VIDEO: The real roots of Kwaito and South African house music > This Is Africa

The real roots of Kwaito and

South African house music

by DJ Zhao

 


Whenever western publications have written about Kwaito and South African House, the story has almost always been told in terms of a unidirectional migration of House Music from the United States to Africa.

This is problematic because it always omits one central factor, one that's often missing even from the South African voices sometimes interviewed. That central factor is the wealth of Southern African musical traditions that was the real precedent, the main cultural lineage, the Mother (with Chicago perhaps being the Father, which might be an exaggeration) of Kwaito and SA House.

Mbaqanga, Township Jive, SA Jazz, music styles from the Tsongas (Shangaan), Xhosas, Tswanas, Zulus, Swazis, Vendas, Sothos, Ndebeles, etc., numerous other 20th century and traditional Southern African styles, and influences from other parts of Africa, these are the true ancestors of contemporary urban electronic music from South Africa.

In many classic pre-80s South African jams, you can hear the 4 to the floor kick, the consecutive high-hats (sometimes done with clapping), the off-beat snares (as opposed to on the 2), additional percussion, distinct baselines, driving chants — all elements which live on in today’s SA dance music. Many older recordings sound almost exactly like Kwaito played solely on acoustic instruments:

Here are are two examples of unmistakable traditional precursors to SA House, one traditional, and one pre-1980s Jive:

In the earliest days of new urban music in the townships, as a new wave of Afro-American and Afro-European imports landed in the form of disco and house, SA artists took a lot of inspiration from these refreshing electronic sounds, incorporating the influences and sometimes outright imitating. Western sounds, thus, had the effect of an initial stimulant and inspiration, but its impact did not last, and soon after this initial phase, Kwaito, and a little later SA House, began to mature. They became their own thing, less and less influenced by outside sources, and borrowing more and more ideas from Southern Africa's indigenous musical heritage. Eventually, as African musical roots fully manifested themselves, the two genres took their rightful places in the history, lineage and continuum of South African music. Of note was the shift of rhythmic emphasis: as early as the 90s, Kwaito started to use more and more the homegrown “Dembow” rhythm pattern with offbeat snares, distinctly different from the mechanical Duple 1-2 beat of western house music.

Today, if one looks at canonical artists of SA House, those most emblematic of the genre, such as Dj Cleo, Dj Clock (most recent releases of these two artists notwithstanding), Black Motion or Dj Vetkuk, it is clear their music is now rooted in African traditional sounds, with American or European characteristics largely left behind. Indeed, a very good case can be made - through analysis of musical form - that South African House is now a distantly related but entirely different breed from Chicago House, with its own rhythm signature, palette of sounds, attributes, textures, and stylistic conventions; its own family tree, genealogy and history.

Yet western journalism continue to focus entirely on the American Father, to the point of completely neglecting the African Mother. Franky Knuckles was surely seminal, but this influence needs to be seen in the context of a larger cultural womb rich with the musical nutrients that nourished and gave birth to modern SA music, and its limits recognized.  Too much importance, as always, is given to western exports, as if SA is only doing an African version of an American thing, as if Kwaito is only “Slowed down US house” – a view so common that it is on the Wikipedia page. Even more extreme, this article that absurdly compares the relationship of SA House to Chicago to that of the Rolling Stones to Muddy Waters, demonstrating garden variety ignorance and ethnocentricity. Oversimplified, reductionist and simply false claims such as these are made frequently, perpetuating structurally West-centric points of view. Even those with the best intentions often subconsciously take the hegemonic position, inadvertently denying Africans of cultural and historical agency. And it is not surprising that South Africans themselves often reproduce this skewed perspectives, being a people recently liberated, and still largely in awe of everything from the wealthy people up north, often undervaluing their own, in every way much more significant cultural heritage.

When it comes down to it, African Mother is much older and possessive of much larger bodies of deeper and more varied musical knowledge than American Father; the later being himself, of course, only one of her many children.

A version of this article appeared originally on the writer's blog: Ngoma Sounds.

 

VIDEO: Ric’key Pageot & Dessy Di Lauro’s Neo-Ragtime > The Revivalist

Feature Media:

Ric’key Pageot

& Dessy Di Lauro’s

Neo-Ragtime

With roots in the late 19th and early 20th century, Ragtime became a hit with audiences for its “ragged rhythms” and danceability, finding its first notoriety in the black communities of St. Louis and New Orleans where the polyrhythmic patterns were first fusing their way into popular American music. For pianist and musical director Ric’key Pageot and enticing songstress Dessy Di Lauro, this is exactly where they wanted to begin their journey in fusing the popular American music of today with something a little more substantial.


Photo by Yoji Abe

With years of work behind them on this project and even more experience in the music scene — Pageot is an alum of McGill University’s jazz program, performs and records as Madonna’s pianist, and has been touring with Cirque du Soleil recently; Di Lauro has made a name for herself with a unique vocal style, even penning a new genre: ”Feathered Frohawk Futuristic Art Deco Centric Harlem Renaissance Hep Music” — This is Neo-Ragtime will represent a very new take on a style of music that has been around since the early 1900s.

Integrating Pageot’s stride piano mentality of Fats Waller and Cab Calloway with the very modern vocal stylings of Di Lauro has proven to bring an incredible homage to the greats while still moving the music forward and bringing in new fans. The project is extremely accessible and downright funky at times with a live band that makes you want to get up and dance with them. It brings together elements of ragtime, funk, hip-hop, pop, soul, and more. The resulting sound is something that makes you shake and move, yet also has the history behind it to get you thinking.

We caught up with the Pageot and Di Lauro duo at NAMM where they were performing to get the lowdown on their musical careers, the birth of Neo-Ragtime, and more! Check it out:

You can peep “Jump ‘N’ Jivin” from the record for a taste of This Is Neo-Ragtime which drops 2/5/13!

Words by Eric Sandler (@ericsandler)

======================================================================================

Check out more from Ric’key Pageot & Dessy Di Lauro!

 

PUB: CFP: Writing South Africa Now: A Colloquium. University of Cambridge. « Africa in Words

CFP: Writing South Africa Now:

A Colloquium. University of Cambridge.

Writing South Africa Now: A Colloquium.
 University of Cambridge.
 Tuesday, July 2nd 2013.
writingsouthafricanow.wordpress.com

The deadline for proposals is Friday, March 1st 2013.

Writing South Africa Now is a new collective of research students and scholars based in the English Faculty at the University of Cambridge. It is committed to the literary critical study of South Africa in the broadest of terms, with interests ranging widely from the contemporary novel, the short story, and creative non-fiction, through to oral history narratives, testimonial theatre, and documentary film. Motivated by an ambition to make new critical voices from within the UK and elsewhere heard, Writing South Africa Now is delighted to announce a call for papers to be delivered at its inaugural colloquium to be held in Cambridge on Tuesday, July 2nd 2013.

The convenors invite proposals from postgraduate students and early-career scholars engaged in research on any aspect of the field of South Africa literary studies. Writing South Africa Now particularly encourages proposals that have as their focus, however, the work of writers, directors or creative practitioners seen to have emerged in the decades since the nation’s first democratic elections as well as those that attempt to draw into focus work from the more distant past that has been neglected or occluded from critical scrutiny. Proposals that explore the complications of the ‘now’ in a critical landscape that often simplifies or elides any substantive scholarly or social distinction to a ‘then’ would be equally welcome. The convenors do not seek to limit otherwise the range of topics available for discussion and are eager for proposals that will broaden the categories by which we understand the field. South Africa’s literary terrain, as the recent Cambridge History of South African Literature attests, continues to yield a rich crop of literary work from a diverse range of linguistic, ethnic, geographic, economic, and even national backgrounds that continue to exceed and overflow the bounds of our former knowledge. Writing South Africa Now intends this colloquium to be a space in which emerging scholars can present and debate this new material.

It hopes this may forge new critical directions for the field and construct significant individual and institutional scholarly links to the profit of future research.

The deadline for proposals is Friday, March 1st 2013. Please send an abstract of no more than 300 words, including your name and institutional affiliation, to: writingsouthafricanow@gmail.com

The convenors aim to notify all speakers whose proposals are accepted within two weeks of the deadline and will provide further details of the arrangements for the day, including options for accommodation, at this time.

There is no cost for attendance and Writing South Africa Now warmly welcomes all those interested by the ambitions of the colloquium to attend as a generous provision of time has been dedicated to discussion. We kindly request those not giving a paper to confirm their attendance at least one month in advance. A reminder, detailing the specific times and location for the event, will be sent out nearer the time.

Details of the event and the timetable for the day will also be available through Writing South Africa Now’s webpage writingsouthafricanow.wordpress.com.

Any questions or queries, please contact the convenors: writingsouthafricanow@gmail.com

 

PUB: Arc - Fiction submissions engine

Fiction Submissions

Read us before submitting to us.

Arc publishes short stories over 5000 words.

On acceptance, it pays a flat fee of £1500 (c. US$2370) for first world serial rights

We publish stories that have some bearing on the future. You don't need to write science fiction to do that -- all we're interested in is your vision, your skill, and your ability to move us.

We set our bar very high. Arc’s writers so far have included Margaret Atwood, Bruce Sterling, Stephen Baxter, M John Harrison, Hannu Rajaniemi, Alastair Reynolds, Adam Roberts, China Mieville, Frederik Pohl, Paul McAuley, Nick Harkaway, Jeff VanderMeer, Lavie Tidhar, Robert Reed, Liz Jensen, Nancy Kress and Kim Stanley Robinson. If you can hook the editor's attention on page one, there is some slim hope for you. Joseph Conrad and Raymond Carver knew how to hook a reader. You should too.

We like technology and science, but we love people. The stories we're looking for will explore their anxieties, their joys and fears. We don't publish fantasy and if you send us anything with even a whiff of steampunk about it we will come round and burn down your house.

This submission engine is for fiction only. Arc also publishes features, essays and poetry. Please contact us before submitting these as we have very specific requirements and we usually commission this work.

Our boilerplate rates are

for essays under 1500 words    £250

for features over 2000 words £500

£75 per page for poetry and experimental work.

We commission news pieces and reviews for our blog at http://arcfinity.tumblr.com. We pay £30 per blogpost. If you're interested in contributing, tweet or DM us at @arcfinity.

Thanks for reading, and good luck.

Simon Ings,

editor,

Arc

 

 

PUB: Palaver

Palaver Mission Statement

Traditional sources offer many definitions for the word palaver.  These show a turbulent history in the word’s vernacular—from tribal “palaver huts” where Portuguese traders negotiated with African tribesmen in a dialogue between native and invader, to the colloquial hijack: a “fuss or commotion”—palaver comes to us with some proverbial baggage. 

Palaver is UNCW’s new interdisciplinary journal of student research housed in the Graduate Liberal Studies department. At Palaver, we challenge and embrace the vintage definition of “an often prolonged parley usually between persons of different levels of culture and sophistication.”  A palaver then encourages a dialogue of multiple perspectives.  We showcase the distinct intellectual pursuits of students while merging those diverse academic endeavors into a forum that will give rise to a new dialogue born out of those individual parts.

The student writing in Palaver defies the confines of a single discipline. Contributors explore the multiple influences that their subjects necessitate.  Within the multitude of university departments, work is being created that values the nonrestrictive and looks beyond the paradigms of the discipline to converge versatility, skill, and ingenuity in the service of its subject. Palaver is a venue for this innovative work, promoting the visionary talents of students across an array of interests.  We encourage palaver within your work.

 


Spring 2013 Creative/Multimedia Submission Guidelines

 

 

Ends in 13 days, 1 hour

Palaver is extremely interested in exploring interdisciplinarity in not only in content, but also in form.  This is why we accept creative pieces, multimedia submissions, and multimedia-text hybrids.  All creative/multimedia submissions should be accompanied by an interpretive essay that reveals the interdiscplinary nature influencing your creative work.  This essay will be published with your creative/multimedia piece, should we accept it.  Please submit your essay as a seperate document from your creative/multimedia piece.

 

Please do not include any identifying information on your uploaded submission or essay.  Only fill out identifying information on the form provided by Submittable.  If you should have any questions regarding the multimedia submissions process, please e-mail submissions@palaverjournal.com.

Submit to Palaver

Spring 2013 Written Academic Submission Guidelines

 

 

Ends in 13 days, 1 hour

Palaver does not accept previously published work, be it print or online.

 

Simultaneous submissions are encouraged. If the work is accepted elsewhere, please notify us immediately to withdraw your submission to Palaver.

 

No multiple submissions. Notification time from submission date will to be within 12 weeks. Please wait until you have heard back from the first submission before submitting a second time.

 

Written creative works are not excluded. However, we ask that creative pieces be accompanied by an interpretive essay that reveals the interdisciplinary nature influencing your creative work.  Please see our seperate "Spring 2013 Creative/Multimedia Submission Guidelines" for more information regarding those submissions.
Palaver is extremely interested in exploring interdisciplinarity not only in content, but also in form.  This is why we accept multimedia submissions and multimedia-text hybrids.  See our "Spring 2013 Creative/Multimedia Submission Guidelines" category to submit yours. 

 

Written academic submissions should be typed, double-spaced, follow MLA guidelines if appropriate for your submission, and the file name should only include the title of your submission. No self-identifying information should be present in the body of your work, due to our blind review process.

 

Publications questions can be addressed to submissions@palaverjournal.com.
Submit to Palaver

 

DANCE + VIDEO: STIGMA X Shikeith Cathey > Vimeo

STIGMA
1 dancer, 2 mentalities

Directed by Shikeith Cathey
Starring Adryan Moorefield
amerrika.tumblr.com

++++++++++++++
Shikeith Cathey is a visual artist from Philadelphia, PA.

 

VIDEO: QUACKS is a hilariously accurate short comedic... > Dynamic Africa

QUACKS

QUACKS is a hilariously accurate short comedic socio-political satire film by Nigerian filmmaker Abba Makama that revolves around “an elite group of pseudo intellectual leftists” that have convened for an emergency meeting to address the ineffective protests of the “have-nots” of a fictional state called ‘The Repulic’, that aims to “overthrow the existing regime ran by a cabal of self-centered materialists?”.

Will they succeed?

The film touches on the disconnect between the out of touch young elite of the society, and those whose everyday lives and realities that they are estranged from.

A must-watch.

 

 

VIDEO: The Abolitionist Mindset « Progressive Pupil

The Abolitionist Mindset

Happy Black History Month! For Black History Month this year, the Association of African American History and Life (ASALH) asks everybody to commemorate the 150th Anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation and the 50th Anniversary of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. Dr. Carter G. Woodson, a groundbreaking Black studies scholar who authored The Miseducation of the Negro and amassed an archive of primary sources that is now housed at the Library of Congress, founded ASALH. An abolitionist of American ignorance about Black history and the son of emancipated slaves, Woodson founded Negro History Week in 1926, which spanned between Abraham Lincoln’s and Frederick Douglass’ birthdays. After the successes of the Civil Rights and Black Power movements, the week expanded into Black History Month in 1976.

 

Bayard Rustin (l) with Dr. Eugene Reed at Freedom House, 1964. Photo courtesy of the Library of Congress.

Bayard Rustin (l) with Dr. Eugene Reed at Freedom House, 1964. Photo courtesy of the Library of Congress.

The signing of the Emancipation Proclamation and the success of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom both resulted from the work of activists who had an abolitionist mindset. The transatlantic slavery abolitionists built the first international multiracial social movement. The word “abolition” reflects these activists’ unwillingness to believe that the gruesome economic exploitation, objectification and rights deprivation that is slavery could be made kinder, gentler and therefore acceptable. 100 years later, the Civil Rights Movement exploded into the national and international consciousness after decades of advocacy that rejected the idea that so-called “social segregation” could continue in a democracy.

We will never know many of the names of the people who participated in these movements. Visionary radicals for their times, these everyday people sought to address what they believed were the root causes of the human suffering caused by racial injustice and economic inequality. They persevered in spite of arguments by the conservative and the ambivalent that their proposed solutions were too expensive, too inconvenient and too idealistic.

 

Abolitionists of the 19th and 20th century such as Harriet Tubman, Bayard Rustin and Viola Liuzzo saw clearly that, in fact, it is systems of oppression that are simply too expensive in terms of their human and material costs to sustain. Settling for a bit of democracy, a piece of freedom and a morsel of justice is an absurd proposed solution for social problems.

More than a few abolitionists were imprisoned, driven underground and murdered because of their activism. Today, decision makers celebrate our predecessors’ historical sacrifices while they support policies and practices that limit freedom and social justice in our contemporary communities aspirations.

21st century abolitionists are already working to close down prisons, expand access to health care and education, increase funding for the arts as well as end the violence and joblessness that is crippling the hope of our youth. This Black History Month, I’m going to embrace the abolitionist mindset and 1) decide which problem I’d like to see finally solved in my community; 2) attend an event sponsored by people in my community who are already working on that problem and 3) do just one thing to support the work of the people I meet. I hope you’ll join me in honoring the activists who created the more just and emancipated democracy in which we now live by taking these three small steps.

With minds wide open to the possibility of change, we can do more than simply challenge racial injustice. We can abolish it.

Yours in Solidarity,

Robin Signature

Robin J. Hayes, PhD

Principal Organizer, Progressive Pupil

PS We’d love to hear about your plans to embrace the abolitionist mindset. Your small steps will help create a path for others to follow!

 

HISTORY + VIDEO: “The Slave That Reads Is The First To Run Away”: A Free Database of the Major Slave Narratives > US History Scene

“The Slave That Reads

Is The First To Run Away”:

A Free Database of the

Major Slave Narratives

Posted by on Jul 23rd, 2012

 



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