What do you love most about SA women?
I love how they are comfortable being themselves. I love how they are rich in blackness, sisterhood and African-ness; it’s just powerful. It feels warm and strong – I can appreciate it. They remind me of the best part about my family. My grandmother, my sister, my mom … they embody the same energy, and you can feel it. There’s that confidence about themselves that I love.
Why do you think South African women deserve to be celebrated?
I believe all women need to be celebrated because this is where we all originated, this is our homeland, from the beginning of who we are. I don’t see why we shouldn’t celebrate the women in SA. I don’t see why we shouldn’t hold them up and keep cheering them on. To be there, to apologise where we need to, but to mainly heal and love them.
How do SA women inspire your music?
Their response to some of my songs, like Her Heart, really fuels my writing process. When you see the kind of impact a song has on a woman in her home country, it pushes you to revisit that emotion – to create something with the same depth. It makes you more intentional about what you write and how you want them to feel.
How did your two collaborations with Zonke come about?
I met Zonke in 2009. We always talked about working together, but never got the chance to make it happen. After all those years, it’s only now in 2025 that we have finally made it into the studio to work on two songs.
But honestly, I don’t think it would’ve been the same songs or the same energy back then. The studio session was comfortable. We were both excited, and the respect we have for each other as artists – especially considering what she’s accomplished here – is real.
She’s even heading back to America. To be part of her legacy, and for her to be part of mine, means a lot to both of us—on both sides, in the States and Africa.