Breathe KwaiCore
The countdown to the launch of a band who have created an entirely new genre, KwaiCore, an amalgamation of Kwaito and Hardcore Punk in South Africa. Meet the band who have jump-started this craze. Breathe KwaiCore speaks about racial and societal issues, South African news, the music industry, SA bands and their increasing international presence, philosophy, and the biography of Light Hour showing the power of collective intention.
Monday 22 April 2013
End of the journey
We have come far. Today is the day we show people what KwaiCore means to us and how it's cultivated out creative souls. Ndonsa and I have battled through racism and prejudice to combine two styles of music important to each of us.
Friday 19 April 2013
Tuesday 9 April 2013
The Law of Conservation of Music.
It's actually virtually impossible to create a new musical language or style that hasn't been heard before. Any new style will simply be a derivation of a previously existing style. That's why the trend these days is to combine previously existing styles into new sounds. While the individual elements might not be new, the resulting mix is at least a refreshing change! I pose a question though, will there come a time when we'll eventually create so many new genres that it'll all just be a messy mash of bullshit and not quality music?
Monday 8 April 2013
All to their own.
When it comes to Hardcore, the songwriting has more emphasis on rhythm rather than melody. Which is a reason why Ndonsa thinks Light Hour could work. Trying to combine melodies of Kwaito and melodies of Hardcore would just sound chaotic. Vocalists in the hardcore genre usually scream, chant, and use spoken word; another reason why these two genres could work together harmoniously. The majority of the time, Kwaito has spoken-word lyrical styles. An example Ndonsa gave me is a band called Me Without You. He says the artist's style is similar to what Light Hour would like to pull off. Storytelling, through use of metaphors, rather than pitch perfect melodies and harmonies will be reminiscent of Light Hour. They'll still have vocals and melodies, but it won't be the main focus. In order for these two genres to work, they need to have a compromise.
Saturday 6 April 2013
The Hardcore side of things
Hardcore punk originated in the late 1970s. It's usually faster and heavier than regular punk rock. It spanned the straight edge movement and its associated submovements, hardline and youth crew.
http://punkmusic.about.com/od/punktionary/g/straightedge.htm
http://www.dictionaryupdate.com/Hardline
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Youth_crew
Hardcore influenced other music genres like alternative rock, alternative metal, metal core thrash metal, emo, and post-hardcore. It started in the underground scenes across the US in the early 1980s. The most popular places being Washington, California, New York, New Jersey, Boston, Canada and the UK. Traditional hardcore has never reached mainstream commercial success, but an exception would have to be Black Flag's album Damaged: it was included in Rolling Stone's list of The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time in 2003.
Return to that One-ness
Ndonsa was in a hardcore band for over 2 years. It's funny that somebody with such a traditional Zulu background has an interest in the hardcore scene. I've gathered much from what Ndonsa has told me about the genre itself, but there is something deeper with this genre that drives him forward and always makes him "discover things about himself when performing hardcore that he never knew before." Ndonsa tells me other people see it as loud, abrasive music, but to him it's a channel through which he can transport his alter ego and "feel the one-ness we all felt when we were still children." From a young age Ndonsa would play on his teacher's piano at school whenever he got the chance. He never had the money to buy his own, so he would beg his teacher to let him stay in after school. Ndonsa taught himself how to play and he says he was happiest when his teacher would leave him in this classroom after everybody was let out for recess. He was at peace knowing that he could play whatever he wanted and experiment in whatever way he chose because there was nobody around to criticize him like his parents would. His parents never wanted him to become a musician. They said to him, "Art is a hobby. It isn't a breadwinner. Wake up and make good money. You're not going to make money playing your silly piano." That cut Ndonsa, but he knew what made him feel closer to the rhythms of life: playing keys to sick drum beats.
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