Tag: nasty c

  • That Dusty Love: stories from the Unsea

    I’ve cried over Milo milkshake at a Northam strip mall; coughed up ten rounds of mud-dust; dug the dirt from my nails; slept for fifteen hours straight; shaken the twiggy debris from my tent; plunged into nostalgia every time Wololo airs on radio; and added five new artists to my playlist. All in the aftermath of the 22nd Oppikoppi and four days in a Limpopo dust bowl.

    Oppi is the largest music festival in the country, hosting over 150 acts on seven stages. It began as a small rock festival for a congregation of predominantly white, Afrikaans devotees. While these origins remain palpable in its demography, the festival’s line-up and audience has undergone kaleidoscopic diversification. Oppi’s 2016 party pastiche reflected an assortment of musical tastes, including rock, drum-and-bass, hip-hop, house, Indie, metal, and alt-RnB, with the aim of awakening audiences to new people, new ideas, and new genres.

    Ours was a creative commune of clustered braai stands and deck chairs. Huddled under umbrella shade were MC’s, DJs, photographers, models, social media professionals, and entertainment entrepreneurs, all flipping meat and dispensing wet-wipes. It was a camp as committed to a shared lamb potjie and a rotating AUX cable, as it was to supporting one another’s hustle and artistry.

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    There were those cutting-cold nights when we were kept awake by our feet. All three pairs of socks and still our toes were never quite warm enough to go unnoticed.  Those nights when an encompassing blue-pink sunset drew in a bespeckled black sky and the stars forced their way into conversation. “How did these extinguished fires, so far away, seem close enough to be plucked from their black canvas?” Those nights we crawled into our tents at 5am, encased in meat-scented smoke, clutching to any available warmth, only to be cooked out of our beds at sunrise.

    Dawn was ushered in by human wolf-cries, echoing across the steaming valley. Heat poured over the skin, with an after-sting of grit and acacia thorns. We learned to cherish simple pleasures: a sip of cold water, a friend’s finger coated in lip-balm, a dust mask, a slice of flat ground. Each day we navigated from basecamp to ‘the belly’: over the danger tape; past the gazebo emanating kwaito; turn at the row of green toilets; pit stop at the Red Frog tent, where water, coffee and pancakes were offered to wayward travellers; and finally dive into the current of festival-goers, decked in ripped denim, Basotho hats, dusty moon bags and bandanas. Each group yelling ‘Oppiiii!!’ as they passed: part-greeting, part-salute, part-chant. In the heat and grime and crowd-sway, everyone looked paradoxically more beautiful. “It’s that dusty love”, I was told. The lovely young, effervescent in bush-wear couture. Oppi was a simmering incubator — of sound, and creativity, and disparate bodies colliding.

    Where the day was about scarcity and longing for a flush toilet, the night erupted in excess.  The most sophisticated technologies of sound and light extended laser beams and synthesisers from the peak of the ‘koppie’ over the 20, 000 campers below. At the festival’s pinnacle, pegged atop the hill, was the Red Bull stage, where green light darted up the trees like florescent lizards. The three neon triangles above the DJ decks reverberated bass over the natural amphitheatre and into the bellies of the audience. Here, the dance floor was a slope of sand and rock. We clutched onto strangers’ bodies for support and offered hands to pull others out the pit.

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    Over the course of the weekend, some of the country’s best DJs shook Red Bull ground, kicking up dust from the decks. Newcomer Buli spun melody and groove into a perfectly ambient set, lifting his audience from their rocky footholds into a cool sway. Duhn Kidda’s genre contortionism had us dipping from Ja Rule, into new house, and back to the Noughties. Then there was the moment Diloxclusiv dropped Gqom on an Oppi stage. Unapologetic and dripping ostentatiousness, he spliced Durban dance music with struggle songs, while the crowd spewed whistles and ‘woza!’  An impromptu performance by DJ PH had us fast forgetting about Nasty C’s last-minute cancellation. You know that stomach-shaking ecstasy you feel when your song is about to drop? Now imagine it every twenty seconds, your arms stretched out for more. He’s the DJ who plays “37 songs in one”. We pulled him back for an encore set.

    Magic mixology was interspersed with fire-spitting live acts. Saturday night belonged to 21-year-old North-London lyricists, Little Simz, who entranced her audience with grime-stained confessionals, carried by bass-heavy production. While hip-hop, RnB and dance music have often been synonymous the Red Bull stage, there have been increasing attempts to diversify stage acts and prompt eclectic discovery. MC’s Riky Rick and Khuli Chana performed on Main and Skelm stages respectively. Petit Noir’s enrapturing Main Stage performance rippled into evening conversation. We celebrated his sound while stoking hot coals and climbing into our night jackets. On Sunday, DJ Ready D took to Main Stage to receive the festival’s Heavyweight Champion Award. His banging tribute performance set the crowd and Twitter alight, featuring guest artists ‘direk van die Kaap af’: Prophets of the City (POC) inserting (P)eople (O)f  (C)olour into the festival’s Afrikaans cultural production. “Sit jou hande op, terwyl die beat klop”. Also on Sunday, 2Lee Stark, backed by Boombapbase, shut down a sweltering Skelm Stage. His perfectly tailored set and electric stage presence had me feeling like this was an artist, pre-detonation, about to explode on the local hip-hop scene.

    It’s days since I returned from the Oppi dustbowl. I’ve submerged myself in sanitising bathtubs and sunk into the nostalgia of the Unsea. Some of my clothes still smell of a dusty Northam farm, where we surrendered to “the cusp of this here whatever time” and “prayed in a language that would outlive us” — music.

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  • Party[ing] Politics: East-Side Youth Pre-Gaming the Election

    Dusk falls in Katlehong. A line of cars extends down the Nota street pavement, connecting the provisional barricades to the Hurricanes entrance. It’s an East Rand block party, wedged between residents’ yard fences. The sun-warmed air is infused with house music and smoke: simmering Rizla, hookah-pipe tobacco, and meat on the grill. A young man leans over, laughing, and says: “Welcome to Hell”. Hurricane Sundays, he tells me, will keep you from church. Behind us, young people cluster around beer-stacked cooler boxes, intermittently setting their sneakers to dance.

    Today, Hurricanes plays host to the ‘March To Victory’ party, a pre-election day celebration in support of the ANC’s mayoral candidate for Ekurhuleni:  Mzwandile Masina, dubbed ‘The People’s Mayor’. Ekurhuleni’s current mayor, Mondi Gungubele offered public support for Masina’s candidacy, following violent protests in neighbouring Tshwane over the nomination of new candidate, Thoko Didiza.

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    As night edges closer, a constant stream of partygoers pours through Hurricane’s palisade fencing. The venue is interspersed with ‘party’ regalia: yellow, green and black dotted amidst army jackets, headscarves, sneakers and Timberlands. Styled ‘campaign cool’, partygoers are clad in cutting-edge street-wear and military-chic, with clusters of ANC insignia. A group gathers for a photograph alongside a makeshift tuck-shop:  their heads tucked into their elbows, a line of arms outstretched in the signature ‘dab’. An ANC flag flies above those queuing for the bar. It’s the blowout before the ballot box.

    By seven, the venue is throbbing with some of the country’s biggest tunes. On the line-up for this evening’s ‘Victory March’ are DJs Sbu and Shimza, as well as hip-hop sensation Riky Rick, who took to the stage in a Madiba-emblazoned ANC shirt. The night also includes a surprise performance from 19-year old emcee, Nasty C, the young voice of hip-hop anthems Hell Naw and Juice Back.

    It’s the soundtrack of our dancefloors, but this time, descending from the decks is the regular chant, Viva ANC, Viva! It’s entertainment electioneering, steered by the local ANC youth league and aimed at Ekurhuleni youth. When the campaign struggle song, Asinavalo [We are not scared] drops with ‘Nqonqo’, the audience erupts, receiving the song like any club banger. Fists raised, the crowd chants the lyrics:  Sisebenza Kanzima [We work hard]. The apparent implication in this case is: “we work hard, so why not enjoy it? This is our victory dance”. Elections rendered as celebration above contest. It’s the politics of partying, and of the Party, in audacious collision.

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  • The Kool Out Phenomenon: how rooftops and hip hop can ‘put you in your place’

    We use the word ‘place’ to mean many things. Most obviously, place is location — a space in the world. It may also be a ‘place’ in the social order, as in to ‘know your place’ or ‘be in first place’. In a third sense, place is performance:  events ‘take place’. If there is any event series that knows how to ‘take’ and ‘make’ a place, it’s Kool Out. Whether it’s the mellow kick-back of Kool Out Lounge, a concert gig at Kool Out Live, or Koolin in the City over a Sunday skyline; the Kool Out crew know how to produce place with hip hop.

    In its most recent edition, Koolin in the City saw crowds gather on a Troyeville rooftop. Shoulders slung over the balcony railings. Heads rested on the distant edges of Ponte Tower. Mouths pulling smoke, stoking orange light. Then exhaling Biggie, Erykah and Bobby Caldwell over the used car lot below.  ‘Is this your first Kool Out?’ No-one said yes. These were pilgrims, like birds regularly migrating home, coming to rest atop another Kool Out skyline.

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    For the past eight years, Kool Out has been cultivating this sense of place. The brand began in Cape Town, founded by DJ ID (Akio Kawahito). ‘I was an old-school hip hop guy’, he explains, ‘and there wasn’t really that scene on Long Street’.  The city’s hip hop heads had been ‘placeless’ since the early 2000s, when DJ Raiko had run Cape Town’s biggest hip hop night, The Lounge. They needed new turf and Akio set about finding it.

    ‘The way that I always found places to DJ, it’s not like I’ve been to a spot and I’m like, “Yo, this is the music I’m into. I wanna play here”. It’s more like I’m into a spot and I’m not even listening to the music. If it’s the vibe, I’ll play here, and I’ll play what I wanna play. But this is where I wanna play what I wanna play.’ Place was paramount from the start.

    Akio chose the Waiting Room, recognising potential in the above-street space, teetering on the pavement-edge of Long and Kloof. ‘The décor, the ambiance is cool. The crowd is there. You’ve got views of the city.’ He knew that the ways places affect us was not about individual locations, or even the bodies within them, but about the interaction between spaces and bodies — and how curators like Kool Out could connect people and place. In this first series, artists, lyricists, poets and hip hop lovers were strung together on a Cape Town rooftop.

    This was before Waiting Room was what it is now’, Akio explains. ‘It was very much on an electronic tip. They said they didn’t do hip hop’. In spite of this, Akio began running Wednesday hip hop nights, having fooled the venue managers with an instrumental demo.  ‘Really by the fourth month, it was poppin’ off’.

    As Kool Out grew, it also ‘took place’, reclaiming territory.  ‘For the first time, hip hop people — even black people in general — were going to the Waiting Room. Before that, it was like straight up a white spot.’

    There were tussles over turf: the venue soon discovered what Akio was doing.

    You can’t be doing this hip hop stuff’, they told him, ‘The crowd is too rowdy’. Kool Out was urged to relocate, but they held their ground. They knew their place, and quickly put the Waiting Room in theirs. Within a year, they were the city’s biggest monthly hip hop event.

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    In 2011, the crew moved to Johannesburg. Turntablist P-Kuttah (from Durban) and Emcee Reason joined the team. So did Banesa Tseki, Kool Out’s Creative Producer, whose role has been to put the vision in place — to make place happen.

    ‘Johannesburg has a beautiful downtown skyline. Within the last four years or so, people are starting to come downtown again. [We thought], “Let’s take something — a new space — and try build it up”’.  The bricks and mortar would be immaterial things: the sound, the senses, the feel of a place. Using space like a ready canvass, this was about how to inject a site with meaning and attachment.

    They began at Kitcheners in Braamfontein.  We always try to use a nice, small, compact space’, Kuttah explains. ‘So it gives you that house party feel’. Kool Out wanted crowds to feel intimacy and familiarity, as though they owned the place. Meanwhile, the team were also looking for their own place, to reclaim turf from venue managers.  ‘We started off as artists [on the decks]. Then we became promoters [at the door]. But you know where the real money is? The motherfuckin’ bar! (usually claimed by the venue).[So] we were like, “let’s take the door and the bar, cos that’s where the power’s at, you know”’. 

     ‘We did site checks everywhere’, Akio explained. ‘Me and Raiko. We needed a place that nobody else was doing, where we could define it’.  That place was the Kool Out Rooftop on Commissioner Street.

    ‘We saw a gap’, says Kuttah, to do rooftop parties.’ No doubt there was something about being above the city that made it feel like it was yours. Like you could pluck the Hillbrow Tower from its place and pin back your hair with it. As night fell, Koolin in the City morphed: its people became a shadow-mass of silhouettes, while the city, all alight, was let in. It reminded me of that J-Z lyric from City is Mine: ‘You belong to the city, you belong to the night’.

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    Jo’burg is a city to which many belong  — a place of many places. ‘The funny thing about Jo’burg’, Kuttah says, ‘I think about 70 percent of the people you meet in Jo’burg aren’t from Jo’burg.  [They’re] from all over the nation.’ On stage at the most recent Koolin in the City were AKMG (out of the Eastern Cape), Kandy Koated (from the Vaal) and Durban’s Nasty C.  Place has always been integral to hip hop, as artists make a point to ‘rep their hood’.

    The culture of Kool Out is fed by Jo’burg’s cosmopolitan energy. By Kool Out is also literally fed by Jo’burg, where the crew have been able to live off their work for the first time. ‘We were on the top of hip hop in Cape Town and we were broke. Going out with hip flasks and shit’, Akio remembers. In Jo’burg, ‘you can make money off this shit.’ It’s like that Biggie lyric. Akio recites: You never thought hip hop could take you this far. That’s how I feel! Everything is done from me being in hip hop. I own a house here. I’m buying a car next week, cash money. That shit blows my mind!’ While running an incredibly successful event series, Kool Out also consult for corporates and music festivals and have facilitated local tours for big international acts: People Under the Stairs, Ras Kass, DJ Babu, Talib Kweli and more.

    Ask Kool Out pilgrims what keeps them coming back and they will say ‘the music’. That’s what transforms a non-descript space into a place where people feel they belong and connect. We hear a track and we remember where we were when we first heard it, how we felt when we first loved it. Then, in our communal recitation of lyrics, the memory is transformed into something shared. It is as though all of us here now, were also there together, at the time when we first loved this song. And so a bond is manufactured between us, like old friends and family coming together for a reunion — despite having never physically met. These days it doesn’t even matter where the venue is, coming to Kool Out means coming to a place that you know.

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    Kool Out works as this music meeting-place because DJs don’t just play the latest ‘turn up’ tunes. ‘We’re not trying to be about any trend’ Banesa explains. ‘We’re not dictated by who’s on radio. We’re not dictated by who’s big on social media. It’s not about who’s cool and who’s not.  It’s just about what’s dope’. Interspersed with old-school hip hop nostalgia, Kool Out audiences will also be introduced to something new, discovering unchartered sonic territories together. ‘You get to kind of educate people on music’, says Kuttah. It’s not subjected to you having to play commercial stuff all the time’. As such, artists are able to carve out their own space at Kool Out. ‘The funny thing is, even club DJs, when you put them here, they play different sets here.’

    At Koolin in the City, those who come early enter free, after which tickets stay a reasonable R60. There’s no VIP and no price variation based on who’s performing. Whether it’s an international act like Sky Zoo or a massive local artist like Nasty C, it’s a normal Koolin in the City. ‘It’s not supposed to be artist-dependent’ Akio explains. ‘It’s difficult, but what you want it to be is: everybody loves your brand and they don’t care who’s performing. They go anyways. If it’s Nasty C, dope. If it’s someone you don’t know, then it’s probably somebody cool if these cats are putting him on’.   

    Underground artists and open mic emcee’s share the stage with big acts. Internationals and locals are given equal turf. Each has an option to claim and contest space. I saw young women (both female emcees and audience members) putting weak rappers in their place, attacking the dancefloor, and brazenly halting proceedings to call out misogynist lyrics.

    Literary journalist, Joan Didion, once said that ‘ a place belongs forever to whoever claims it hardest, remembers it most obsessively, wrenches it from itself, shapes it, renders it, loves it so radically that [they] remake it in [their] own image’. 

    This is how the geography of Kool Out has been made. There has been acute sensitivity to physical location, but also a devotion to the immaterial sound and sense-scapes that make a place what it is.  And while Kool Out has cultivated a very particular sense of place, it has been with enough openness that audiences claim it as their own.  ‘Everyone just feels like home’, Banesa says. ‘A lot of people say Kool Out is their church or their home’.

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  • For the love of Hip Hop; recapping 2016’s Back to the City Festival

    Back to the city is a Johannesburg institution, a hip hop festival celebrating urban music and street culture in one of the world’s most notorious cities. The humble beginnings of back to the city, run parallel to the story of hip hop in SA, and intersect with the revival of the inner city. The festival began as an educational summit for artists offering knowledge exchange and workshops from established artists within the industry. The first year had approximately 3500 attendees.

    This Freedom Day, Back To the City saw some 25000 attendees and celebrated a decade in the game of pioneering inner city festivals and putting hip hop at centre stage regardless of the reservations or obstacles experienced. This year saw AKA and Riky Rick drop out of the show and there were instances where the sound on the main stage was plagued by problems with microphones and such but the show went on and the crowd was in the presence of the nation’s most loved lyricists including Kwesta whose Ngud’ had thousands and thousands of people with their hands up and bodies gyrating. While Reason’s Yipikayay remix was a stellar collaboration with a gang of rappers going in on PH’s bombastic, playful beat and Reason himself reflecting on his own journey with Back to the City, having performed at the festival each year since it’s inception.

    The main stage was surprised by a performance from Nasty C. The teenager has the game in frenzy, and his performance was composed and crisp highlighting his wordplay and execution, revealing a talent beyond his 19 years. The festival itself offered so much entertainment for hip hop fans and likers of music; the Sprite stage and the Powerplay stage hosted band and dance battles respectively, with performers competing for cash prizes of up 30 stacks. It is beautiful to see the urban performing arts appreciated and rewarded, a sure sign of a growing entertainment industry.

    I saw some amazing things at Back To the City, from stumbling upon beautiful vocals and instrumentals from Melo B Jones’ band Regina, to young dancers sharing their talent and passion with youthful vigour and confidence. Not forgetting the wonderful energy backstage; the competitive nature of hip hop sometimes overshadows that the industry is a community of creatives, and in terms of urban music and culture they all descended on Mary Fitzgerald Square to perform on hip hop’s biggest stage and enjoy the 10 years of the continent’s biggest hip hop festival. A momentous and enriching occasion.

    Checkout some street style snaps from the event below.

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  • Nasty C releases documentary style video for his new single Hell Naw

    South African Hip Hop Awards Freshmen of the Year, Nasty C just dropped the video for his latest single Hell Naw. The young rapper is credited for both co-directing and co-editing the video which follows Nasty on a day spent at a high school where he negotiates Selfi- Op’s and stages a live performance for the mesmerised students. Shot entirely in black and white, the video, which has an unpretentious behind-the-scenes quality embraces the documentary style in which it is filmed. At just 19 years old it wasn’t that long ago that Nasty C was in high school himself and barring his white NY Yankees New Era cap and premium Puma x Bape tee, he doesn’t look out of place in the setting. The school scenes are juxtaposed with two shots, one is a fireworks display foregrounded by a close-up of Nasty’s face and the other is a dimly lit scene in which Nasty lurks like a shadow waiting to pounce. The singles artwork, which depicts a digitally illustrated Nasty C with a crown on his head gives the feeling that the young rapper senses an opportunity that the emergence of the new wave of South African Hip Hop led by Nasty C and some of his contemporaries like Emtee and B3nchMarQ has loosened the grip and that the throne which has for a while now been monopolised by AKA and Cassper Nyovest may potentially be up for the taking.

  • Stilo Magolide teams up with Nasty C on new track, Day Off

    Stilo Magolide just dropped “Day Off” a new track which features Nasty C, one of South Africa’s most buzzed about young rappers and winner of South African Hip Hop Awards “Freshmen of The Year.

    This is Stilo’s first track since releasing “Camron Diaz”, an 18 track mixtape on which he offered up a range of vocal styles and sounds.

    “Day Off”, which was produced by Cassper Nyovest (Family Tree) signed producer Gemini Major recaptures the vocal energy Stilo realised on previous singles such as “Mr Party” and “More” but also, through its distinct trap sound hints at the artists alignment towards a wider audience.

    Listen to the track below:

    Download track here: