"Qongqothwane", also known as "The Click Song" by Anglophones, is a traditional song of the Xhosa people of South Africa.[1][2] Click consonants from the Xhosa language are characteristic of the song as an extended vocal technique.[3][4][5] The Xhosa title translates to "knocking beetle", which is a name for various species of darkling beetles colloquially known as "tok tokkie" due to their method of attracting mates that include distinctive knocking sounds from tapping on the ground.[2][6] In Xhosa oral tradition, these beetles guide lost children to home. The song compares a knocking beetle and an igqirha, which is a traditional South African healer or diviner who can preside over marriage rites, vows, and incantations. Due to this, the song is sung at weddings to bring good fortune in guiding couples to new lives.[1][2]
Pilani Bubu released a soul version of the song on her 2022 album, Folklore: Chapter 1.[4]
References
123Makeba, Miriam (6 July 2023) [Performed 1963]. Miriam Makeba - Qongqothwane The Click Song Live, 1963 (Video). Musicalidade. Retrieved 14 July 2025– via YouTube. The next song we're going to sing is a Xhosa wedding song. It comes from South Africa. Xhosa is my native language, and it's a wedding song back home where I come from. It's called, by the English-speaking people, 'The Click Song,' because they cannot say ['nguqongqothwane'].{{cite AV media}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)