Sunday, September 29, 2013

Thursday 26 September 2013


What to talk about?

Today I think im gonna a bit off topic, I will share with you one of my passions. This being house music. I recently started a blog on the origins of house music. One of the lessons that I learnt this year is to follow ones passion.

The link for the blog is originsofhouse@wordpress.com

One of the recent articles I wrote was on the birth of house music in South Africa.

As much as we need to pay homage to Chicago for being the architect for the house that Jack built, they had no idea that their music was fueling the rage and resistance against apartheid. House music became a cultural fabric of one of the most complex places on earth; house music was part of the Mandela’s (both Winnie and Nelson’s) cultural vocabulary.

As much as heads were busy with their own developments, blending music that Traxx Records, Paradise garage and Mt Fingers gave out. Topped off with what The Warehouse, West End Records and Steve “Silk” Hurley offered. These producers had no idea that the migration of this electronic cultural product called house was travelling beyond their shores and settling in the South African townships.

House music in South Africa did not start with the talented and contemporary Black Coffee, Culoe de Song and Soulistic crew, in fact, House in South Africa has roots almost as long as Hip Hop’s golden era in the Boogie Down Bronx.

DJ Clive Bean of Soul Candi records remembers hearing “The Godfather of house”, Chicago’s own Frankie Knuckles in 1987 at a local stokvel, which we all know is South Africans equivalent of a Harlem Speakeasy. Back then the sound was called international music and thought of as hardcore music as it was different from the bubble gum music that artists like the legendary Brenda Fassie sang which most of us were listening to at that time. International went in hand in hand with isi’Pantsula dancing, a local traditional dance that came to life in the townships, primarily in the 80’s and gained momentum with the dismantling of the apartheid regime.

House music is the same age as our democratic dispensation in South Africa, however the increase in access to overseas sound material in the early 90’s led to House Music’s growth locally. We were listening to this music at the height of the apartheid resistance. House Music was a part of the soundtrack of social change and was the underground answer to the chains of restriction imposed by the Dutch/British minority who occupied South Africa through the system of apartheid.

The track by Jay Williams “Sweat” (Big Beat Records, NYC) reminds one of the struggle floor filler…” “We gonna sweat till you set them free”…

In fact, the Bronx, the South Side of Chicago and South Africa were all united by the stank of disenfranchisement and the electronic music inspired by the lived reality of people in all three places which amplified the inequalities that connected black people around the world.

This is due to the fact that house deals with the difficult issues we have been unable to resolve in our material reality. In the music we see the co-mingling of ambiguities within the post apartheid scenario. House music conflates theses issues in a dynamic and experiential way, addressing precisely that which we have been unable to speak in words.

The sound of South African house is characterized by the bass heavy, “churchified” synthesized sound of classic Chicago house and some Euro – tech sounds heard coming from Germany and England. Prior to the South African invasion that we came to know through DJs/producers like Kent or Black Motion, pioneers of the sound like DJ Oskido and Arthur Mafokate took this township electro funk, slowed down the beloved 120bpm groove to 90bpm, added a social context and called it Kwaito music. However this did not take off too well in the international market.

The feeling that came over in South Africa spoke to a larger point that had never really been considered. Deep house is healing as compared to Kwaito music, maybe that’s why kwaito didn’t really have the legs to push on. This all makes sense that a place still haunted by the ghosts of apartheid would make House Music the sound of daily living. These days house music can be heard on local and national radio stations, in clubs, taxi’s, retail stores, everywhere and anywhere. Basically any and everyone from waiters to doctors have their feet tapping to the tunes of house music.

So it is not surprising that South Africa has been dubbed the world’s biggest House Music Market per capita, and to clarify that, the love and creation of House doesn’t stop at the South African borders, it can be heard in neighboring countries such as Mozambique, Botswana and Namibia.

There is a dangerous, and at this point, boring focus on Black American music as being the sound of the African Diaspora. To learn more about Black American music, we must reach into the soul of it. There we’ll discover Brazil, Ghana, Jamaica and a host of other global influences. We’re a multi-dimensional people and our music reflects the true meaning of Diaspora. Who’s to say what ancestor used you as a vessel to create your sound? Let’s share the bass that unites us…

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