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Chapter 7 - Re-Cover: Afrikaans Rock, Apartheid's Children and the Work of the Cover

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 April 2018

Aidan Erasmus
Affiliation:
currently a doctoral candidate in the Department of History and an Early Career Fellow at the DST-NRF Flagship for Critical Thought in African Humanities at the Centre for Humanities Research, University of the Western Cape
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Summary

Ek's ‘n agtergeblewende

op die grasvelde van my kinderdae

(Fokofpolisiekar, ‘Kyk noord’)

In an eight-part series of short videos released on their website chronicling the recording of their latest album, Bloed, sweet en trane, the lead vocalist, Francois van Coke, from the Afrikaans rock band Van Coke Kartel (VCK) explained what he deemed was the inspiration for the lyrics on the album:

I think it's like … that obviously comes across in the lyrics is like just, where life is at the moment. I think that's probably my main goal with the lyrics on this album is just to write about normal, everyday things … like what I'm experiencing … Ja, I think Bloed, sweet en trane is a collection of songs about a new chapter for me and the band, and the realisation that things like love and playing music with others and music makes you part of … something, even if you're very insignificant in the greater scheme of things (Eendag op ‘n slag).

VCK emerged after the break-up of the Afrikaans punk-rock outfit Fokofpolisiekar. Fokofpolisiekar's 2003 EP, entitled As jy met vuur speel sal jy brand, caused an uproar in conservative Afrikaans-speaking communities because of songs, such as ‘Hemel op die platteland’, which openly expressed an antireligious sentiment, so distancing the band from a fundamental tenet of Afrikaner nationalism (see Badprop; De Olim; Herholdt; Nel). Given the ways in which their music challenges the subject position of white South Africans in particular – specifically, Afrikaans-speaking white youth – after the democratic transition of 1994, the group has also been linked with a certain articulation of what it means to be white in a postapartheid South Africa constituted against the racialised apartheid past. Fokofpolisiekar, their music and their lyrics have been seen as marking an important moment in this shift in this set of debates, and their ‘contribution to the South African music scene with their questioning of white patriarchal South African values as well as their visceral and poetic use of the Afrikaans language, paved the way for a fresh alternative movement within South African music’ (Smit 2). Fokofpolisiekar has been seen by Sonja Smit as a direct antecedent of both the hip hop artist Jack Parow and the debate around whiteness in post-1994 South Africa.

Type
Chapter
Information
Remains of the Social
Desiring the Postapartheid
, pp. 172 - 194
Publisher: Wits University Press
Print publication year: 2017

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