A night with MeccaMind begins the same way his tape Volume 2 does. People ululate with joy as they reunite, with hugs that scoop you off your feet, half-finished sentences and inside jokes blurted over the bumping bass that crawls through Gwigwi Mrwebi St — a welcomed soundtrack to accompany the lives we've lived since we last embraced.
“It’s a big year, Year of the Snake, we killing off them,” Sebaga interjects, half prophecy, half punchline. There’s an unspoken understanding here that the economy is unforgiving, its old promises expired early, so people have been cornered into following their dreams. Not out of romance, but necessity. When stability becomes a myth, belief becomes currency, allowing us to dream bigger.
Finding your own frequency doesn’t mean rejecting luxury, it means calling it in early. LV and Bottega become promises, Hennessy with no chaser to quiet the doubt, and a big blunt to seal the moment. The rest will come if you believe it's already yours.
Mecca and Sebs step into their respective verses with a rare kind of honesty, "maybe I’m a bit lustful, maybe I’m a bit toxic". These aren’t confessions for spectacle; they’re the type of truths you only arrive at after sitting with yourself long enough for ego to silence itself. It feels less like bravado and more like the self-audit that follows aspirational talk, when the shine has worn thin and what’s left is clarity.
The last time I had been with MeccaMind, we were with his Johannesburg crew and collaborators, setting up to host the Sound System Warfare Downtown Live Show — my first real introduction to the world he’d been quietly building. The night spilled over in true pirate radio fashion, with noise complaints arriving before we’d even found our footing.
Outside, the kind of conversations that only happen when the speakers are unplugged and the city is listening. Homies trade secrets and the myths of legends from the City of Gold and Windy City, only to be smacked sober by the reality of just how much these cities mirror one another. Both restless, both searching, both seeking survival through sound.
Black people have always shaped electronic music by sharing a pulse, transmitting culture across borders, long before algorithms and industry permission. The internet simply extended that reach with selectors abroad spinning his tracks in rooms he has yet to stand in. This was before many of us knew he’d soon be performing at Rocking the Daisies. Proof, in retrospect, that MeccaMind was already bigger than the moment, “My Nigga Bigger Than Grande”.
The night still stretches its limbs around 00:21. People begin making their way to the bar, easing into the space with that familiar hesitance of bodies still shy to dance, still negotiating the room. Kaddy is on the decks, holding things steady, his set with bright and melodic house music that feels like an invitation rather than a command. Ten minutes later, the room begins to shift. More women arrive in back-revealing tops, moving in groups, singing among themselves, friends perched on tables, claiming space before the music fully claims them. In the bathrooms, congregations form. Men huddle as they discuss their game plans, outfits are adjusted.
By 01:07, the venue is noticeably fuller, bodies pressed closer, people roll up, swallowed whole in alternating red and blue light. And as MeccaMind’s set edges closer, the front row belongs to the ladies who’ve come with intention, waists loosening, ready to move. Photographers crowd the edges, flashes punctuating the dark with small bursts of memory being captured in real time.
When MeccaMind finally jumps on stage, he introduces himself by saying, “Hi, I’m MeccaMind, I’m from Bloemfontein, where there’s scammers galore and lions roar”. It lands somewhere between joke and testimony. Opening with Cordial, a song that circles the realities and dangers of fast money and success, its warning underlined by gunshots that close the track.
He runs through Motho O, the loudest and best received of the night, BND, and Feng Shui with his Scorpio twin FatherWethu. They move with an ease that feels earned rather than rehearsed. Feng Shui maps Mecca's rise: not local, not coastal, a George of the concrete jungle, spinning through cities faster than they can hold him.
When he raps about being heard on the radio while certain people aren’t there to witness it, the moment cuts sharper than the flex. Winning forces inventory whilst familiarity breeds contempt, and not everyone wants to be just another voice wishing you well from the sidelines. Real triumph is measured by who stays to enjoy the feast.
One of my favourite parts of Volume 2 is MeccaMind and his collaborators' lyricism, grounded in reflecting current images: his in your ends asking to be connected to someone’s hotspot, ten girls packed into a Vito, makeup stains on his tee, “that’s your friend, you say she does promos, in the club with scammers it’s normal”, and PassionPanthers “told moms the new girl ain’t a Christian, but he ain’t cuff that.” Life here is modern and raw, observations delivered without judgment, just reporting back what we already know.
Once his set ends, I move toward the back of the venue to watch the room reset as FatherWethu performs. Many bodies instinctively turn toward the exit, the reflex to leave once the moment has passed. But when Up and Down comes through the system, something holds them. People sway left and right, singing along despite themselves. The night, it seems, isn’t over yet.
P, I was not familiar with your game! This is stunning and captivating and honest.