Tag: black queer artists

  • Turn Up The Volume and Queer The Dancefloor

    Turn Up The Volume and Queer The Dancefloor

    A few years ago, I wrote about what I called the Somzification of the South African queer identity. The idea is premised on Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s idea of the danger of the single story, the notion that we risk erasing essential identifiers of people’s lives or people themselves if we relax into telling a one-dimensional side of their story. The idea that being gay in this country is to be like Somizi.

    This isn’t Somizi’s fault by any stretch of the imagination. As matter of fact, South African queer people have a lot to thank him for. Normalisation is a term that’s often frowned upon in queer circles, but for the purposes of this argument, it’s important to say that Somizi’s high profile, unashamed existence made it so that there was at least some semblance of a departure point in black homes across the nation. A black child can say “gay” and their mother, father, sister or brother would have at least one lens through which they could engage with the conversation.

    But there was also 3Sum, the original queer vocal group who became famous overnight for their flamboyant presentation and their art. And there was also the nation’s biggest soapie, Generations, which inspired articles like one from the City Press titled “Storm over TV gay kiss” in 2009 when its newly introduced gay couple, Jason and Senzo locked lips for the first time.

    What was necessary as an introductory phase by those forebears has now inspired a multiplicity of identities under the LGBTIQ+ umbrella. There are so many, I’ve resolved to calling them the Alphabet community or simply the queers. The beauty in this is that it’s meant that the current generation are tackling identity in ways unique to their individual stories — and through music.

    They call themselves, Mr Allofit, Gyre, DJ Phatstoki and Tiger Maremela — and this isn’t even an exhaustive list. If you will ignore the complexities around the term, we can get away with calling it a born free generation of queer artists finding their place in the national canon of musical artists. Their freedom wasn’t free of course. It was earned by the resistance of their forebears.

    This kind of freedom is what DJ Phatstoki sees whenever they play a set at Pussy Party. “You get on the dancefloor and people are really dancing like how they wanna do it. The energy feels different,” they say. The Pussy Party gig came about after Fela Gucci of FAKA put in a word for her with Colleen Balchin of Broaden a New Sound. Phatstoki had begun making a name for themselves by uploading mixes to SoundCloud. After months of contemplation and convincing from Phatstoki’s close friend, Colleen finally reached out to her.

    “I’ll forever be thankful to uGucci because I was doing that ‘no one really cares thing’, feeling really unimportant and just putting it online assuming that when I have six listens I can count, okay, it’s probably my brother, my sister,” they remember. “Sometimes as a young black queer person, you don’t have the strength to kick the door open that hard.” And the door opened all the way for them to the point where Phatstoki now helps organise Pussy Party along with Colleen, and she’s Sho Madjozi’s DJ.

    At any given Pussy Party event, you’re likely to find Tiger Maremela enjoying the extents of their freedom on the dancefloor. The Internet artist’s work diagnoses the net’s ability to create a go-to space for queer, and particularly trans bodies, to feel free. They recently brought this to life with the Soundscapes of a War Zone live performance at the Hive in Braamfontein. By combining music, memefication and portraiture, the vast space of the Hive felt like its own social media timeline; the movement of bodies as pieces of content all free to be the most actualised versions of themselves.

    “A lot of the lingo and phrases that we use often and things that have gained popularity are really inspired by queer culture or by stan culture, by black queer Internet culture. It’s definitely had an influence,” Tiger explains. Phatstoki knows the value of this culture that’s been created online. “A tweet of something you’ve been thinking [about] for years has got 17k retweets — it’s like I’m not alone.”

    For Tiger, “the problem is all these voices aren’t being amplified and that’s part of the work” that their Internet art answers to. “So that’s why lists like [this cover story] are important because they amplify people that potentially have the answers of how do we fix this.”

    Gyre sees the Internet as a valuable resource to keep themselves educated on those who came before them, which ultimately feeds into their work. “I like to do it in my imagery and the way I portray myself in performance. It’s informed by so many different people.” Some of those people include 3Sum and Somizi, but for this rapper, the definition of queer has long been an identifier for various bodies.

    “In my head I’m thinking which gay artists am I looking back at and I’m like well [they don’t] need to be gay,” Gyre explains. “There’s LGBTQI+. People that I look up to are Brenda Fassie and Lebo Mathosa and the world will never bring it up, but we all know that they were queer.”

    With Gyre’s Queernomics mixtape, the framing of the queer identity was pushed to its limits. A track like “Ikunzimalanga” defies common perceptions of masculinity by Gyre taking on the title of a queer Shaka Zulu. “Black Jesus” does a similar subversion of binaries while tracks like “Eat My Ass” and “Premium Bottom” are spliced in to add the gender fluid dimension needed to close the loop.

    It’s no wonder they’ve found so many collaborative opportunities with Mr Allofit. The androgynous rapper’s own mixtape, 5 to Mainstream,problematises the idea of gender altogether by aggressively driving the listener towards a utopian world where, as they say, “music has no gender.”

    Consider “Eat Da Beat”. These niggas look at me from the back / Think I’m a chick / Hit the front, homie it’s lit / Got a dick. Though it gets them “trending” (their term for catching attention from onlookers) while thrifting in downtown Joburg, they understand the time and place we’re in.

    “It’s a born free season. We’re people who are non-conformist, people who are born in not much of a struggle — we have different problems in this era,” Mr. Allofit says, “A lot more people are being free. A lot more people are doing their own kind of freedom.”

    The collective efforts of all four artists is shaping room for access and understanding that queer identities exist within a wide spectrum. Phatstoki can both play and sit at the decision-making table of Pussy Party and be Sho Madjozi’s DJ. Tiger Maremela can question the warzone that is their lived experience via Internet art and live performance. Gyre doesn’t have to fear claiming the Zulu nation’s proudest figure of masculinity. And Mr Allofit has the confidence to preach their androgyny manifesto no matter where they go.

    For these artists, the hope is to ultimately make work in a world where their sexuality isn’t the primary focal point but that the story creates the buy-in. “Can we not make it about our sexuality? Can we not start competing with everyone [of other non-queer sexual identities]? Can we not be introduced as a separate category?” Mr Allofit asks. Gyre isn’t too concerned though: “I believe existence is resistance so I don’t need to do much to disrupt the space. I exist and I disrupt the space.”

    There’s hope. At least we have Pussy Party, and Tiger’s Internet art and Gyre and Mr Allofit’s discography on Apple Music. And then there’s FAKA who just soundtracked Versace’s SS18 show, and Nakhane who got a shout out from Elton John and is selling out shows across Europe. The landscape is shifting and there are more options than when we just had Somizi and 3Sum. To me that sounds like a true born free South African music landscape.

    Credits:

    Photography and styling: Jamal Nxedlana

    Makeup: Kristina Nichol

    Hair by Nikiwe Dlova

    Photography and styling assistant: Lebogang Ramfate

    Fashion sourced from Marianne Fassler archives.

     

  • FAKA – building a spiritual home

    For the queer, the trans, the non-conforming, the female and the black,

    For those who have been alienated by mainstream culture,

    For those who are constantly harassed by patriarchy and suffer at the hands of capitalism,

    For copper-coloured Afro wigs, golden chokers, torn stockings and moving freely despite Lorraine’s side-eye,

    there is FAKA.

    Buyani Duma and Thato Ramaisa accomplish their pursuit to infiltrate spaces through the expression, reimagination and liberation of queer bodies as Desire Marea and Fela Gucci, collectively known as FAKA. The isiZulu word faka, which means to penetrate, seductively nuances how Desire and Fela validate new vocabularies of communication about black queer identities through their performance art, music, photography and videos.

    FAKA formally established themselves in 2015. It started with a Facebook friend request and since then Desire and Fela have had reason to thank the internet for their divine connection. Like them, we also have various online platforms to thank for the front row seat we have to the becoming of a duo that has been representing and creating a sense of community. Their virtual following is extensive. From their #Siyakaka hashtag that caught like wildfire to their Instagram pages that beautifully showcase their breathtaking black queer bodies doing the most.

    It is also online that we are able to listen to FAKA’s ancestral gqom gospel sounds from their EP Bottom’s Revenge or watch videos like From a Distance and Isifundo Sokuqala. But it is the duo’s titillating performance art which physically summons FAKA.

    However, the reception of their performance art has been a “weird experience” for both of them. According to Fela, it seems as if society and even creative communities that appear to be open to experimental performance, art or music are in fact not. Both Desire and Fela laughed about how people walk out of their shows. But the frustration was felt when Fela said, “We want our art to exist outside, beyond gallery spaces. Beyond our circles and it is very difficult to manifest that because people are just not open.”

    Desire added, “I think that is a very pertinent issue and something that also affects us as black queer artists. Many times people don’t want, or they fear engaging with our work because of what it might do or say about them or they just don’t understand it or they’re just not comfortable with assigning that much power to a black queer person who is not supposed to have that much power in our society, and a power that they created for themselves.”

    The contrast between FAKA’s reception in the virtual world and in reality is evident and it is highly plausible that the internet’s humanising virtue of representation is responsible.

    “I think the online experience is different because there is a sense of community online with people who follow each other and stuff. As opposed to physical spaces, not everyone is familiar with the work so not everyone has been following what you have been doing so I guess it can come as a shock to some people,” said Fela.

    FAKA imagine a future in which they own a creative agency that elevates black, queer and trans people. In the meantime, they want to create safe spaces that allow black, queer, gender non-conforming or trans people to reflect on their experiences growing up. FAKA want to continue creating spaces where mourning can take place in order for healing and liberation to follow.

    “I think in many spaces people always champion the fight, this radical reaction to that kind of upbringing or that kind of childhood and stuff, and I do not think that is something that we champion. I mean, YES, it is great, we all have different ways of fighting but we also feel like we should be creating spaces for ourselves to be like, ‘Yo, I am really affected by a lot of things about how I grew up and what it means for me to be me.’ My experience of family is also very different and it is quite a complicated thing because you exist in a world where everyone is like, ‘Oh, you’ve been home, home must have been so great. I mean home is home, you must be so refreshed’, but I think in our circle we understand that home usually isn’t like that. Home is a lot of policing…it is very violent. Not even from people doing anything. Just the space and what it represents for you and what it has always represented is quite a harsh thing. And I think we have created spaces for us to just be, to feel openly,” said Desire

    Subsequently, Desire and Fela have built spiritual homes in each other. Together, FAKA also represents a home for all those that relate to or revere their expression.

     

    Shoot Credits

    Photography by Viviane Sassen 

    Styling by Jamal Nxedlana

    Hair & Makeup by Orli Meiri

    Assistant Stylist Chloe Hugo-Hamman

    Cover Image: Fela Gucci & Desire Marea in Africa/China Bags, Printed headscarf, Ruffle socks all stylists own.  Shoes are models own

    Look 1: Fela Gucci & Desire Marea in Cobalt Shirtdress and Embroided jeans by Topshop, Pink ties stylist own, Shoes and accessories are models own.

    Look 2: Fela Gucci in Check trousers by H&M, Ibheshu, Ruffle socks, body chain and earrings stylist own, Shoes and accessories are models own.

    Look 3: Desire Marea in Check blazer by H&M, Ibheshu, Ruffle socks, Cowboy hat and earrings stylist own, Shoes and accessories are models own.

    Look 4: Fela Gucci & Desire Marea in Mesh bomber by H&M, Fishnet stockings and Ruffle socks stylist own, Shoes and accessories are models own.

    Look 5: Fela Gucci in check trousers by H&M, Cardigan, Zebra vest, Cowboy hat and Ruffle socks stylist own, Shoes and accessories are models own.

    Look 6: Desire Marea in check trousers by H&M, Waistcoat, Cowboy hat and Ruffle socks stylist own, Shoes and accessories are models own.