Classroom lesson 路 Music馃嚳馃嚘 South Africa

Amapiano - South Africa's global sound

A bouncy, slow-fast dance music born in Pretoria, now played everywhere

What is it?

Amapiano is a kind of dance music that started in South Africa around 2012. The name means 'the pianos' in Zulu, because the music is built around bright, bouncy piano melodies. It has spread from South African bedrooms and parties to clubs and playlists all over the world.

Tell me more

Amapiano grew up in the townships and neighbourhoods of cities like Pretoria and Johannesburg. Young people made the first songs at home on laptops, mixing piano with deep bass and a swinging drum pattern called the 'log drum'. Then they shared their tracks online.

The sound is unmistakable. There is usually a soft piano riff, a low rolling bass, a shaker that ticks along, and a special bubbly drum sound. The tempo is slow enough to chat over but bouncy enough to dance to. Lots of songs have a long build-up before the beat finally drops in.

Amapiano now plays in clubs in London, Lagos, New York and Tokyo. Songs by artists like Kabza De Small, DJ Maphorisa, Tyla and Uncle Waffles get millions of plays. In 2024, Tyla won a Grammy for her amapiano-inspired song 'Water'.

What's special about amapiano is how friendly it is to dancing. There are simple footwork patterns - moves like 'pouncing cat' and 'TikTok' - that children, teenagers and grandparents all do at family parties. It is music made for everyone to join in.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Amapiano started with young people making music at home on laptops. What other kinds of art can you create at home today that you couldn't have made 30 years ago?
  2. 02The music has spread from South Africa to all over the world. How do you think a song travels from one country to another these days?
  3. 03Why might music be such a good thing to share between countries?
Try this

Classroom activity

Listen to a clean amapiano track as a class (e.g. an instrumental clip). Ask everyone to close their eyes and listen for: the piano, the bouncy log-drum bass, the shaker. Raise a hand each time you hear one. Then everyone makes up a simple two-step dance move together.

More about South Africa

Other things that make South Africa special

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