Max, who is based in London also said that even though Africa by Toto was released 1982 it is still very much present in today’s pop culture and frequently used for memes and even entire Reddit pages are dedicated to the song. “Hopefully the song will play just as long,” he added. Max told CNN that the desert, on the west coast of Southern Africa, is around 55 million years old, making it the world’s oldest desert and the “perfect spot” for his work. The life of Totos 'Africa' has perhaps reached its logical end with Max Siedentopfs absurdist art installation Toto Forever, which will play 'Africa' in the Namib Desert 'for all eternity. The song is put on loop and the installation runs on solar batteries to keep Toto going for all eternity.” “The sound installation consists of 6 speakers which are attached to an MP3 player that only has one song on it – Toto’s Africa. “Set in the Namib desert, which is not only the oldest desert in Africa but the world, I set up a sound installation which pays tribute to probably the most popular song of the last four decades, Toto’s Africa,” writes Max. Despite selecting durable sound equipment for the installation, the harsh conditions of the Namib will likely destroy Toto Forever long before forever actually hits.According to CNN, German-Namibian artist Max Siedentopf has set up the sound installation, called “Toto Forever,” in an undisclosed location in the 1,200 mile-long Namib Desert. If the installation's endless playback of "Africa" has you taking pity on any desert creatures forced to listen in, the artist admits the installation's endless loop isn't quite so endless.
In an oral history on the song, Billboard’s Andrew Unterberger writes that the earworm “is arguably more popular with millennials today than it ever was among the MTV generation.” While a complete list of the song’s appearances in recent years might be impossible to chart, it’s been sung by water activists outside the White House, performed on fruits and vegetables, played by “ Bongo cat, ” and now, of course, put on a relentless loop by Siedentopf.
This is just the latest place the ’80s hit has showed up. “It’s crucial that it’s not a song about Africa, but about the stew of ideas and half-truths from which we create our own romanticized notions of place,” writes Hann. Paich reportedly wrote the song from the point of view of a woman flying to an unknown part of Africa for the first time to meet a missionary and imagining what it would be like. According to Michael Hann at The Financial Times, the song lyrics were penned by Toto keyboardist David Paich, whose obsession with the continent was based off of stories he heard from former missionaries that taught at his school and images he saw in National Geographic. The looping song’s chorus, which crescendos to the line “I bless the rains down in Africa…,” plays on in what Britannica defines as an “almost rainless area." Then again, that might make the Namib Desert the perfect location for a song that was never really about Africa at all. There’s an apparent irony to the installation. “The installation is supposed to be a bit like a treasure that only the most loyal of Toto fans can find,” he tells Joshua Bote at NPR. I think that's a great compliment,” he tells BBC News.Īnyone hoping to track down the installation will likely need to acquire a leave of absence from work first on his website, Siedentopf indicates its “approximate location” by circling the entire Namib Desert in red. According to CNN, German-Namibian artist Max Siedentopf has set up the sound installation, called Toto. “Some love it and some say it’s probably the worst sound installation ever. Toto’s Africa is set to play on an ‘eternal loop’ somewhere in the Namibian desert. He decided a fitting way to pay tribute to it was by letting it play on forever in Africa. The catchiness of the song inspired Siedentopf to create the work he genuinely can’t get "Africa" out of his system, telling Cascone that he personally has listened to it more than 400 times.
Sarah Cascone at artnet News reports that Namibian-German artist Max Siedentopf is behind the new sound installation, which he installed in an undisclosed location in the Namib Desert.įittingly called Toto Forever, it uses a solar-powered MP3 player hooked up to six speakers situated on pedestals to broadcast the kalimba-heavy song into the surrounding dunes. Now, the Karaoke standby that you either love to love or love to hate is set to play on an endless loop in the continent of Africa, in the nation of Namibia, specifically. Since the soft-rock, synth-heavy “Africa” was released in 1982, the Toto masterwork has made appearances on countless television shows, internet memes, and, as of late, been reimagined on the airwaves by the likes of Weezer and Pitbull.