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SPOEK MATHAMBO selects dirty paraffin South African rap visionary Spoek Mathambo: “Dirty Paraffin are awesome. Smiso is an incredibly imaginative artist – slangmaster, dancemaster, fashion don. They inspire me a lot. They’ve been pretty secretive, but one day I was cruising through Johannesburg listening to the unmastered EP in someone’s car – an exciting next step! It’s party time.” A DIY electro-rap duo from Johannesburg, Dirty Paraffin’s ambitions are clear. “We don’t want to be a South African band,” states Smiso Zwane, aka OKmalumkoolkat. “We want to be a band that happen to be from South Africa. That’s success for us.” Originally from Durban on the east coast, they’ve lived in Jo’burg for seven years, though only recently moved from the calm of the ’burbs into the city itself, a seething, multicultural hotpot. “What’s inspiring in the city is all the tribes and nations meeting up to try and make it. All these cultures mashing up is crazy, we get a lot out of that. Gospel groups, people rapping on the street…” “Our music is about telling South African stories,” adds Dokta SpiZee. “It’s about what we see around us.” The key Dirty Paraffin ingredients are French electro, their own Zulu culture, west African and east African music, an infectious sense of humour and a keen eye for the absurd details of SA city life. Check their online video for “Drip Dry”, which features them dancing and goofing about in the city parks and streets, chickens and all – it’s an optimistic, good-time take on a place that typically makes headlines internationally for crime and violence, not its grassroots creativity. OKmalumkoolkat has already collaborated with UK producer LV for Hyperdub club hit “Boomslang”, and there are plans for an EP – new track “Papap! Papap!” is a joyfully dirty bassline-driven party- starter, packed with online jargon and acronyms. “It’s ‘primer stove music’,” explains Smiso. “There should be more different genres in South Africa, so that’s why we’re coming up with our own.” Say what? “It’s a stove we used to use back in the day before cats had money,” he laughs. “Without electricity, you’d have to go buy a litre of paraffin. Everywhere used to smell of it. “People should be excited about South Africa now,” he concludes. “We just woke up! Kids are now like: ‘Yo, I need to bust my slang in my raps. People need to ask ME what it all means.’ Whereas before, you know, we used to have to find out what Biggie was talking about.” TEXT ROD STANLEY PHOTOGRAPHY CHRIS SAUNDERS SPOEK MATHAMBO’s album FATHER CREEPER is out now on Sub Pop DIRTY PARAFFIN’s EP will be out on LV’s label OKZharp soon [l–r] DOKTA SPIZEE, OKMALUMKOOLKAT DAZED 114

Dirty Paraffin - Dazed & Confused

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SPOEK MATHAMBO selects

dirty paraffinSouth African rap visionary Spoek Mathambo: “Dirty Paraffin are awesome. Smiso is an incredibly imaginative artist – slangmaster, dancemaster, fashion don. They inspire me a lot. They’ve been pretty secretive, but one day I was cruising through Johannesburg listening to the unmastered EP in someone’s car – an exciting next step! It’s party time.”

A DIY electro-rap duo from Johannesburg, Dirty Paraffin’s ambitions are clear. “We don’t want to be a South African band,” states Smiso Zwane, aka OKmalumkoolkat. “We want to be a band that happen to be from South Africa. That’s success for us.”

Originally from Durban on the east coast, they’ve lived in Jo’burg for seven years, though only recently moved from the calm of the ’burbs into the city itself, a seething, multicultural hotpot. “What’s inspiring in the city is all the tribes and nations meeting up to try and make it. All these cultures mashing up is crazy, we get a lot out of that. Gospel groups, people rapping on the street…”

“Our music is about telling South African stories,” adds Dokta SpiZee. “It’s about what we see around us.” The key Dirty Paraffin ingredients are French electro, their own Zulu culture, west African and east African music, an infectious sense of humour and a keen eye for the absurd details of SA city life. Check their online video for “Drip Dry”, which features them dancing and goofing about in the city parks and streets, chickens and all – it’s an optimistic, good-time take on a place that typically makes headlines internationally for crime and violence, not its grassroots creativity.

OKmalumkoolkat has already collaborated with UK producer LV for Hyperdub club hit “Boomslang”, and there are

plans for an EP – new track “Papap! Papap!” is a joyfully dirty bassline-driven party-starter, packed with online jargon and acronyms.

“It’s ‘primer stove music’,” explains Smiso. “There should be more different genres in South Africa, so that’s why we’re coming up with our own.” Say what? “It’s a stove we used to use back in the day before cats had money,” he laughs. “Without electricity, you’d have to go buy a litre of paraffin. Everywhere used to smell of it.

“People should be excited about South Africa now,” he concludes. “We just woke up! Kids are now like: ‘Yo, I need to bust my slang in my raps. People need to ask ME what it all means.’ Whereas before, you know, we used to have to find out what Biggie was talking about.”

TEXT ROD STANLEY PHOTOGRAPHY CHRIS SAUNDERS

SPOEK MATHAMBO’s album FATHER CREEPER is out now on Sub Pop DIRTY PARAFFIN’s EP will be out on LV’s label OKZharp soon

[l–r] DOKTA SPIZEE, OKMALUMKOOLKAT

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