Bittereinder
Bittereinder performing live at Oppikoppi Festival, South Africa, August 2011
Bittereinder performing live at Oppikoppi Festival, South Africa, August 2011
Background information
OriginPretoria, South Africa
GenresHip hop, Rap, electro, Afrikaans rap
Years active2009–present
LabelsRhythm Records
MembersJaco van der Merwe
Peach van Pletzen
Louis Minnaar
Websitehttp://www.bittereinder.com/

Bittereinder is a three-man Afrikaans rap/electro band from Pretoria, South Africa. The band consists of Jaco van der Merwe (acclaimed lyricist and rapper), Peach van Pletzen (award-winning musician, engineer and producer) and Louis Minnaar (award-winning visual artist, director, VJ and musical producer).

Bittereinder have released two albums; 'n Ware Verhaal (A True Story, 2010) and Die Dinkdansmasjien (The Think-Dance-Machine, 2012)

History edit

2009–2010 edit

Bittereinder formed early in 2009, and immediately began production on their debut album, titled ‘n Ware Verhaal (A True Story). The album took almost 2 years to complete, and in October 2010 ‘n Ware Verhaal was released through Rhythm Records, featuring collaborations with Jack Parow, Tim Beumers (Dutch rapper from Rotterdam), Tumi Molekane (Tumi & the Volume), Inge Beckmann (Lark/Beast), Richard Brokensha (ISO/kidofdoom) and Sev Statik (Deepspace 5, from New York).

2011–2012 edit

Following a highly anticipated tour of South Africa starting with seven cities in a month, Bittereinder crowned the excellent reception of their debut album by winning the SAMA (South African Music Award) for “Best Afrikaans Alternative Album of 2011”. The album and the first video were finalists in the 2011 Tempo Awards, and Bittereinder were also nominated for three 2012 MK Awards, in the categories “Best Group”, “Best Newcomer” & “Best Dance”. The band toured the Netherlands for the first time in August 2011, playing at Lowlands Festival and legendary Amsterdam club Paradiso.

2012–present edit

In 2012 Bittereinder released their second album DIE DINKDANSMASJIEN. The album was nominated for a 2013 SAMA for "Best Alternative Album" (the only Afrikaans album nominated in this category), a 2013 Tempo Award for "Beste Alternatiewe Album" and a 2014 MK Award for "Best Album". The first single from the album, "KWAAD NAAS", which features iconic indie frontman Shane Durrant (from Desmond & the Tutus) reached number 3 on 5FM's Top 100 Chart, and was also voted as one of 5FM's top 100 songs of 2013. The video for KWAAD NAAS was nominated for a 2014 MK Award for "Best Video". In 2013 Bittereinder received the Best Local Band award in the Rekord Awards. Bittereinder have established their reputation as one of South Africa's most striking and powerful live acts, with MK Award nominations for "Best Live" in 2013 and 2014. In April 2014 Bittereinder began work on their third full-length album, due August 2014.[1]

Discography edit

Studio albums edit

  • 'n Ware Verhaal (2010)
  • Die Dinkdansmasjien (2012)

Singles edit

  • Ware Verhaal (2010)
  • A Tale of Three Cities (2010)
  • Slechte Mensen (2010)
  • Almanak (2011)
  • Solidariteit (2011)
  • Die Dinkdansmasjien (2013)
  • Kwaad Naas (2013)
  • Kulkuns (2014)
  • Die Slagting (2014)
  • Slegte Mense (2014 remix) (2014)

Touring, Significant Performances and Media edit

Shows edit

Bittereinder have played and headlined festivals in South Africa, The Netherlands, Mozambique and Namibia, including Oppikoppi, Lowlands, KKNK, Aardklop, Innibos, STRAB, Hart van Windhoek, Synergy (JHB & CT), Ramfest (JHB & CT), TUKS Spring Day, Smoking Dragon Festival, Gariep Festival, TUKS Rag, PUK Jool and The Campus Invasion Tour.

Collaborations edit

Bittereinder has collaborated on stage with Dawid Kramer, Koos Kombuis, Inge Beckmann, Jack Parow, Kongos, Tumi Molekane, Hano de Jongh (the Narrow), Richard Brokensha (ISO), HemelBesem, iconic bassist Carlo Mombelli, Reason, Schalk Joubert, Albert Frost and Shane Durrant (Desmond & the Tutus) amongst others.

2012-Present edit

In June 2013 Bittereinder toured the Netherlands for the 2nd time, this time with Van Coke Kartel and special guest Jack Parow on a tour called “Afrikaans Verower Harte”, including the “Festival Voor Het Afrikaans” at Melkweg, Amsterdam. In August 2013 Bittereinder featured prominently on a CNN show called “Inside Africa”, in an episode about cultural diversity in South Africa, specifically in the capital city, Pretoria. The episode featured clips from many of Bittereinder’s live shows, music videos, and an in-depth interview with Jaco about growing up as an Afrikaner in the 1990s.

Bittereinder have also appeared and performed live on e-TV’s hip hop show “Shiz Niz”, SABC 2’s Afrikaans soapie “7de Laan”, 5FM’s “live @ 5”, Kyknet’s “Kwêla”, Kyknet’s “Hoor-Hoor!”, Kyknet’s “Fiesta”, numerous times on MK’s live show “Studio 1”, featured in a collaboration with a cappella group The Soil on SABC 2’s music fusion show “Jam Sandwich”, recorded a collaboration with The Plastics & Jon Savage for 5FM’s Mashlab in 2013, as well as being awarded the honour of being the Opening Act at the 2012 Pendoring Awards in Cape Town, and performing in the Pendoring Awards show again in 2013.

Bittereinder also performed at the 2013 Tempo Awards. Jaco hosted the 2013 MK Awards in March (with Bouwer Bosch), and Bittereinder opened the award show as well as being the “house band” during the live broadcast of the award ceremony from the South African State Theatre.

Band members edit

  • Jaco van der Merwe - lyricist, lead vocals (2009–present)
  • Peach van Pletzen - producer, vocalist, mixer (2009–present)
  • Louis Minnaar - beatmaker, visual artist, VJ, vocalist (2009–present)

Critical Reception edit

“In 2012, Bittereinder released a record that was one of the year's best, yielding something thrilling with each listen and making good on the promise of the group's debut, 'n Ware Verhaal (2010).”[2] - Diane Coetzer, Rolling Stone.

“Bittereinder is the next big thing. Jaco/Bittereinder could be to hip-hop what Hunter/Fokofpolisiekar was to rock in South Africa…a refreshingly real and honest Afrikaans voice, true poetry.” Liam Lynch, Obrigado.

“Bittereinder is the real deal. This is one Afrikaans hip-hop crew you need to hear.” Lloyd Gedye, Mail & Guardian.[3]

“Their 2009 debut album ‘n Ware Verhaal (“a true story”) is full of interesting, delightfully bizarre turns, from hard 8bit spit sessions to light upbright bass solos to singing harmonies. The only consistency? Every word is in Afrikaans.” Halley Bondy – MTV Iggy, Mar 2012[4]

"It's a collection of songs and lyrics that make you want to think and dance at the same time. Where Mr Parow and Die Antwoord are caricatures of themselves, Bittereinder simply are themselves... In a music industry where 90 percent of the Afrikaans music produced has the words “my bokkie,” “sokkie” or “brandewyn” and has the shit auto-tuned out of it, Bittereinder offer a refreshing and intelligent angle on the Afrikaans rap genre. Of course, this doesn't mean it can only be enjoyed by white Afrikaans boytjies... So if you want to both dink and dans, give this one a spin." - George van der Riet, Playboy SA Magazine.[5]

"Two years after the release of their debut album, Bittereinder has now undoubtedly produced the album of the year. Die Dinkdansmasjien delivers thought provoking material, otherworldly production and some remarkable collaborations making this album a piece of art you won't be able to fully grasp even after its tenth time on repeat." - Louise Pieterse, Zeplin Magazine.


Awards edit

Awards Won edit

Date Award Awarding Body
2013 Best Local Band Rekord
2011 Best Afrikaans Alternative Album SAMA

Award Nominations edit

Date Award Awarding Body
2014 Best Alternative Album SAMA
2014 Best Music Video MK Awards
2014 Best Live Act MK Awards
2014 Album of the Year MK Awards
2013 Best Live Act MK Awards
2012 Best Newcomer MK Awards
2012 Best Group MK Awards
2012 Best Dance MK Awards
2011 Beste Alternatiewe Musiekvideo Tempo Awards
2011 Beste Kopskuifalbum Tempo Awards

References edit

  1. ^ Louis Minnaar (20 October 2011). "bttereinder bio October 2011". Retrieved 20 October 2011.
  2. ^ Diane Coetzer (6 June 2013). "Bittereinder's Reconciliation With Afrikaans Culture". Retrieved 6 June 2013.
  3. ^ Lloyd Gedye (3 December 2013). "Press play -- hot music for the holidays -- South Africa". Retrieved 3 December 2013.
  4. ^ Halley Bondy (15 March 2012). "Bittereinder's Mad Afrikaans Hip Hop". Retrieved 15 March 2012.
  5. ^ George van der Riet (February 2013). "Die Dinkdansmasjien". Retrieved February 2013. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)

External links edit