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K W A i T O

"the official kwaito connection"

About Me

welcome to kwaito! ...we could ask ourselves a few questions about the kwaito movement such as, where is the root and energy located at the base of this unique sound? who is representing these artists? how come the world does not know about you and what you stand for? why are there no international tours organised pushing for the popularity of kwaito sound? etcetera........ attempting to advocate kwaito is right. help this site make it's more than rightful place in myspace and the international arena. people adhering to this movement please send news about the artists (established or up-coming), news about kwaito contacts, articles, movements elswhere, concerts, events and anything that could help towards creating a powerful and solid base which can help promote kwaito. kwaito is a powerful sound that exuberates and vibrates the people of south africans souls and voices. i have lived and travelled enough to know how special this very soul is. the kwaito dance is exceptional, kwaito is exceptional.welcome to this page. Louis /KAhttp://www.southafrica.info/what_happening/arts_entertain ment/kwaitodoc.htmKwaito's looking sharp!9 April 2003A new documentary film about kwaito culture is spreading awareness about this uniquely South African music form around the world and creating an international market for kwaito artists."Sharp Sharp!", written and directed by Aryan Kaganof, was broadcast in the Netherlands on 8 April. The first film to tell the story of kwaito, "Sharp Sharp!" contains detailed interviews with all the major musicians, producers, figureheads, media commentators, industry executives and others involved in kwaito."Sharp Sharp!" tells the story of a music form that burst from South Africas computers and synthesizers after the release from prison of Nelson Mandela in 1990.By the time of the first democratic elections in 1994, kwaito had its first stars, Boom Shaka. Today, there is a veritable pantheon of kwaito celebrities who are idolised by millions, and kwaito is now breaking into the international market.M'du, Zola, Arthur, Kabelo, Oskido, Don Laka and Mzambiya are just some of the artists featured in the film, which was broadcast on Hollands prestigious RAM world culture programme.Johannesburg-based Kaganof, who won the prize for Best Video Made In Africa in 2002 with Western4.33, is currently working on bringing "Sharp Sharp!" to South Africans as a five-part television series.Voice of the ghettoThe music and culture of the township youth of South Africa, kwaito is the voice and language of the ghetto, speaking of the daily experiences and dreams of the first generation to come of age in the post-apartheid period.Despite suffering a lack of recognition, and often downright disparagement from mainstream cultural institutions and figures, kwaito has forged ahead, providing employment for tens of thousands of people in the music, radio, entertainment and fashion industries.To date, no substantial analysis of the kwaito phenomenon has been written or filmed, and the music and the scene surrounding it have often been relegated to gossip columns.But kwaito is a force to be reckoned with. It is the site of a major sonic revolution: the dawn of the digital age in South African music.Dominated by a radically different approach to sound, kwaito is a music of textures and repetitive modal vamping, as opposed to classical song structures. Rather than a weakness, this is kwaitos great strength, for this is the direction that popular music culture across the world has taken since the mid-1980s and the onset of house music.Purely SA dance musicKwaito, then, is an addition to the library of world dance music; a uniquely South African contribution to global dance culture that is respected precisely because of its distinctive South African qualities: the languid, rolling bass lines and vocal chants that imbue this music with characteristics that are purely South African.These chants and phrases link the music form to American hip-hop, but kwaitos lyrics come straight from South Africas townships and convey the street language of these townships: the tsotsitaal, the kasitaal, the street "lingo" that is a glorious pot-pourri of all 11 official languages that puts paid to the apartheid mythology of separate development.Kwaito is a wild, eclectic mix-up, a boiling, cooking brew of language and sound that could have happened nowhere but in South Africa. Source: Franki Hills

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Member Since: 7/21/2006
Band Members:
Influences:Definitions::::::named after Amakwaitos (gangsters), who were in turn named after the amalaitaan organization of Norh Sotho gangs active outisde Johannesburg during the first half of the 20th century. Related to the Afrikaans slang kwai, meaning hot. An R&B/hip-hop flavored combination of chanted or sung vocals married to powerful (and often programmed) beats. Features sampling and effects. Also has strong roots in Jamaican reggae and European house music. Popular music in today's South Africa. www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.phpan urban South African genre developed in the 1990s, a fusion of various musical sounds that were popular in the 1990s, including South African dance music, hip hop, Jamaican influences, house music and rhythm and blues www.cgsmusic.netThis very popular music is a South African style, an ecletic brew of House music, R&B, Hip-Hop and Ragga influence. A difficult one to describe but one not easily forgotten - perhaps a product of a Rainbow Nation. (Arthur)(TKZee)( Bongo Maffin)(Boom Shaka)(Abashante)(M'Du)( Skeem) Kwassa Kwassa An athletic type dance style begun in Congo in the late 80's (Kanda Bongo Man) Kwela South African pennywhistle music. www.concretejungle.co.za/glossary.htmKwaito is a South African form of house music that originated in Johannesburg in the mid 1990's. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kwaito
Sounds Like:_______________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ Modern History Sourcebook: Nelson Mandela: Speech on Release from Prison, 1990 ____________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________After a quarter century in jail, Nelson Mandela, the leader of the South African African National Congress, was released and faced the world's press in a speech carried live throughout the world.Comrades and fellow South Africans, I greet you all in the name of peace, democracy and freedom for all. I stand here before you not as a prophet but as a humble servant of you, the people. Your tireless and heroic sacrifices have made it possible for me to be here today. I therefore place the remaining years of my life in your hands.On this day of my release, I extend my sincere and warmest gratitude to the millions of my compatriots and those in every corner of the globe who have campaigned tirelessly for my release. I extend special greetings to the people of Cape Town, the city which has been my home for three decades. Your mass marches and other forms of struggle have served as a constant source of strength to all political prisoners.I salute the African National Congress. It has fulfilled our every expectation In its role as leader of the great march to freedom.I salute our president, Comrade Oliver Tambo, for leading the ANC even under the most difficult circumstances.I salute the rank-and-file members of the ANC: You have sacrificed life and limb in the pursuit of the noble cause of our struggle.I salute combatants of Umkhonto We Sizwe (the ANC's military wing) who paid the ultimate price for the freedom of all South Africans.I salute the South African Communist Party for its sterling contribution to the struggle for democracy: You have survived 40 years of unrelenting persecution. The memory of great Communists like Bram Fisher and Moses Mabhida will be cherished for generations to come.I salute General Secretary Joe Slovo, one of our finest patriots. We are heartened by the fact that the alliance between ourselves and the party remains as strong as it always was.I salute the United Democratic Front, the National Education Crisis Committee, the South African Youth Congress, the Transvaal and Natal Indian Congresses, and COSATU, and the many other formations of the mass democratic movement.I also salute the Black Sash and the National Union of South African Students. We note with pride that you have endured as the conscience of white South Africans, even during the darkest days of the history of our struggle. You held the flag of liberty high. The largescale mass mobilization of the past few years is one of the key factors which led to the opening of the final chapter of our struggle.I extend my greetings to the working class of our country. Your organized strength is the pride of our movement: You remain the most dependable force in the struggle to end exploitation and oppression.I pay tribute to the many religious communities who carried the campaign for justice forward when the organizations of our people were silenced.I greet the traditional leaders of our country: Many among you continue to walk in the footsteps of great heroes.I pay tribute for the endless heroism of youth: You, the young lions, have energized our entire struggle.I pay tribute to the mothers and wives and sisters of our nation: You are the rock-hard foundation of our struggle. Apartheid has inflicted more pain on you than on anyone else.On this occasion, we thank the world, we thank the world community for their great contribution to the anti-apartheid struggle. Without your support, our struggle could not have reached this advanced stage.The sacrifice of the front-line states will be remembered by South Africans forever.My celebrations will be incomplete without expressing my deep appreciation for the strength that has been given to me during my long and gloomy years in prison by my beloved wife and family. I am convinced that your pain and suffering was far greater than my own.Before I go any further, I wish to make the point that I intend making only a few preliminary comments at this stage. I will make a more complete statement only after I have had the opportunity to consult with my comrades.Today, the majority of South Africans, black and white, recognize that apartheid has no future. It has to be ended by our own decisive mass action in order to build peace and security.The mass campaigns of defiance and other actions of our organizations and people can only culminate in the establishment of democracy.The apartheid's destruction on our subcontinent is incalculable. The fabric of family life of millions of my people has been shattered. Millions are homeless and unemployed. Our economy lies in ruins and our people are embroiled in political strife.Our resort to the armed struggle in 1960 with the formation of the military wing of the ANC (Umkhoto We Sizwe) was a purely defensive action against the violence of apartheid. The factors which necessitated the armed struggle still exist today. We have no option but to continue. We express the hope that a climate conducive to a negotiated settlement would be created soon, so that there may no longer be the need for the armed struggle.I am a loyal and disciplined member of the African National Congress. I am therefore in full agreement with all of its objectives strategies and tactics.The need to unite the people of our country is as important a task now as it always has been. No individual leader is able to take all this enormous task on his own. It is our task as leaders to place our views before our organization and to allow the democratic structures to decide on the way forwardOn the question of democratic practice, I feel duty-bound to make the point that a leader of the movement is a person who has been democratically elected at a national congress. This is a principle which must be upheld without any exception.Today, I wish to report to you that my talks with the government have been aimed at normalizing the political situation in the country. We have not yet begun discussing the basic demands of the struggle. I wish to stress that I myself have at no time entered negotiations about the future of our country, except to insist on a meeting between the ANC and the government.Mr. de Klerk has gone further than any other nationalist president in taking real steps to normalize the situation. However, there are further steps, as outlined in the Harare declaration, that have to be met before negotiations on the basic demands of our people can begin.I reiterate our call for, inter-alia, the immediate ending of the state of emergency and the freeing of all - and not only some - political prisoners.Only such a normalized situation, which allows for free political activity, can allow us to consult our people in order to obtain a mandate.The people need to be consulted on who will negotiate and on the content of such negotiations.Negotiations cannot take their place above the heads or behind the backs of our people.It Is our belief that the future of our country can only be determined by a body which is democratically elected on a non-racial basis.Negotiations on the dismantling of apartheid will have to address the overwhelming demands of our people for a democratic, non-racial and unitary South Africa.There must be an end to white monopoly on political power and a fundamental restructuring of our political and economic systems to ensure that the inequalities of apartheid are addressed, and our society thoroughly democratized.It must be added that Mr. de Klerk himself is a man of integrity who is acutely aware of the dangers of a public figure not honoring his undertaking.But as an organization, we base our policy and our strategy on the harsh reality we are faced with, and this reality is that we are still suffering under the policies of the nationalist government.Our struggle has reached a decisive moment: We call on our people to seize this moment, so that the process toward democracy Is rapid and uninterrupted.We have waited too long for our freedom. We can no longer wait. Now is the time to intensify the struggle on all fronts. To relax our efforts now would be a mistake which generations to come will not be able to forgive.The sight of freedom looming on the horizon should encourage us to redouble our efforts. It Is only through disciplined mass action that our victory can be assured.We call on our white compatriots to join us in the shaping of a new South Africa. The freedom movement is a political home for you, too.We call on the international community to continue the campaign to isolate the apartheid regime. To lift sanctions now would run the risk of aborting the process toward the complete eradication of apartheid.Our march toward freedom is irreversible. We must not allow fear to stand in our way.Universal suffrage on a common voters roll in a united, democratic and non-racial South Africa is the only way to peace and racial harmony.In conclusion, I wish to go to my own words during my trial in 1964 - they are as true today as they were then:I have fought against white domination, and I have fought against black domination. I have cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society in which all persons live together in harmony and with equal opportunity. It is an ideal which I hope to live for and to achieve. But, if need be, it is an ideal for which I am prepared to die.________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________ ------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------ -----------------------------------------------------
Record Label: KWAITO is NOT "world music", KWAITO is KWAITO!!
Type of Label: None