The Citizen (KZN)

Making the right noises

GETTING THE LION’S SHARE OF THE ATTENTION FOR HIS MUSIC

- Nick Cowen

Strings And Bling lyrics find sweetspot between the personal and the universal,

Cast an eye in the direction of the celebrity gossip space and you’ll find a ton of stories filled with shenanigan­s involving musicians on social media.

Headlines are awash with stories about clapbacks on fans, celebrity feuds and the pearls of wisdom South Africa’s stars drop into the twittersph­ere.

In fact, there are so many stories about celebrity Twitter it’s sometimes hard to remember that people used to be famous for making … well, art.

And this brings us neatly to the case of Nasty C (Nsikayesiz­we David Junior Ngcobo) who seems to stand resolutely apart from the nonsense on social media.

While many of his fellow musicians (Cassper, we’re looking at you; AKA, your ears are burning) make headlines for their spiky online personas, Nasty C seems to be getting the lion’s share of his attention for (shock!) putting out a very good album and performing amazing shows in front of his fans.

But then, Nasty C doesn’t really do the whole “celebrity thing”. He says he finds the whole concept weird.

“I don’t like it. There’s a lot of fake stuff that goes on with that and there’s way too much drama,” he says. “I rather hang with the same people I grew up with.

“I’m a human. Treat me like a human. Don’t look at me like a celebrity or something ‘other’. It’s tough, because that’s the way the industry is. But I don’t like that so I stay apart from it.”

Nasty C treated fans to a great show on last Wednesday, when the rapper burned up the stage at the AXE Party Of The Year at Fox Junction in Newtown. Taking to the stage in a mask and flak jacket, Nasty banged through some of the choicest cuts from his new album Strings And Bling, sending the crowd into a bouncing frenzy.

His lyrics find the sweetspot between the personal and the universal, with the MC spitting lyrics about the hard-bitten ghetto landscape in one song (Jungle) and then celebratin­g both old school values and millennial aspiration­s (on the album’s title track).

Nasty C seems comfortabl­e in any mode, whether he’s laying claim to hip hop’s crown in the swaggering track Legend, or letting his guard down and admits to some weaknesses on the introspect­ive Another One Down.

The mix between the music’s balance of hardcore rap and light-hearted bravado connects instantly with fans – as evidenced by the cheering faces at Wednesday’s gig.

But it’s also a personal document for Nasty C, who sees his art as

both his own voice and the voice of his fans. “[The album] is kind of like an update of what’s going on in my head,” he says. “As a human, as a young kid, I’m going through a lot of things – heartbreak­s, betrayal, back-stabbing and victories too – so I wanted to balance it out so it’s not one note.

“I’ve got some hardcore tracks, but I’ve got vibey songs and feel-good songs where I’m not even rapping, I’m just singing. I wanted different moods throughout.

“I wanted it to be super-relatable. I didn’t want it to be too personal to a point where people feel like they’re just listening to me vent. I wanted to be able to speak to people and speak for them.”

Off the back of Strings And Bling and his formidable performing

There’s a lot of fake stuff that goes on and there’s way too much drama

skills, Nasty C seems poised for bigger things. He speaks with such conviction that it’s hard not to be swept up in the moment.

 ?? Picture:Gallo Images ?? REFRESHING­LY DIFFERENT. Rapper Nasty C shys away from the spotlight, preferring to keep a low profile.
Picture:Gallo Images REFRESHING­LY DIFFERENT. Rapper Nasty C shys away from the spotlight, preferring to keep a low profile.

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