Tag: gangsterism

  • Get addicted to the Afrikaaps raps of Niko10Long

    Get addicted to the Afrikaaps raps of Niko10Long

    While South African hip-hop today is dominated by artists based primarily in Johannesburg, the roots of local hip-hop can be traced back to pioneering Cape Flats acts such Prophets of da City, Brasse Vannie Kaap and Black Noise. Exploring topics such as social issues and everyday Cape Flats life, these groups would lay the foundation not only for hip-hop in South Africa, but through the use of Afrikaans, and Cape Flats slang, pioneered a brand new form of hip-hop. “They came with the realness and talking about the struggles. And that’s what attracted me to keep that alive and talk about the truth” says Wesbank-based rapper Niko10Long of his predecessors.

    Originally from Kleinvlei in the Cape Flats, it was his move to Wesbank which led to the birth of Niko10Long (Nicotine Lung) the artist and a move away from a negative past. “I was still a rude boy [gangster] when I moved there. 2002 is when I encountered rastas and that’s where everything changed. That’s when I realised that I can write music and that I can take hip-hop even further.”

    Photography by Brandon Hiemand

    Rapping in his mother-tongue, Kaapse (Cape Flats) Afrikaans, Niko10Long explores the realities of living in a poverty stricken township that is rife with unemployment which feeds drug abuse and gangsterism, while still focusing on the positive human stories that exist around him. “Love, gangsterism, domestic violence, most of all the people, the beautiful struggles, change and freedom. All of that stuff is important to me to talk about.”

    This realness is evident on tracks such as ‘VaderViguur’ in which he shares the realities of an unemployed father raising his daughter or 2016’s ‘Politrix’ which deals with the attempted evictions of shack dwellers in Hangberg, Cape Town.

    Photography by SIEP

    Attributing both the lessons learnt from rastafari and hip-hop to his own growth, Niko10Long hopes that his music exposes his listeners to good energy, consciousness and reality and to encourage them to stand up for themselves. “That I’m willing to speak out and stand for my own; I want them to see that and it must encourage them to also big up themselves.”

    Currently in studio working on a 7-track EP with his producer SIEP entitled ‘7ewe’, Niko10Long is also working on his second album, DubbeleLONGonsteken, to be released in time for the Rasta New Year.

    Get Niko10Long’s music and gig info at www.illmajormovement.co.za

  • Autodidacts & Associates Introduces a new Headwear Capsule ‘kaas’, sharing their perspective on the untold narratives of Mitchell’s Plein

    Autodidacts & Associates Introduces a new Headwear Capsule ‘kaas’, sharing their perspective on the untold narratives of Mitchell’s Plein

    Muted tones. Desaturated colours. The word kaas on caps and cricket hats. Washing lines carefully coated with white articles of clothing. A youthful face navigating different spaces within Mitchell’s Plein. We are introduced to the setting of a new fashion capsule editorial, zine style.

    From the creators of ‘Still Not Joshy Pascoe’ a new project is given form by Aa (Autodidacts & Associates). A headwear capsule created under the brand, kaas is digitally manifested as a zine that seeks to define a space where many narratives go untold “because not many people have a lens into it,” I am told by group member, Keenan Oliver.

    Contrived by the apartheid government as a “model township” Mitchell’s Plein was constructed during the 1970s as housing for Coloured people who were forcibly removed as a result of the Group Areas Act. Today the area is largely associated with gangsterism and methamphetamine abuse, which is why the creators of the capsule felt strongly about telling untold narratives within this space.

    “I was born and raised in Mitchell’s Plein, which forms a large part of the cape flats. The only time you hear/read about these spaces is on the news. Stories of violence, gangs and drugs but never of the people who live within all of that. All I want to do is tell a different story with the space/resources and access I have.”The capsule lookbook which acts as a photographic essay articulates the current narrative of growing up in Mitchell’s Plein where both Keenan and Thorne, his younger cousin, grew up in the same house. The lookbook then can be regarded as a nuanced expression of a childhood gone by and reflected in Keenan’s younger cousin. The documentation of a space within a specific time forever monumentalises it by means of the physical object – the photograph.

    The unconventionality of the fashion zine format was chosen by the group due to the DIY nature and mentality that it carries. “This ties in with the thought behind streetwear itself, which is expressing your thoughts and ideas through the resources available to you.”The headwear capsule is inspired by a childhood growing up playing cricket in the surrounding streets and field, as well as the community that stems from that connection.

    “…This is not so much about changing the narrative coming out of Mitchell’s Plein and more so about contributing to it by defining my own narrative.”

    The zine had its launch on the 3rd of March in Observatory and was met with positive public review.

    *Aa is a collaboration studio focused on democratizing knowledge & education in   various fields of art and design. We aim to create art, product & spaces that endorse an open source mentality and encourage the trading of philosophies, ideas, and thought systems, for the greater good of civilization.

    Practitioners: Keenan OliverMzonke MaloneyLubabalo Nkobo & Thorne Oliver.

     

    Photography: Keenan Oliver

    Art Direction: Keenan Oliver & Mzonke Maloney

    Design: Keenan Oliver

    Styling: Lubabalo Nkobo, Assistant; Kaylynne Damonze

    Model: Thorne Oliver