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Rouge gets better with every single, and “Sheba Ngwan O’” is her best effort so far. The producer Whichi 1080 gave Rouge another one of his bass-heavy bangers, and she knew exactly what to do with it. The emcee sings as well as she raps, and “Sheba Ngwan O’” is a great combination of vocals, raps and a beat. She uses a fast-pace flow without being wordy. Rouge’s breath control on her single, “Sheba Ngwan O’,” is that of the pros. Not the most popular release of the year, but a great song nonetheless. “Jubille noLigaMo” is smooth and mellow which works with the song’s content. It’s one of many personal songs on the rapper’s latest album. He’s musing on each one of them, hoping they are proud of what he's become. “Jubilee noLigaMo” is a song about Solo’s late grandmother and brother. Lyrically, AKA is basking on his impressive track record, asserting his position in the game: “Last five years ain’t shit without me/ Most consistent, I goes the distance.” Add a lightly autotuned catchy hook and you have one of the most solid street bangers of the year. AKA spits solid verses, so does Yanga, who is slowly but surely becoming a lyricist of note. The beat is ice cold, with a bassline that drones under sinewy synths. Out of the few singles he released this year, this was Supa Mega’s finest. “By Any Means” is one of the most well-crafted songs on Stogie T’s brilliant self-titled album. Stogie T, on his verse, reflects on how far he has come from being another struggling artist to being so well-off his biggest struggle is choosing between St. His hooks are the best, and he also drops a great verse which combines rapping and singing without any effort. Even Stilo Magolide brought his A-game on this street-certified banger, which, in an ironic turn of events, got slept on by the rest of the country. Last year, he gave Tumi and Nasty C a run for their money on DJ Switch’s “Way it Go.” On “Sleep for the Rich,” a collaboration with Boyznbucks’ Stilo Magolide, Youngsta spits two solid 16s replete with Cape Coloured slang you won’t hear from any other rapper but him. Youngsta is part of the new crop of South African emcees who are ensuring the art of lyricism is not going to die. Youngsta x Stilo Magolide “Sleep is for the Rich” The ex-battle rapper spits quotable after quotable showing that he’s still one of the best to ever do it. The emcee raps for three minutes straight, devouring the grimy boom bap beat without a hook, just a few effective poses.
A few months ago he dropped “Denneboom,” a street-centric rappity rap banger produced by Trompie Beatmochini. The Cap City Records signee has been making radio-friendly singles over the past few years. N’veigh is one of the most potent lyricists South Africa has ever seen. Definitely one of the biggest hip-hop songs of this era. Kwesta’s baritone gave the song an x-factor and fits the mood perfectly. The producer, DJ Maphorisa, slowed down Antena's house classic “Camino Del Sol (Joakim Remix)” to an old school kwaito tempo, making it a woozy beer anthem for the shebeens. It went gold, and so did DaKAR II, the album it’s taken off of. A stone-cold South African classic song.Įasily the second biggest song of 2016-after Babes Wodumo’s “Wololo”-“Ngud’” is Kwesta’s breakout hit. “Vura” is a good example of South Africans owning trap music and not just copying and pasting what Americans are doing. Sjava’s mbhaqanga-esque drawl gives the song a quintessential Sowetan feel. Then there’s the subtle percussion and keys in the background. “Caracara”)-collaborated on what is one of 2016’s best beats. Three production geniuses-Ruff (Emtee “Roll Up”), Bizboy (Da L.E.S “Heaven”) and Lunatik (K.O.