Tag: debut album

  • “The Greatest of A-Town”: Khenji Releases His Debut Album “Notes”

    Lately, I’ve been getting so tired of my own music. My friends and I came to the conclusion that TikTok, and all its slowed and reverb versions of mainstream (often good) songs that are used in viral trends, is the reason that new music doesn’t hit the same anymore. So, naturally, I’m always interested when I come across an underground artist that mimics mainstream music genres, but in some way, adds their own ‘character’ or ‘interpretation’ to the generic to create something that will stand out more- and it’s even better when it’s a South African artist!

    In my pursuit of discovering new music, I came across a Twitter account owned by Thato Mashigo (Khenji) a Musician, Writer and Producer from Alexandra, Gauteng. He recently released his debut album “Notes”, a 12-track celebration, which he describes in an article as “a brief record of points or ideas written down as an aid to memory.”

    More times than others, I think we fail to call out musicians for creating albums that sometimes fall short of manifesting clear purpose or intent. I find it so enlightening listening to an album that sounds like a clear lived experience of someone- and I think this is where this album wins and makes it a project worth listening to. 

    Khenji

    Along with the announcement of the album on X, Mashigo unironically shared a couple of key takeaways from the album; notes of what the album is made of, what it represents and how it should be received by listeners. 

    “Notes is more than a story, it’s my perspective of Life”- Khenji/@SolarKhenji 

    Along with the Khenji, the album was produced by Lucas Mathule, an Alexandra-based producer. 

    As much as I do appreciate a solo album, featured artists on a tracklist always take an already good project to the next level, and that’s what happened here. I can hear from songs such as Plenty and Too Long that this album evokes so many feelings about community and the essence of one’s upbringing. In terms of its production value and artistic appeal, the album is an impressive way of characterising Alexandra’s music scene.

    There’s all those present elements for the album to qualify as an alternative R&B album, but there’s also so many elements that make it a perfect blend of R&B, Hip-Hop and Jazz- Oh and those beats of drums just enhance the overall vibrancy that the music in this album reflects. 

    While I will admit that prior to this, I had never listened to local musicians’ albums from front to back (without skips), this was really fun to listen to. The album stands as a type of homage to the rawness of youth, but within that rawness, Khenji’s use of lyrics implies faith in one’s present state and hopes for one’s future. 

    You know what I like about @SolarKhenji music? You can hear the fun in his music. I can tell broer was having the time of his life in the studio. 

    A tweet by @master_rxph 

    Quite excited to see how far this emerging South African artist goes! 

    Khenji

  • Lex LaFoy: Dripping with Honey Bass

    While her journey into performance began in high school when she and her girlfriends would perform at assemblies, Lex LaFoy already started writing poetry and music as a child. It was the discovery of Durban’s Hip Hop Inqaba Sessions that led her into the world of cyphers. “I was in the same crew as Zuluboy, Raheem Kemet, Sizwe Dhlomo who at the time were called Scatter Brain,” Lex remembers.

    Initially performing as Leigh.L, she would adopt the name Lexicon in 2005 and began focusing on hip hop and performance poetry. Shortening Lexicon to Lex and adopting her maternal surname in 2013 saw the birth of Lex LaFoy. “I feel like she was an evolutionary step in my journey as a person and as an artist. I felt like Lexicon no longer fully represented who I was because I’d come into this newness and I was so hungry for a new expression,” LaFoy exclaims.

    This new expression came via Honey Bass, both the name of her signature sound and her upcoming debut album. Bringing back elements of fun, enjoyment and dancing, the sound was birthed from her work with production trio the Nutscratchers. “We created this song called ‘From the Head’ and it included so much authentic Durban sound as well as the influence of bass that was newly expanding in South Africa. I had stepped into a new realm creatively and I really liked the combination. I love the combination of the bass elements with the rap on top of it,” LaFoy says of the sound’s birth.

    Her debut album ‘Honey Bass’ is a feminine twist on the bass sound. Lex LaFoy’s message is one coming from an empowered, confident, bold, young woman claiming her identity. “It’s about wholeness, it’s about confidence, it’s about a young woman claiming her own in a space that is so-called predominantly masculine. It’s about expression and the freedom of expression. It’s also about the balance of the so-called two extremes that some people don’t understand. Because I have to overcome my own conflict and my own so-called contradictions to see that no, just as I am is perfect.”

    Featuring a number of collaborations including tracks with iFani, Sketchy Bongo, Veranda Panda, RubyGold & Fiesta Black, LaFoy works with those closest to her in a natural way. “Each of those collaborations was really organic. The collaborations that are on my album are with people that are very dear to my heart and I wouldn’t have it any other way,” says LaFoy.

    With the album to be released on the 4th of November with a launch party in Durban, Lex LaFoy is working hard on putting the final touches together. The upcoming single ‘From the Head’ (Remix) is a reworking of her 2012, ragga influenced song that kicked off her Honey Bass sound. “I don’t have to fit into your boxes of what you think is a hip hop sound or what you think is lady-like or what you think is ratchet. I can be all those things and still be content within myself.”

    Photography by Llwellyn ‘Juice’ Makhanya

     

    Credits:

    Photography by Llwellyn ‘Juice’ Makhanya
    Make Up by Charelle Cassie McAllister
    Studio Open Plan Studio, Durban
    Nails by Elite