From Beyonce’s ‘My Power’ to ‘Black Panther,’ New Book Explores How the Sounds of South Africa Reached the Global Pop Stage
05.05.2023 - 18:01
/ variety.com
Lior Phillips There’s no formula to emerging from the seemingly endless sea of available music in the past twenty or so years — and yet from kwaito on, South African electronic music has done just that, both directly and indirectly. In the past five to ten years, two offshoots of house music have dominated South African airwaves: gqom and amapiano. The former, pronounced by replacing the “gq” with a Zulu tongue click, was born in the clubs of Durban and embraces a darkness buried in house music’s repetition. The name itself translates to something akin to “bang,” but the Zulu pronunciation demonstrates the more direct, aggressive tone. One of the foremost proprietors is DJ Lag, a producer from Clermont township who blends Zulu chants with eerie, slow-burning synth patches, hard-hitting bass, and rough-hewn rhythms. Tracks like “Ice Drop” (2017) and the 2021 single “Raptor” are still clearly designed to get crowds moving at the club, but there’s a wide-eyed intensity and weight there as well.
When Beyoncé put together her companion soundtrack album, “The Lion King: The Gift,” she selected a DJ Lag instrumental to support a powerful group of female vocalists, including herself, Philadelphia rapper Tierra Whack, South African artists Busiswa and Moonchild Sanelly, and Nigerian Afro-pop star Yemi Alade. The resulting “My Power” is a perfect example of the way gqom has intersected with global pop music, the burning darkness infiltrating and providing a counterpoint for purer vocals — lending a new shade that artists like Beyoncé hadn’t previously reached. Moonchild Sanelly has a few hits of her own, the self-described practitioner of “future ghetto punk” recently reaching a wider audience thanks to her single “Demon” making
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