HOW SOUTH AFRICA influences NIAJA MUSIC
All you need to know about this South African township sound influencing Nigerian music
Patoranking's latest single - 'Available' - draws from the South African 'Gqom' sound.
Right now, dance floors all across Nigeria are turning up to ‘Available’,
a sparse record by Patoranking which inspires the craziest of moves.
The song released in November 2017, is a hollow record, packed full of
banging drums which inspire dancing.
You
can find a similar rhythm and beat on ‘Legbegbe’, the hit song by Mr
Real, which has grown to become one of Nigeria’s early hits in 2018. In
fact, the entire Shaku shaku movement and sound is based on this heavy
drumming, which is tweaked by producers for variety.
That
drumming isn’t native to Nigeria, It originates in South Africa, where
it is called ‘Gqom’. It’s the South African dance sound that’s come from
the townships and is taking over the world.
Gqom
is described as a “big bang which leaves you happy after it hits you,”
and it’s exactly what Available does to you – with a simple catchy
chorus and a contagious beat produced by DJ Catzico and Vista; this
addictive song will surely get you dancing!
What is ‘Gqom’?
Gqom
(pronounced “gom” with a clicking sound on the “g”) is an unfiltered
mutation of South African kwaito that has evolved in the Zulu-dominated
neighbourhoods surrounding Durban’s city centre.
Instead
of the regular House beat and the refined production techniques of
commercial South African kwaito, the gqom that comes out of the
townships uses broken beats and is made on basic home computers, with
producers often utilizing repetitive, sliced vocal samples, echo, and
heavy percussive beats. The result is a dark, gritty and minimalist
sound with similarities to dubstep, techno and Chicago juke.
Citizen
Boy, who released one of the gqom tracks to gain international
attention, a 2015 rework of Adele’s Hometown Glory, describes to
Guardian, the intense atmosphere in any room the music plays. “It is heavy because no one is shy,” he states. “It’s like they become a new version of themselves. And even those who can’t dance, they have the courage to dance.”
In
South Africa, gqom is regarded as an unsophisticated sound and looked
down on. It is rare to find gqom music pressed to CD or vinyl. Producers
of the genre generally upload their new productions to mobile phones
and spread them via Whatsapp groups, or upload them to MP3 sites like
Kasimp3.
Over the last five years
overseas interest in gqom has increased, with tracks produced in
Durban’s townships being played by international DJs including the owner
of the Hyperdub, label, Kode9, who’s likened the sound to “being suspended over the gravitational field of a black hole, and lovin’ it.”
Gqom In Nigeria
Nigerians
have always made music via copying, adaptation and pasting. We grab
sounds from different cultures, bring it back home to our studios,
remix, chop and adapt until it is passed through a Nigerian filter. The
end result is something local, deeply Nigerian, and syrupy.
Nigerians
have always had a musical connection with South Africa. Our version of
House music borrows heavily from the country, and in Hip-hop, stars of
both cities collaborate. At some point between 2013 – 2015, House music
dominated our pop music.
But Gqom is starting to get in, although much of it is mixed with House, in a new variant named known as ‘Sgubhu.’ You can find it in Lagos club mixes, with notable names including Busiswa and DJ Tirra.
You also can find it in CDQ’s ‘Nowo Soke’, ‘Say baba’, and ‘Indomie’. Patoranking’s recent utilization of gqom to make ‘Available’ is likely to inspire a fresh class of musicians, who understand the hack behind leading with heavy, dark and minimalist beats.
So
whenever you hear that South African sound in the club, inspiring you
to move to the beat, just raise your glasses to the air, and educate
your friends that this isn’t called a ‘South African’ sound. It is the
‘Gqom’.
Source:pulse.ng
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