South Africa’s Amapiano: The pumping music blasting everywhere

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“Ameno”, the song in Pogba’s clip, has 10 billion views on TikTok alone, powered by dance challenges that Shaquille O’Neal, Janet Jackson and Shakira couldn’t resist.

Its catchy phrase “you want to bamba” in the recomposed version by Nigerian rapper Goya Menor, remixed by a Ghanaian producer based in the United States, uses sounds that first played in South African clubs.

It is often heard blasting everywhere from houses, car speakers at traffic lights and at parties.

No one’s sure exactly how amapiano — literally, “the pianos” — began.

South Africans first heard it a decade ago, but over the last two years, it has exploded with international tours, music awards, festivals and countless playlists.

“It has a unique style of beat. There is an instrument in amapiano called a log drum,” said TikTok’s Africa music operations manager, Yuvir Pillay, better known as Sketchy Bongo.

“That’s really the whole soul of amapiano music. It’s a really pumping, hitting bass.”

That log drum sound is what people are dancing to, he said.

Amapiano star Kamo Mphela said the genre is “a whole culture movement”.

“I don’t want to just say it’s just a sound, because it gets influenced by so much other stuff that are just part of the hood lifestyle,” she told AFP, wearing a furry black-and-white outfit reminiscent of Cruella de Vil.

Mphela rose to fame in 2018 as a dancer, but the 22-year-old then realised she could also make the music she wants to dance to.

She’s performed around Africa, and notably live at London’s Boiler Room, a universal online broadcasting platform.

“It’s not about what you have. Amapiano is about what you’re living,” said the Soweto-born entertainer.

“You can be one kid in the back room creating a hit, and the next day you’re a superstar.”

Tumelo “Force” Mabe and Tumelo “Maero” Nedondwe, known as MFR Souls, were amapiano pioneers. Their hit Amanikiniki has nearly 25 million views on YouTube.

“He was more into deep house, and I was more into soulful house, so we wanted something different,” Maero told AFP at their home-studio outside Johannesburg.

That’s when we started mixing up the sounds to get something really unique — that’s how amapiano started initially.”

That mix included kwaito, South African house music from the 1990s. And they replaced vocals with piano chords.

“It’s more local than anything,” Maero said. “It’s just raw because there are no rules in amapiano. We don’t master amapiano songs. You just mix and balance the sound. It needs that rawness.”

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