Review: Samthing Soweto’s “Touch is a Move (Good Morning)”
‘Touch Is A Move (Good Morning)’ is a portrait of Soweto journeying in perpetual motion, but always finding his way back to where he belongs.
‘Touch Is A Move (Good Morning)’ is a portrait of Soweto journeying in perpetual motion, but always finding his way back to where he belongs.
From his beginnings with the a capella outfit The Soil, and a dalliance with the off-kilter band The Fridge, Samthing Soweto has drawn from gumba fire, poetry, Alt-Jazz and Folk, to soundtrack the realities of our contemporary times. These aural strands have contributed to a catalogue that weaves sensation and observation together in ways that are both delicate and pronounced. Like his diverse palette, Samthing Soweto’s strong suit is his ability to communicate from a range of vantage points.
One such instance is his trope-flipping lyricism on Sun-El Musician’s “Akanamali,” a breakout hit that brought him mainstream success. Offering a more upbeat version of the artist without sacrificing his propensity for aligning narrative with beguiling harmony, this fusion of Amapiano, Afropop, and R&B was maintained on his debut release, ‘Isphithithi.’ This project housed standout songs like the Makhafula Vilakazi-featuring “Omama Bomthandazo,” “AmaDM,” and “Akulaleki,” crafted alongside ‘piano pioneers, Kabza De Small and DJ Maphorisa.
Shaking up dancefloors, the streets, and the charts was somewhat of a departure for Samthing Soweto as his music often resisted classification and occupied the peripheries, as EPs ‘This N That Without Tempo’ and ‘Eb’suku’ do. It’s in this context that this second LP exists, with Samthing Soweto once more eschewing the allure of a template by side-stepping the format employed on ‘Isphithithi.’
2025’s ‘Touch Is A Move (Good Morning)’ sees a musical shift as Samthing Soweto soulfully wades across more measured compositions helmed by producers like J Smash, Christer, and John Lundun. There are touches of Afropop, Jazz, Amapiano, Kwaito, and Hip-Hop here, in a signature defiance of the conventions of genre. Offering navigations of the personal, familial, and communal, Samthing Soweto addresses romance, responsibility, and self-determination. Rooted in the multi-faceted artist’s penchant for storytelling, this is a stirring collection of love letters to music, family, and his wider environment.
What sets this project apart is its attention to the temporal, as Soweto (the township) functions as the backdrop for a typical day in the life of a young Samkelo Lelethu Mdolomba. While the past is evoked to draw out lessons of life and love, Samthing acts as our tour guide through the specific feelings and experiences informed by his locale. In some ways, this is the autobiographical wrapped in airy melody and augmented by theatrical interludes that recount regular domestic interactions.
This invitation for us to eavesdrop on Soweto the man and be flies on the wall of Soweto the place, imbues the album with a keen interactivity. It also speaks to the sense of community espoused in the ‘(Good Morning)’ portion of the album title. As much as the rituals of youth shaped Samthing Soweto as a person, this ceremonial greeting of his online audience helped formulate this cinematic sophomore release. More than just addressing fans, these morning salutations maintained our collective relationship with Soweto, and extended to teased snippets that gauged the preferences of listeners. This appreciation for connection, at least in part, contributed to the iterative process that characterised a project five years in the making since his groundbreaking debut.
Although ‘Isphithithi’ garnered both critical and audience acclaim, a subsequent retreat following 2020’s Danko! EP left a Samthing Soweto-shaped void across the African music ecosystem. It is to this withdrawal into his own spaces, however, that we owe gratitude for ‘Touch Is A Move (Good Morning).’ His hiatus would coincide with intimate reflections on the different forms that love takes, from the parental and cultural to the nourishing and spiritual. These ruminations not only anchor this treatise but also serve as an embodiment of Samthing Soweto’s ethos. Because ‘Touch Is A Move’ is the result of several phases of editing, this is the manifesto of a 37-year-old singer-songwriter who’s had to labour in love. So while we witness young Samkelo’s growth across a symbolic Soweto day, his personal development is matched by this album’s occupation with cultivation.
Every touch being a move speaks precisely to this act of learning, re-learning, and unlearning; not just about oneself and one’s loved ones, but also about one’s surroundings and craft. If there are any questions threaded through ‘Touch Is A Move,’ they are what, where, and who we look towards to gauge our evolution. Across the album’s 17 tracks, Samthing points to music, Soweto, and people like uGogo, uMama, bhut’ Lungisa, sis’ Amina, and sis’ BhiBhi as his touchpoints. These characters are central to interludes whose cross-generational interactions mimic the movement of pieces across a board game. They also inform the singer’s broad artistic palette, an amalgam of Gospel, Kwaito, R&B, Jazz, spoken word, and Amapiano, that itself serves as an avatar for the cosmopolitanism of Soweto township. It’s within these microcosms that the artist deftly posits community as the source of ritual, value adoption, and musical inclination.
The stories that follow weave between the nostalgic and the now, with Samthing Soweto’s thoughts and feelings seemingly dictated by the time of day. There’s the perspective of a new father on “Amagents,” both a commentary on gender dynamics and a warning to a daughter about the downside of romantic relations. That protective element also shines through on “Deda,” itself a plea for a loved one’s safe return home. The appreciation of culture on “Indandatho,” which posits lobola (bride price) as a celebration of love and tradition, is juxtaposed against more contemporary cultural iconography, with the BMW Gusheshe taking centre stage on the flirtatious, Blxckie-assisted “325.” The vulnerability expressed on the album is palpable on songs like “Ngicela Sithandane” and “Yebo (Ngiyazifela),” which explore a desire to be cared for and the insecurities that can sprout during a relationship.
It’s the spirituality of album closer “Goodnight” that best encapsulates the play between interiority and externality on ‘Touch Is A Move.’ This journey may be soundtracked by Samthing Soweto, but it is taken in unison with a maturing Samkelo. As he ponders a day flush with the rich experiences of his family life and the township, it’s uGogo who summons the night with prayer. Despite making moves out in the world, it’s in his home, the blessings of his kinfolk, and the bosom of God that he seeks refuge. Ultimately, ‘Touch Is A Move (Good Morning)’ is a portrait of Samthing Soweto journeying in perpetual motion, but always finding his way back to where he belongs.
Listen to ‘Touch Is A Move (Good Morning)’ here.