The Beat That Changed the World
More than Zappa’s Joe’s Garage. More than Centerfield. More than the Indiana Jones Theme Song. More than AC/DC’s Thunderstruck. More than even Glen Miller’s In the Mood. If I ever got the once in a lifetime chance to request a single song for Phish to cover, there currently exists one song that I would rather hear over any other song. It’s called Indoda Yejazi Elimnyama by Amaswazi Emvelo and comes from a ridiculously good recording called The Indestructible Beat of Soweto, Vol. 1.

I suspect a lot of folks probably already know the story of the Indestructible Beat, but it’s essentially a collection of South African mbaqanga music compiled by a pair of visionary ex-pats named Trevor Herman and Jumbo Van Renan in 1985.
Within seconds of listening to any number of its songs, the aircraft carrier-wide influence of this music becomes painstakingly obvious. With Graceland released just one subsequent year later, Paul Simon typically takes credit as the most famous alum of the School of the Beat, but other graduates who borrow influence from this album include the heavyweight likes of David Byrne and Peter Gabriel. More recently, the wildly popular upstart Vampire Weekend even referred to their own sound as “Upper West Side Soweto.”
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READ ON for more on this incredible compilation…
According to a few different Internet sources, Paul Simon actually spent time in Johannesburg during 1985, so odds are the Indestructible Beat of Soweto played widely throughout South African clubs and boomboxes during his stay and the parallels of the this music perambulate all eleven songs of Graceland.
The music of the Indestructible Beat of Soweto comes from the Soweto region of Johannesburg, an acronym which translates to “southwestern towns.” The Soweto region historically tended to be synonymous with apartheid, the uprising there-against and poverty within the region. The Soweto region became its own municipality in 1983.

Given the historical significance, difficult social conditions, and impassioned people of Soweto, it comes as no surprise that the music stemming from this region resonates with vibrant energy and raw emotion. The music is perhaps more about a cultural identity for the region and its people than it is pure musical expression.
The sound on the Indestructible Beat acts like a syringe of serotonin shot straight to the brain. Musically, this is not your run-of-the-mill plodding Putomayo world music sampler available for sale at your nearest Coffee Bean, but rather an inspiring combination of songs that actually inflicts happiness. In fact, this might be the catchiest music in the world. Resistance is futile.
The sound varies fairly widely from track to track, but the universal characteristics of this mbaqanga music seem to be heavy doses of vocal harmonies (some beautiful African singing, others just bizarre deep squawks and sound effects), funky attacks on basic major key song structures, generous portions of rhythm via hand drums and voice beats, and any number of instrumental melodies playing in harmony, often repetitively. The collection blends fluidly into a distinct work.
While we talked about the influence this music had on other genres, within this music we hear familiar borrowings from reggae, calypso, bluegrass, pop music, and hip hop as well. Overall, the music comes across very urban and very stylish, not at all tribal or unsophisticated like much so-called “world” music.
The famed longtime music critic for the Village Voice, Robert Christgau, went as far as to call the Indestructible Beat of Soweto the most important record of the 1980s and gave the album an A+ rating. While this may sound like strong hyperbole at first glance, if you think about the impact of an album like Graceland flowing across generations to new music like Vampire Weekend, it becomes evident that this album perhaps really does maintain an Indestructible (and highly addictive) Beat; a beat that will undoubtedly penetrate popular music for generations and beyond.
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November 7th, 2009 at 2:14 pm
[...] READ ON for more on this incredible compilation… [...]
November 5th, 2009 at 7:48 pm
I really dig this music. Thanks for highlighting it and a cool article as well.
November 5th, 2009 at 6:28 pm
I don’t know, seems like it would make for a funky jam and funny vocals.
November 5th, 2009 at 6:03 pm
Good music but why would you want Phish to cover this? They would crap all over it (and I love Phish)
November 5th, 2009 at 5:35 pm
I didn’t know anybody else liked this. I’ve owned the vinyl for years.