first product which has the name of the fund itself is in partnership with chordCash, an American company that provides a patented technology to help artists get advances on their streaming royalties.

In three simple steps, any African artiste can acquire the funds they need for their project between 7-14 days.

And within the next few months, Orin Fund is expanding its products to have other financial solutions to develop artists/labels in Africa without excluding labels/artists exit or raise funds from private investors both locally and internationally.

Moreover, this innovation by DMCE aims to give artists control over their intellectual property while still providing the funds they need to stay afloat and succeed in the emerging market where funding is a huge challenge.

Founded in 2018, Digital Music Commerce and Exchange Limited (“DMCE”) is an African-focused company that is set to redefine the intellectual property valuation, collateralization, and general monetization of the African music space.

They are currently established in Ghana, Tanzania, and the USA with Nigeria as the headquarters.

Through Intellectual Property valuation, protection, management, administration— and now funding, it gives every artist the means to thrive and own their craft.

Via Orinfund, DMCE extends this service to artists in all African countries with access to both local and international funding.

Chief Operating Officer Digital Music Commerce and Exchange Limited Olayinka Ezekiel said, “At DMCE, our mission is to place African creators at the center of the entertainment value chain. Orin Fund is bolstered by a team with extensive finance, entertainment and media experience. Our new product approach leverages global best practice but is adapted to fit the African context and opportunity.”

Eric Palumbo, Head of Partner Activation & Growth Marketing at chordCash had this to say, “chordCash is honored to become DMCE’s chosen partner to join their mission in empowering artists across Africa through Orin Fund. Independent African musicians will have access to funding that helps expand their global reach without having to sacrifice ownership of their music or control of their careers. Our data-driven funding model combined with DMCE’s expertise in intellectual property will make Orin Fund a powerful new resource available to artists looking to take the next steps in their career growth.”

DMCE offers catalog administration services to some of the biggest and most respected artists in Nigeria’s music industry some of which include; K1 De Ultimate, The Estate of Dagrin, Sola Allyson Obaniyi, Premier Records, The Estate of Chief Sikiru Ayinde Barrister.

They also see to the business management of hyperlocal record labels, such as Remdel Optimum Communications which is affiliated with top gospel artists such as; Tope Alabi, Bola Are, Evangelist Bisi Alawiye, Evangelist Dunni Olanrewaju (aka Opelope Anointing) and Daniel Aregebesola.

Organisers have alluded to the fact that DMCE’s new product, Orinfund, is a monumental moment in achieving its goals and mission.

They add: that is to ensure that artists are covered on all grounds and made aware of their assets and bargaining power. Basically, creating a leveled playing ground for them.

Orin Fund would go a long way in giving every budding and/or existing African artist a genuine fighting chance.

As they have proved time and again, every move and decision DMCE makes is always in the best interest of every African artist.

Without a doubt, Orin Fund is a pretty good example, they share.