Tag: Luthando Sithole

  • Horus Tha God is rapping himself into hip hop’s mythology

    Storm clouds crackle and crease, a punctuated thunder. Lightning strikes my eye; lightning strikes my eye. The emerging myth of man and beast. A falcon-headed figure. Ruler of the heavens, the sun and moon both captured in his gaze. Son of Isis and Osiris, conceptually connected to the multi-faceted threads of reality. An ancient deity. ‘The distant one’ flies high above. Horus takes to the sky with his all-seeing eye.

    Sipping on a cool Windhoek draft on a summers eve, Luthando Sithole recounts a personal mythology. His latest artistic incarnation emerged on the streets of LA – a culmination of what had gone before. Horus Tha God has been preceded by the musical duo, Spazashop Boyz and more recently, Jonny Joburg.

    Palm trees, performers and soft sand litter the coast of Venice Beach. The site Horus Tha God first appeared. Accompanied by a cohort of other Egyptian deities – including protector of the dead and exotic dancer, Isis. A chance encounter with the spiritual leader of Snapchat solidified the bond between the four god-like allies. It was in this moment that Horus understood his purpose: making music. “I’ve been looking for myself”. This pivotal juncture was a rebirth into the international and global scene.

    elsa-bleda-for-bubblegum-club

    In August 2014, his project as Jonny Joburg, Mazishe exploded on national radio. It was shot by Grimetown and foreshadowed the trend of 90’s revival. After its release, things, “got too heated in Joburg…that was when I needed to leave”. After hustling enough money for a ticket and without informing his family, he packed up and got the next flight out to Miami for the Revolt Music Conference. His first stop was the notoriously dangerous neighbourhood of Liberty City. The events that transpired thereafter changed his life.

    The conference was teaming with both budding new and established artists, peppered with industry heavyweights. After having what most would describe as a panic attack, an instinctive move lead Horus to reach for the mike. Fortunately, music exec Daniel Glass was obliging. After jumping up on stage, he began to perform. “That’s the thing about America, is that before talent, they respect balls”.

    With a mere $80 in his pocket a five-day trip stretched beyond several months – only returning to the city of gold earlier this year. In the States, hanging out on Hollywood boulevard with homeless kids and drug dealers underpinned much of his experience. “It was hard, because I didn’t have any money”. While living in Long Beach fifteen-year-old Mexican kids slinging guns in the middle of the day was not an unusual sight. During this time, “I learned a lot about the Bloods and the Crips”.

    horus-tha-god-by-elsa-bleda-for-bubblegum-club

    Navigating drug territory was a daily feat. While living across the road from a meth house even his kicks –  Nike Cortez – were constantly read as a gang-related signifier. “There’s no friendship in LA…you’ve gotta show no weakness if you want to survive”. His experience on the streets is the overlaying narrative of his latest SkyGod Mixtape. What he expresses is rooted in real events, “I did that stuff”.

    When Horus arrived home in February this year he, “came back as the guy who’d been chilling with P. Diddy.” After somewhat of a creative hiatus and normalizing back into South African society he got back to work at a home studio set-up in the East Rand to record SkyGod. He describes the youth as craving innovation and is ready to push those industry boundaries and address an underlying national tension. “The pie is actually big enough…but we are caged in our minds to believe that it isn’t.”

    There are some people he dubs as the “enemies of progression, I’ve been doing battle with them since I touched the mike”. With Horus as the god of war, this seems only fitting that the battle continues. He recognizes the importance of representing not only the country, but also the continent at large on the global stage. He’s committed to the project and will “always bring it back home”. Horus will be releasing the deluxe version of the SkyGod Mixtape, including nine new songs and two remixes of Wavve on itunes at the end of November. The first of which, titled Robbery is streaming exclusively for the very first time below.

  • Horus Tha God – Taking Flight

    The falcon headed Horus was one of the most powerful deities in Ancient Egypt- the Pharaoh’s claimed that they were Horus in human form.  It take a lot of self-belief to adopt the name of such a potent mythological figure, but Horus Tha God seems primed to live up to this title.  His latest track Bangarang (produced by Trip G) is the official single for the forthcoming The Alien Tape.  Over a skeletal beat, the lyrics take overt influence from Future’s trap style. But it goes beyond mere emulation, by taking typical rap boasting about criminal prowess to a ludicrously entertaining extreme.  In the song he compares himself variously to drug kingpins like Pablo Escobar, El Chapo Guzman and the fictional Alejandro Sosa from the movie Scarface. Hilariously, the songs chorus of ‘Taliban, Taliban, Taliban shoot ‘em up like Afghanistan’ got its premiere on the ETV’s youth show Shiz Niz.  Horus is clearly self-aware about all this absurdity, as the song gets its name from Steven Spielberg’s family movie Hook!

    Horus is promising that The Alien Tape will be a diverse mix, including a ‘heavy metal track. with Zulu verses’.  The Horus name is that latest moniker of Pietermaritzburg born artist Luthando Sithole.  Under his previous pseudonym Jonny Joburg, he both released his own work and produced for musicians like Cama Gwini.  His lyrical and musical skills are most vivid in the moody track Mazishe. The song is both nostalgic and ominous, underscored by an exceptional music video which depicts the mystery of nocturnal Johannesburg. He also put in time hustling to break his music in the US, with stints spent in Miami and Los Angeles. Based on his Facebook page, he has quite the tale to tell as he interacted with moguls like Birdman and Puff Daddy.  The time in America has fed into the Horus persona which reflects a less austere, more approachable contemporary style which will have wide appeal in South Africa and beyond.