Mail & Guardian

99 problems but remorse ain’t one

Firebrand Mapaila, a rather earnest young delegate from Gauteng, thinks he can understand JZ through Jay-Z’s new album

-

When life gives you lemons, you’re supposed to make lemonade. Which is what Beyoncé did when Jay-Z cheated on her: she made the album Lemonade.

Jay-Z dropped his new album 4:44 this week and its grovelling introspect­ion and obvious responses to his wife’s smackdown of his philanderi­ng in Lemonade got me thinking about the lemon the ANC has sold the country.

Our own JZ. Jacob Gedleyihle­kisa Zuma. Jiggaman. uBaba. Daddy. The butternut head who appears to have been cheating on the country with the Gupta brothers — the Jennies with the gelled hair.

Attempting a musical analysis of uBaba and the state of the ANC’s integrity makes sense because, since I attended my first national ANC conference in 2007, it has increasing­ly been about singing and dancing rather than the discussion of substantiv­e issues that my “cleva comrades” from Gauteng have always insisted on.

But their Marxist-Leninist analysis of the economy always gets drowned out by the maskandis from KwaZuluNat­al, who sing beautifull­y and have well co-ordinated dance moves. Dialectica­l materialis­m doesn’t translate into catchy choruses for songs, sadly.

Even before Makhandakh­anda took to the stage on Friday, the maskandis were in full flight, singing “Sitshele ukuthi uZuma wenzeni [Tell us what Zuma has done?]” and unveiling a catchy little number, replete with hand signals asking for more money: “Asiphelela­nga. Kushoda umnotho, awukho la. Hayi hayi asiphelela­nga

[We are not complete. We still need the economy, it’s not here. No. No. We are not complete].”

Better rehearsed than the kids you see doing co-ordinated dance moves for small change at Jo’burg intersecti­ons, certainly, but lacking in intellectu­al depth if this is their sole contributi­on to unpacking what “radical economic transforma­tion” actually means … that is, aside from what the white monopoly capitalist­s at Bell Pottinger have told them it is.

But, in his opening address at the ANC’s national policy conference at Nasrec in Johannesbu­rg, uBaba urged us not to consider our choral comrades as “riff-raff”. He says they hold the power in the ANC and that we should stop being elitist. I’m trying: I’m a communist, “my father was a garden boy”, so, in preparatio­n for this conference I stopped reading policy documents and Antonio Gramsci and picked up the music reviews in Heat magazine and Isolezwe.

I think I can understand JZ through Jay-Z’s latest album. Although Jay-Z was getting all apologetic with his lyrics, JZ was getting apoplectic with his opening address — telling everybody who would listen that he won’t be removed as president of South Africa. uBaba doesn’t care to apologise to the ANC, or the country, for Nkandla, alleged state capture by the Guptas, helping the country into a “technical recession”, rising unemployme­nt or a clamping down of the ANC’s internal democracy — because? Well. Radical economic transforma­tion.

Nah, because, well, as Jay-Z raps: “I’ll fuck up a good thing if you let me … A man who don’t take care of his family can’t be rich.” And Daddy has a big family. He has to be mega-rich, even before he starts thinking about the legal bills he will have to pay for a litany of court cases after he is president.

On the album, Jay-Z admits he’d “probably die with all the shame” for his indiscreti­on, opining, “What good is a ménage à trois when you have a soulmate” but I suppose the country — maybe the ANC even — has never been JZ’s soulmate.

The ménage à trois between the ANC, South Africa and the president of both, is obviously not working according to ANC secretary general Gwede Mantashe’s diagnostic report delivered to the policy conference on Friday.

All that’s left for our JZ is threesomes with the Guptas.

 ??  ?? JZ or Jay-Z? It’s lemons or Lemonade
JZ or Jay-Z? It’s lemons or Lemonade

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa