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Okayafrica Exclusive: LV ft. Okmalumkookat 'Push It' + Interview

Lenny Kravitz, Grace Jones, Lauryn Hill, Lion Babe, Thundercat, SZA & More Rock The Afropunk Festival 2015 in Brooklyn, NY.LV-okmalumkoolkat-push-it-interview-mp3-stream

London production trio LV have been dropping a steady stream of SA-tinged, multi-layered gems on a number of UK underground labels, most notably electronic elite house Hyperdub. The producers are currently prepping the release of their sophomore full-length Sebenza, which features South Africa's Okmalumkoolkat (of Dirty Paraffin), Spoek Mathambo and Ruffest. Download the unreleased track "Push It ft. Okmalumkoolkat"  and read Okayafrica's interview with LV below. Sebenza LP is out September 4 via Hyperdub.

Tell us about your upcoming record Sebenza, you got a bunch of South African features on it.

Yes we do. Though it's not like we went out to find South African features or anything, this album is a result of ongoing collaborations with Spoek Mathambo, Okmalumkoolkat and Ruffest. It started with [group member] Gervase's trips back to South Africa where he met Spoek and Okmalumkoolkat and we've been making tunes with them since. The Ruffest guys came a bit little later after he met them at a gig in Cape Town on a later trip. It came to a point where we felt we had a collection of tunes that worked well together and Kode9 helped us to get them into shape and form the album. Then Manuel Zambrano made some amazing artwork to go with it and that's the album, Sebenza.

Why do you think your beats pair so well with SA rhyming? What are some of your influences when crafting them?

We've always liked making music with vocals, and obviously you try to make what you do compliment the vocalist, but it's not an exact science. Smiso, Spoek and the Ruffest guys all have their own distinctive ways and we love what they do, so there was definitely a desire to make them a focus of the music. We all have quite different tastes and influences but then obviously we crossover on some things too. Some of the SA music we heard over this album-making period definitely formed a part of those influences, but then there were also indirect links to other music. Spoek pretty-much tuned us into juke ages ago and Smiso is into all this mad Durban and Joburg music but he's also big on US rap and other stuff.

>>>Download "Push It" + Read the Full Q&A (via Okayafrica)