b'trad. Xhosaarr. Buskaid MembersQongqothwane (The Click Song)Qongqothwane (The Click Song) is a traditional Xhosa song, sung at weddings to bring good fortune to the happy couple. It contains many click consonants which Westerners find difficult to articulate, which accounts for its alternative name, The Click Song. (In fact, the Xhosa language contains a total of 18 click consonants.) Qongqothwane literally means knock-knock beetle referring to a species of beetle which the Xhosa people believe bring good luck and rain. The great South African singer Miriam Makeba, herself of Xhosa origin, made this traditional song world famous through her many versions, and referred to it as a Xhosa song about a dreamy bride. Mafikizoloarr. Buskaid MembersEncoreKwela Kwela Kwela Kwela is a song by Mafikizolo, released in 2003, which featured the legendary South African trumpeter, the late Hugh Masekela. The words Kwela Kwela hark back to apartheid South Africa when the police would arrest any black person found without a dompass (the required document for any person of color who wished to be in certain areas of town. Failure to produce a dompass resulted in instant arrest). Kwela is in fact popular township music played by penny-whistlers who, through their playing, would alert people to the arrival of the police. By analogy, Kwela-kwela became the name given to the notorious pick-up police vans. Mafikizolo (Emlanjeni and Kwela Kwela) is a South African Afro-pop group. Their music has been described as kwaito-cum-marabi house music. It often deals with pertinent social issues such as women and child abuse, poverty, the importance of education, and the dangers of casual sex. Mafikizolo have performed all over Southern Africa and have a fan base all over the world. The group visits HIV/AIDS Care Centers and Youth Centers around the country and is heavily involved in community work and youth development.buskaid.org.za/ 21'