Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Can local dance music craze transition from the cloistered club scene and conquer the world?

- SANYA OSHA

THERE’S a lot of hype around amapiano. The South African dance music genre has dominated dancefloor­s since 2019, spreading from South Africa to West Africa and now to the world.

But it’s time to peer through the hype and see if amapiano is able to transition from a cloistered club scene onto a global stage in terms of performanc­e strength, conviction and credibilit­y.

Kabza de Small, DJ Maphorisa, Major League DJz, DBN Gogo, Lady Du – the list of amapiano stars is growing. Undoubtedl­y, though, there are concerns regarding the live performanc­es of many.

Beyond the gimmicks of slick studio technology and computer wizardry, it appears that many struggle to make an impact on stage.

Surely, the questions of stage presence, control and front-person desirabili­ty are significan­t in any music genre’s ultimate global success. Just ask US stars Beyoncé, Lady Gaga and Rihanna or Nigeria’s Burna Boy.

Amapiano’s DIY sensibilit­ies, freshness and underdog status are some of its apparent heart-warming qualities.

However, amapiano musicians rarely perform with live bands. Their globally streamed performanc­es are often marred by technical problems, poor sound quality and an evident lack of profession­alism. Many acts appear under-rehearsed.

The question is, to what extent will this be a limiting factor in amapiano’s ascendancy to higher levels?

What is amapiano?

Emerging from Gauteng as early as 2012, amapiano is today waxing stronger than ever as artists establish multiple digital platforms and spaces.

Music executives are jostling to see how all of this might translate into mega bucks and business.

Amapiano is overwhelmi­ngly deejay-driven, with infectious and often melodic beats interlaced with bluesy, jazzy interludes that are punctuated by the ubiquitous log drum (programmed electronic drumbeats that sound natural).

Growing from local experiment­s, amapiano is also ultimately derived from US house music, which never transcende­d into the mainstream. Unlike funk, punk and grunge, which have become staples of the US music market, house music had to find its way to South Africa and places like Ibiza in Spain to gain fresh wings.

In South Africa, at the dawn of democracy in the early 1990s, house music became the euphoric soundtrack for party-loving youngsters whose main wish was to dance the night away.

It seemed they wanted to forget the horrors and bleakness of the apartheid years. And so they plunged themselves into an experiment­al social and music environmen­t that promptly birthed kwaito and other house music subgenres – the city of Tshwane spawned Bacardi house and Durban birthed gqom.

Kabza De Small and DJ Maphorisa demonstrat­e amapiano’s West African reach. South Africa has become a global leader in producing the most delectable waves of electronic dance music. Amapiano pioneers such as De Mthuda have called it a lifestyle or movement just like hip hop.

With the global ascendancy of West African Afrobeats, perhaps it was only a matter of time for South Africa to provide its own music equivalent.

Amapiano provides a golden opportunit­y to feel good and create a seemingly endless array of dance moves such as the famous “pouncing cat”, characteri­sed by the twisting of the wrists in a circular motion in unison with outwardly kicking legs.

The big names of the amapiano genre – such as Kabza de Small, DJ Maphorisa, De Mthuda, Major League DJz, DBN Gogo, Mas Musiq, Mr JazziQ, Focalistic, Musa Keys, Mellow & Sleazy, Josiah De Disciple and Lady Du, among a continuall­y evolving mass of producers, beatmakers, rappers and singers – appear to be second-rate performers on a global scale. This could limit its eventual crossover appeal.

Performanc­e issues

One of South Africa’s most energetic performers has to be rapper Cassper Nyovest. His fill-up-thestadium endeavours and huge fanbase have obviously brought out the performanc­e beast in him.

Things don’t look so good on the performanc­e front for amapiano stars. Kabza de Small is mostly staid behind the decks. The same can be said for most of the genre’s beatmakers and producers.

Even the highly influentia­l Maphorisa is much better behind the decks than when attempting to woo a delirious throng on stage.

Lady Du’s performanc­e at the crammed Boiler Room x Ballantine’s True Music Studios in Johannesbu­rg this year should be a cause for concern about the range and possibilit­ies of today’s amapiano luminaries.

Her act looks and feels raw and amateurish. She, like many amapiano rappers and singers, has no album to her credit yet.

During her performanc­e, she ad-libbed to other musicians’ songs she’d featured on. Indeed, she attained her status on a string of features, not a coherent body of work. Big names in the scene such as Sir Trill, Daliwonga, Malumnator, Toss, Sino Msolo and others are in a similar situation.

Amapiano’s heavy reliance on producers and beatmakers is revealing. Few rappers and singers are able to manoeuvre the decks with convincing skill and they have to rely on beatmakers.

The good news

However, there are a few performers who merit watching keenly. TxC a Gqeberha-born deejay duo, recently released an EP, A Fierce Piano, featuring amapiano heavyhitte­rs. They look good and move well but it remains to be seen if they can work a crowd or stand as bona fide musicians.

Another promising performer is Young Stunna, an award-winning rapper and singer. He’s able to convert his amazing vocal prowess to live wire stage performanc­es, setting benchmarks to which other performers might aspire.

Amapiano is a youth-powered movement that provides often despondent young South Africans with considerab­le optimism, bonhomie and creative opportunit­ies.

It injects a belief in self and a drive to want to take on the world through hypnotic beats. Time will tell.

Osha is a senior research fellow for the Institute for Humanities in Africa at the University of Cape Town

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 ?? ?? YOUNG Stunna and Lady Du. | Instagram
YOUNG Stunna and Lady Du. | Instagram

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