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The not-even-trying-to-be-subtle "Cookie Thumper," the first track leaked from Donker Mag, fares better, mostly on the strength of Hi-Tek's garish carnival-house beat, and Du Toit's rapid-fire rhymes, spit in a hodgepodge of English and her native Afrikaans. "Pitbull Terrier," for instance, stumbles as a stand-alone song it sounds woefully dated, with Jones' barking bravado less junkyard dog and more paper tiger. But while Die Antwoord's visual game is strong, it's hard to sometimes extricate the music from its visual accompaniment, often to the detriment of the songs. The mystery may have worn off, but the exaggeration remains - as does the shock value, which isn't hollow, often opting for biting social commentary. "It's not a persona, it's an extension of myself, an exaggerated version of myself." "I'm just engaging my inner zef, which everybody has," he told South Africa's Times in 2010, referring to the South African redneck-cum-hood rich counter-culture movement. Jones, who's been cranking out satirical hip-hop in South Africa since the mid-'90s, is something of a South African Kool Keith before they were Die Antwoord, Jones and Du Toit performed as The Constructus Corporation, creators of a three-hour, book-accompanied album satirizing consumerism and corporate power.īut satire, Jones has long argued, isn't the point of Die Antwoord. (The third crew member is Justin De Nobrega, aka DJ Hi-Tek.) And what seemed like overnight success had been decades in the making. Their real names have been revealed: Ninja was born Watkin Tudor Jones Yo-Landi, Anri Du Toit.
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(Think: A mix between Aphex Twin's creepier moments and Da Ali G Show.) The music - aggressive dance beats laced with tongue-rolling hip-hop flow and manic pixie trills - always seemed secondary, serving only as a soundtrack to the Die Antwoord's irony-soaked caricature of the South African counter-culture movement zef, once described in The New York Times as "the nasty, freaky, gleefully trashy underbelly of post-apartheid white South African culture." Not too long after the group burst forth from Cape Town, Pitchfork ran a profile with the probing headline "Who the Hell Are Die Antwoord?"įour years later, much of the mystery has worn off, as the band gets set to roll into Amos' Southend on June 12 (NOTE: This show has been postponed). That's been Die Antwoord's bewildering modus operandi since taking the Internet by storm with the visually visceral "Enter the Ninja" in 2010. It's utterly confusing to the sensibilities, simultaneously tickling and titillating and nauseating. Ninja's female counterpart Yo-Landi is creepy and spectral in stark white body paint and blacked-out eyes she flies around doing martial arts, and after Ninja's hit by a bus, spits in his mouth to revive him. Ninja, Die Antwoord's male emcee, wears a remarkably lifelike pitbull mask and a garishly exaggerated spiked collar he races around on all fours, alternately mauling and humping people. You saw them and remembered them for their sometimes hilarious, sometimes haunting videos.Ĭonsider the video for "Pitbull Terrier," the latest single from the South African rave-rap trio's early June release Donker Mag. Chances are you didn't hear Die Antwoord the first time you thought you heard them.