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Ahoy, party pirates! Mi Casa’s Friendship Cruise returns to rock the high seas – bigger, bolder, and boozier than ever

Ahoy, party pirates! Mi Casa’s Friendship Cruise returns to rock the high seas – bigger, bolder, and boozier than ever

BUCKLE up, vibe tribe: after selling out faster than free tequila at a beach braai, Mi Casa's Friendship Cruise by Heart FM is back for 2026, docking in the Atlantic from April 14–17 aboard the swanky MSC Opera. Think three nights of non-stop musical mayhem, gut-busting laughs, and friendships forged in saltwater and soulful beats – because who needs therapy when you've got DJs and deck parties? Curated by South Africa's slickest trio, Mi Casa (you know, the ones who make house music sound like a warm hug from your ex), this year's floating fiesta cranks the dial to 11.…
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Dance scenes in South African rock art: a closer look at ritual, music and movement

Dance scenes in South African rock art: a closer look at ritual, music and movement

ROCK art is widespread across southern Africa and includes a wide range of depictions such as human figures, animals, dots, handprints, and other painted or engraved imagery on rock surfaces. The rock art tradition of paintings was made by San hunter-gatherers over thousands of years. The first dance scenes in southern African rock art were documented 100 years ago. But there’s been some confusion as to whether certain scenes could indeed be interpreted as a dance. Dance can be simply defined as intentional and organised bodily movement. It also functions as an expression of mood and a form of nonverbal…
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New film captures fatherhood in 1993 Nigeria

New film captures fatherhood in 1993 Nigeria

THE film opens in rural Nigeria, where two young brothers, Akin and Remi, fill the quiet with childhood play and small quarrels. Their relationship is intimate but shaped by absence. Both boys speak of their father, Folarin, with admiration that borders on reverence, even though he is rarely home. Folarin works in the city, a man whose presence is imagined as much as experienced, the provider somewhere beyond their everyday world. That early calm setting sets up the contrast that defines My Father’s Shadow, the private tenderness of family life against the coming urban chaos of Lagos in 1993. It…
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History with a human face and voice: how museum theatre gets kids to care about the past

History with a human face and voice: how museum theatre gets kids to care about the past

THE facts of history are important, but try telling that to a classroom full of bored youngsters. One way to liven up the subject is to show that real people lived through historical events. Drama academic Stephanie Jenkins argues that learning becomes fun when learners care about what they are asked to remember. And one way to encourage caring is to perform the stories of the past, using museums as theatre spaces. Here she explains the idea, using an example from her work in South Africa – where the past is painful but shapes current social issues and future citizens.…
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One Voice, One Dream, One Journey – and he’s inviting you along

One Voice, One Dream, One Journey – and he’s inviting you along

PICTURE this: You're stopped at a traffic light in Germiston, South Africa. The engine idles. Your mind wanders. Then suddenly - a voice cuts through the noise. Not through speakers, not through a screen, but raw, real, and right there in front of your windshield. That's where Kutlwano Kenneth Yika has been building his dream. Not in a studio. Not on a stage with perfect lighting. But on street corners, at intersections, in public spaces across South Africa - one song, one stranger, one moment at a time. For years, the 27-year-old musician has been South Africa's best-kept secret, travelling…
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Ebo Taylor: The guitarist who painted Ghana’s sound in gold

Ebo Taylor: The guitarist who painted Ghana’s sound in gold

EBO Taylor didn't just play music—he conjured it from the red earth of Cape Coast and sent it spinning across continents, a hypnotic fusion of palm wine guitar, jazz sophistication, and funk's irresistible pulse. The legendary Ghanaian guitarist, composer, and bandleader who spent six decades weaving the soul of his nation into every note has died at 90, leaving behind a sonic tapestry as rich and complex as Ghana itself. Born Deroy Taylor in 1936, he emerged during Ghana's cultural awakening, when highlife music floated through colonial dance halls, and independence hung electric in the air. By the late 1950s…
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South African novelist Lauretta Ngcobo is the subject of a tender and urgent new film

South African novelist Lauretta Ngcobo is the subject of a tender and urgent new film

LAURETTA Ngcobo, who passed away in 2015, left a singular and impactful literary legacy in South Africa. Even in a life of exile and resistance to apartheid and white minority rule in the country. As a novelist, feminist thinker and freedom fighter, her intellectual contributions were foundational. Ngcobo’s work often deals with the realities of black women facing both political and social oppression. While And They Didn’t Die (1990) is considered to be her masterpiece, her first novel, Cross of Gold, was published in 1981. Awards and recognition came relatively late in her career. In a new documentary film, And…
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Africa’s Grammy Triumph: Tyla’s gold, Fela’s immortal crown – a continent’s roar in 2026

Africa’s Grammy Triumph: Tyla’s gold, Fela’s immortal crown – a continent’s roar in 2026

THE Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles thrummed like a Jozi tavern on match day as the 2026 Grammy Awards unfolded on February 1, a night where Africa's sonic revolution claimed its throne with unprecedented force. Amid global giants like Bad Bunny, Lady Gaga, Kendrick Lamar, Lola Young, and Olivia Dean dominating headlines, the continent etched indelible history: South Africa's Tyla snatched Best African Music Performance for her electrifying "PUSH 2 START," while Nigeria's Afrobeat pioneer Fela Anikulapo Kuti became the first African artist ever to receive the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award - a posthumous coronation nearly three decades after his…
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Rafiki unbanned on appeal: why it’s an important moment for African film

Rafiki unbanned on appeal: why it’s an important moment for African film

THE film Rafiki is a charming love story that plays out in urban Kenya. It follows two teenage girls whose close friendship slowly turns into first love. Directed by rising filmmaker Wanuri Kahiu, it was celebrated as groundbreaking by critics and at festivals when it was released in 2018. But back home in Kenya, where homosexuality is criminal, the film was banned. On 23 January 2026, after a lengthy legal campaign by the filmmaker, the Kenyan Court of Appeals unbanned Rafiki for public screening in that country. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Wanuri (@wanuri) In 2018,…
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Rumba Royale’s actors praise the new Congolese film

Rumba Royale’s actors praise the new Congolese film

THE melodious vibes of rumba waft through the streets of Brazzaville and Kinshasa, an infectious fusion of central African rhythms and Spanish folk music. The distinct style emerged in the late 19th century and had its heyday in the late 1940s through the early 1980s. Designated in 2021 by the UN as an intangible cultural heritage of the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Republic of Congo, rumba is the backdrop and soundtrack for the film, Rumba Royale, which stars Congolese pop music star Fally Ipupa. Rumba Royale is now one of the most talked-about Congolese films on the international…
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