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global club · 112 BPM · 2010s-present

Amapiano

A global club style.

Log-drum bounce, sun-soaked groove, and the patience of a 7-minute introduction. South Africa to the world.

warm sun-soaked communal log-drum
Library Jammy Jammy holding up a labeled jam jar, used on Jam Library / per-style pages. The jar color is intended to swap to match each style accent. STYLE style
STYLE style

What it sounds like

Amapiano emerged from South African townships in the mid-2010s — a hybrid of deep house, jazz, kwaito, and lounge that built around a singular new sound: the log drum, a wood-toned, glide-bent kick-bass hybrid that replaces the traditional house kick on most tracks. Producers like Kabza De Small, MFR Souls, and DJ Maphorisa built the genre into a global force; by 2020 it was the dominant club sound from Johannesburg to London to Lagos.

Listen for the log drum and the genre is unmistakable. A Rhodes/keys chord pattern carries the harmony, a log-drum bassline does the rhythmic work the kick does in house, and shaker-heavy percussion floats on top. The tracks are long — 6–8 minutes is normal, with a 90-second intro of pure groove before any vocal arrives. Patience is the point.

The chord moves

Amapiano loves minor 9ths and maj7s in jazz-derived voicings — same DNA as deep house but with a sunnier color palette. The classic move is i–v–VI–III in natural minor, played on a warm Rhodes or piano patch. Sometimes the harmony just sits on two chords for the whole track — the genre is comfortable with stillness.

Try --voicing rootless so the log-drum has space to do its glide-bend bass work. The chords are companions to the log drum, not the drivers.

The groove

This is where amapiano breaks from house. There’s often no traditional kick on the downbeat. The log drum does the kick’s job — a pitched, tunable, gliding low-mid sound that plays a melodic bassline pattern. It’s not on every beat; it skips, it bends, it leaves space.

Shakers ride the 16ths in stereo. Rim shots mark bars. Hi-hats are sparse. The result is a groove that floats rather than pumps — it’s the patience of jazz with the four-four pulse of house, mediated by a single new instrument.

The sounds

  • Chords: warm Rhodes or upright-piano patch playing 9ths and maj7s. Light chorus, room reverb, gentle compression.
  • Log drum: the genre-defining sound. A pitched percussion patch that glides between notes; in software, FM8 / Massive can approximate it, or sample-pack log drums are everywhere now. Plays a melodic bassline, not a static root.
  • Bass: optional sub layer below the log drum, tuned to the same notes.
  • Percussion: shaker, tambourine, conga, rim — heavy on the 16ths, light on the downbeats. The percussion is the groove engine.
  • Vocals/synths: chopped vocal phrases, organ stabs, the occasional saxophone or guitar lead.

Production tells

Want it modern? Lean into the production polish — clean Rhodes, tight mid-bass, sample-replace the log drum with the latest pack. Stereo width on percussion to the limit.

Want it gqom-influenced (darker)? Push the BPM to 118–122. Replace the warm Rhodes with cold synth pads. Add a hammering kick alongside the log drum. Less vocal, more rhythm. The Durban side of the family tree.

piano roll
112 BPM · 4 bars · base oct 3
C3C4C5
Am9
Em9
Fmaj7
Cmaj7
Hear the chord moves 112 BPM · pulse

Am9 → Em9 → Fmaj7 → Cmaj7

Click to hear it.

Listen to

Three records that show the style at full strength. Read them as listening pointers, not templates to copy.

Six recipes

Six ways to cook Amapiano.

One starter recipe, three variations that each take the style in a different direction, one sectioned recipe, and one curated Live handoff recipe. Each one cooks from a Markdown recipe — edit it before the MIDI lands in your DAW.

Starter

Spacious Piano Pocket

110-114 BPM

Open major piano color, sparse Amapiano percussion, pentatonic call motion, and short low answers for a log-drum lane.

spacious piano warm

Study: Kabza De Small, “Sponono” (2020). Use the reference for relaxed piano space and low-end patience, not for vocal, chord, or bassline copying.

python jamburgr.py --config configs/recipes/amapiano/amapiano_spacious_piano_pocket.md

Variation

Low Answer Pressure

112-116 BPM

A darker low-answer sketch with log-drum-style pressure, minimal harmony, and sparse pentatonic fragments.

low dark minimal

Study: Vigro Deep, “Untold Stories” (2019). Use the reference for low-end attitude and empty space, not for bassline imitation.

python jamburgr.py --config configs/recipes/amapiano/amapiano_low_answer_pressure.md

Variation

Soft Vocal Space

110-113 BPM

A soft vocal-space recipe with slow wide support, simple motifs, and gentle percussion scaffolding.

soft vocal gentle

Study: Sha Sha, “Tender Love” (2019). Use the reference for softness and vocal room, not for melody or lyric copying.

python jamburgr.py --config configs/recipes/amapiano/amapiano_soft_vocal_space.md

Variation

Vocal-Space Piano Call

112-114 BPM

A brighter vocal-friendly piano call lane with wide pads, sparse lead responses, and gentle percussion movement.

vocal bright restrained

Study: MFR Souls, “Love You Tonight” (2019). Use the reference for vocal space and bright piano restraint, not for topline or chord copying.

python jamburgr.py --config configs/recipes/amapiano/amapiano_vocal_space_piano_call.md

Sectioned

Late-Chords Section Pressure

112-116 BPM

A full-song Amapiano sketch with delayed piano density, low-answer pressure, sparse percussion, and session-view clips.

arrangement pressure low-end

Study: De Mthuda, “John Wick” (2021). Use the reference for section pressure and log-drum focus, not for bassline copying.

python jamburgr.py --config configs/recipes/amapiano/amapiano_late_chords_section_pressure.md

Live handoff

Live Piano Starter

112-114 BPM

An optional bridge-workflow Amapiano pack with piano sound cards, section MIDI files, and sample-search prompts for percussion, vocal phrases, and log-drum source material.

live piano session

Study: Kwiish SA, “LiYoshona” (2021). Use the reference for polished piano/percussion balance, not for hook, vocal, or bassline copying.

python jamburgr.py --config configs/recipes/amapiano/amapiano_bridge_ready_piano_starter.md
This Mac

Open in Live or Download uses the local bridge on this Mac. Download MIDI works in any DAW.

Ready when you are

Cook a Amapiano pack.

Drop this in your terminal and you'll have a Standard MIDI pack in a folder, ready to drag into Live. Edit anything, swap any sound, throw out what doesn't work.

terminal
python jamburgr.py --key "A minor" --style amapiano --progression i,v,VI,III --output-mode pack --out ./jams/amapiano