This BBC podcast is supported by ads outside the uk.
Available now on the documentary from the BBC World Service.
The distinct musical genre of amapiano can be heard in clubs and parties all around the world.
It's a sound born out of the unique cultural identity of South Africa.
I am Legendary Chris and I'm going to take you on a journey of exploration as we dive into the history of the music.
Listen now by searching for the documentary.
Wherever you get your BBC podcasts.
It's 1964 and crowds of cheering Egyptians look on as their president Gamal Abdel Nasser surveys the building of a gigantic new dam at Aswan, south of Cairo.
It's to be one of the largest in the world and will divert the waters of the River Nile to provide water for crops and electricity.
It's Soviet funded in what is a snub to the West.
But above all, this is a grandiose concrete monument to President Nasser.
The power of the Nile and the.
Glory of Gamal Abdel Nasser were fused.
Last week at Aswan.
The soldier politician had fulfilled his promises, just as he vowed it would.
The High Dam was going into operation despite the refusal of Western aid.
Dams then and today are inevitably political statements.
Triumphs of engineering used to create national pride, like the sumptuously named Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, the biggest dam in Africa, only completed last year.
But dams have also always been deeply controversial.
The building of the Aswan Dam and the creation of Lake Nasser displaced thousands of people, put Egypt's archaeological heritage at risk and is still being blamed for soil salinity and health problems.