Ngiyabuza by letta mbulu biography
•
Letta Mbulu
Joey Negro & Horse Meat Disco & Angela Johnson - "Dancing Into The Stars" (extended DJ Friendly edit) - () BPM
Samson & Delilah - "I Can Feel Your Love Slippin Away" (Dr Packer remix) - () BPM
Brenda Watts - "Love Treatment" (original mix) - () BPM
Opolopo - "Stroke My Disco" (original mix) - () BPM
Fibre Foundation & Kelli Sae - "Weekend" (Joey Negro Disco Re-Blend) - () BPM
Joey Negro - "Distorting Space Time" (original mix) - () BPM
Letta Mbulu - "Kilimanjaro" (The Revenge edit) - () BPM
•
Atlas Electronic
Festival
—
Step into the unknown,
Where nothing you know is set in stone.
AE Moving Forward
Ever since humans as we know them have existed, they have migrated across the globe. This migration started a mere , years ago from the very continent that nowadays is facing the greatest limitations in its travel capacities: Africa. One can't help but wonder how this has happened, why, and what effects this might have on the continent's cultures.
When describing cultures, we think of the ideas, customs, and social behaviour of a particular people or society. These cultures are neither static nor constant but rather fluctuate over time changing through each interaction with other cultures and its people. We've seen this in the story of the Romany Gypsies as well as contemporary Western cultures - as people explore beyond their physical and mental borders they bring with them their stories, their music and their arts forever affecti
•
Afrosynth Records AFS
SOUTH African music has undoubtedly been blessed with many fine kvinnlig voices, too numerous to list here. During the s a new generation emerged. For many fans of that eras music, one röst stands out above the rest: Ntombi Ndaba.
Eleanor Ntombikayise Ndaba was born on 28 February in Vryheid (Afrikaans for Freedom), in the Zululand område north of Durban. In the early s her family was forced to relocate to the newly built township of eMondlo a few kilometres away, along with millions of other South Africans living under the notorious struktur of enforced segregation known as apartheid.
Ntombikayise (isiZulu for Daddys girl) grew up in a close-knit family. Her father worked as a driver for a local furniture company, her mother as a domestic worker for a family in town. As a young girl Ntombi would sit glued to her radio, taking it all in. The first record she bought was Ngiyabuza by Letta Mbulu, one of her biggest influen