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The song also gained traction due to a viral dance challenge. The video, published on TikTok, featured the Ama Quality Boys, a dance group, dancing to a completely different Amapiano song, until an unknown user put the "Tshwala Bam" audio onto that video and the song and dance became viral. The video now has over 77,000 likes as of July 2024. [3]
The video includes a new verse by Skillibeng who was filmed separately in Kingston, Jamaica. [48] Nabil worked with the production company Happy Place, as well as South African and Jamaican professionals for the shoot. [49] The music video was released on 20 May 2024. [20]
When the song went viral as a TikTok challenge with fans pouring palm oil and hard liquor, Joeboy said, "I was very, very intentional: 'That's why I sip'—not drink, or gulp, or pour." He clarified that the song is "a feel-good song" for finding a peaceful escape from life's challenges, inspired by a calm night in Ghana with a glass of white ...
A music video for the song was released on 21 June 2024. The video, directed by Director K, features the two artists in distinct settings, with Rema perched on an airplane flap and Shallipopi posing alongside a car. [10] [11] The visuals also incorporate elements of Benin culture, including the prominent display of the Benin Ancestral Bronzes.
"Water" is a song by South African singer Tyla from her debut studio album, Tyla (2024). It was released on 28 July 2023 by Fax and Epic Records as the album's lead single. An amapiano song with elements of pop, R&B and Afrobeats, it sees Tyla expressing a desire for a passionate, intimate tryst.
Melanie Wilking. As ever, Netflix is keeping true crime fans well fed this spring, and one of the streaming platform's most intriguing new documentaries is Dancing for the Devil: The 7M TikTok ...
Amapiano is a subgenre of kwaito and house music from South Africa that became popular in and around the mid-2010s. It is a hybrid of deep house, gqom, jazz, soul and lounge music characterized by synths and wide, percussive basslines. The word "amapiano" derives from the IsiZulu word for "pianos".
Many complimented Tyla's sultry R&B vocals over the amapiano track and Kooldrink's EDM production. [5] [12] "Getting Late" emerged as a success after a dance challenge on TikTok, started by Tyla in 2021 received heavy attention with videos racking up over 10.8 million likes on the platform by May 2021. [13] Tyla told Headliner Magazine in 2021: [7]