
“We do amapiano but it’s never original. So I thought I’d take the time to come here to learn something original,” he said at the studio.
Amapiano is its own language, said the professional dancer who also uses social media to promote his work. “Whether you speak Zulu, Bemba, Nyanja, English… it all connects, no matter where you’re from.”
This spirit of inclusiveness comes to life on social media, where people of all ages, backgrounds and cultures unite in dance challenges, like the one for “Tshwala Bami” on TikTok that was taken up by US…