Posts

Watch The Throne

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Watch The Throne: Gold, Gods, and the Sound of Ascension There are albums, and then there are events disguised as albums. Watch The Throne is not merely a collaboration between two titans—it is the sonic coronation of Jay-Z and Kanye West at a moment when both men had already conquered the terrain beneath them and now turned their gaze upward. This is not rap striving for legitimacy; this is rap declaring sovereignty. Released in 2011, the album exists in a rarefied space—post-struggle, post-validation, post-doubt. Jay-Z, the embodiment of rap’s aspirational arc, had long transcended the hustler narrative. Kanye West, fresh off the maximalist triumph of My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy , stood as hip-hop’s most daring auteur. Together, they didn’t just make music—they built monuments. The Architecture of Excess Watch The Throne is gilded in luxury, but its opulence is not shallow—it is historical, political, and psychological. The album wrestles with what it means for Bl...

Behind the Crimson Door

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Behind the Crimson Door: A World of Illusion, Fear, and Becoming There is something unmistakably electric about stepping into The Cirk. It is not merely a venue; it is a threshold. The moment you cross into its space, the ordinary dissolves and something heightened, almost mythic, takes its place. Time loosens. Reality softens. You are invited—no, compelled—into a world where the human body defies its own limits and imagination takes physical form. Watching Gert-Johan Coetzee’s Behind the Crimson Door in this environment feels not just appropriate, but essential. The Cirk is a place where impossibility becomes language, and this production speaks it fluently. From the outset, the show establishes itself as an immersive spectacle. Aerialists carve shapes into the air with impossible grace. Acrobats suspend disbelief as effortlessly as they suspend themselves mid-flight. Bodies twist, stretch, and split against gravity’s expectations, forming a kinetic poetry tha...

The Return of Elvis Pisanie

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The Return of Elvis du Pisanie: Memory, Masculinity, and the Theatre of Becoming There are performances that entertain, and then there are performances that inhabit you —that sit in your chest long after the lights dim, long after the applause dissolves into the Johannesburg night. The Return of Elvis du Pisanie , written by Paul Slabolepszy and brought to life in a riveting one-man tour de force by Ashley Dowds at Theatre on the Square, belongs firmly in the latter category. This is not merely theatre—it is excavation. Of memory. Of masculinity. Of identity in post-apartheid South Africa. And above all, of the fragile, often fractured human spirit trying to reconcile boyhood dreams with adult realities. Ashley Dowds does not simply perform this play—he conducts it. Alone on stage, he becomes an entire world: a son, a father, a dreamer, a broken man, a child clinging to illusion, and an adult confronting truth. His performance is nothing short of an acting masterclass. Ther...

CELESTIAL BODIES II

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CELESTIAL BODIES II There are evenings that entertain you, and then there are evenings that rearrange something inside you—Celestial Bodies at the Keorapetse William Kgositsile Theatre, UJ Arts Centre did the latter. Having first encountered this collaboration at Joburg Theatre, I walked in with expectation—but also curiosity. That first staging was already a triumph: an ambitious fusion between Joburg Ballet and Universe on Stage, where physics met plié, and cosmology unfolded through corps de ballet formations. It was intellectually rich, anchored by the brilliance of Dr. Luca Pontiggia and the ever-commanding musical presence of Yasheen Modi. You learned. You admired. You were moved. But this second experience? This was transcendence. From the moment the auditorium dissolved into darkness—courtesy of Simon King’s restrained yet devastatingly effective lighting design—you felt it: this would lean deeper into movement, into embodiment. L...

Under the shade of a tree I sat and wept

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Under the Shade of a Tree I Sat and Wept  At the Market Theatre for the opening of Under the Shade of a Tree I Sat and Wept, I love the Market Theatre.  For 10 performances only. Get your tickets now!  There are certain spaces that do not merely host performance—they hold memory. The Market Theatre is one such place. You do not simply enter it; you step into a living archive of South Africa’s artistic resistance, a space where stories have always carried the weight of truth. And in Under the Shade of a Tree I Sat and Wept , that truth is not revisited gently—it is ruptured, reassembled, and forced into the present tense. This is not a conventional play. It is theatre about theatre. A self-aware, shape-shifting work that refuses the safety of illusion. At one moment, you are submerged in the harrowing testimonies reminiscent of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission—stories steeped in brutality, injustice, and the unbearable intimacy of violence. T...

BULLY

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Bully: Reverence for Ye, or The Art of Loving a Villain There is no clean way to love Kanye West anymore. There is no neutral position, no safe distance, no polite cultural posture that allows you to consume the music without also inheriting the chaos that trails behind it like smoke from a burning cathedral. To press play on Bully is to knowingly enter a contradiction — to nod your head to brilliance while your conscience shifts uncomfortably in the background. And yet… the music plays. And it is undeniable. I. The Return of the Architect Bully does not feel like a reinvention. It feels like a convergence. Kanye is not searching here — he is assembling. This is not the frantic futurism of Yeezus , nor the maximalist confession of My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy . This is synthesis. A man pulling from every era of himself — the soul-sampling disciple, the Auto-Tuned romantic, the industrial provocateur, the gospel convert, the digital warlord — and compressing them into...

Death Proof

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Death Proof: Tarantino’s Ode to the Women Who Survive Quentin Tarantino’s Death Proof is often treated as the forgotten half of the Grindhouse experiment. Overshadowed by its companion film and misunderstood by audiences expecting constant carnage, it stands instead as one of Tarantino’s most slyly constructed works. Beneath the long barroom conversations, beneath the retro scratches and reel burns, beneath the fetishistic attention to chrome bumpers and spinning tires, lies a simple but radical idea: the slasher film turned inside out. At first glance, Death Proof appears to be a love letter to exploitation cinema — the cheap, lurid, midnight movies that once populated American grindhouse theaters. The grainy film stock, the missing reels, the outrageous premise of a killer with a "death proof" car — everything screams homage. But Tarantino is never content with mere imitation. Like a DJ sampling forgotten vinyl, he loops the past and then scratches it until s...

Illmatic

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Concrete Scripture — Nas’s Illmatic There are albums that dominate charts, albums that redirect trends, and then there are works that transcend format altogether — records that feel like testimony preserved in sound. Illmatic belongs to that rare lineage. It does not merely document a time or a place; it crystallizes consciousness itself. Released into a mid‑1990s hip‑hop landscape brimming with regional identity, lyrical competition, and sonic evolution, it arrived not as noise in the conversation but as its quiet center — a record whose precision, brevity, and poetic clarity made it foundational scripture. To engage it properly is to engage it specifically. Its greatness lives in detail — in the songs themselves — each one sculpted with care by a consortium of producers whose fingerprints shaped the golden age: DJ Premier, Pete Rock, Large Professor, Q‑Tip, L.E.S. They did not merely provide beats; they built terrain for a young narrator to map existence with startling c...