Beatbox: The Instrument You Always Carry
What sets beatboxing apart from every other instrument: you need nothing. No guitar, no piano, no amplifier. Your mouth is everything you need.
This makes beatbox the perfect entry into music:
- Free to start: No instrument costs, no maintenance, no spare parts
- Practice anywhere: On the bus, in the shower, in the park — beatbox works everywhere
- Start immediately: No setup, no tuning, no equipment check
- Always with you: Your instrument is with you 24/7
With our crash course, you learn the fundamentals in four weeks — completely digital, on any device.
Beatboxing is catching on across Limpopo, and Sefeteng B is no exception.
The Three Foundation Sounds: Kick, HiHat, and Snare
Every beatboxer starts with three sounds that together create a complete drum beat:
- Kick Drum (B): A deep, punchy bass sound. Shape your lips like the letter "B" and let the air burst out explosively.
- HiHat (Ts): A sharp, short hiss. The tongue tip taps behind the upper front teeth — like an exaggerated "Ts."
- Snare Drum (Pf): The classic snare clap. A combination of "P" and "F" where air escapes sideways through the cheeks.
These three sounds are the foundation. When you combine them — B Ts Pf Ts, B Ts Pf Ts — you have your first beat. This genuinely works in under 30 minutes.
The Culture and History of Beatboxing
Beatboxing has deep roots and a vibrant present:
- Origins (1980s): Born in New York City's hip-hop scene alongside DJing, MCing, graffiti, and breakdancing. Early pioneers like Doug E. Fresh and Biz Markie made it famous
- Evolution (2000s): Artists like Rahzel ("If Your Mother Only Knew") proved beatbox could stand alone as an art form. The first world championships launched
- Modern era: Today's beatboxers produce sounds that seem physically impossible. Artists like Alem, NaPoM, and D-Low push the boundaries of human vocal ability
- Global movement: Beatbox communities exist on every continent. National and international championships draw thousands of competitors and millions of online viewers
From street corners to world stages — beatboxing has evolved from a hip-hop element into a global art form. And it all starts with three simple sounds.
Whether you're in central Sefeteng B or the surrounding Limpopo area, you can start learning right from home.
Your Start: The 4-Week Crash Course
The course is designed for complete beginners — no prior experience needed. In four weeks, you build your skills step by step:
- Week 1: Foundations — Basic sounds, breathing control, first simple rhythms
- Week 2: Patterns — Combining sounds into beats, timing and groove
- Week 3: Advanced — Lip Roll, bass drops, complex patterns and transitions
- Week 4: Creativity — Original beats, special sounds, and performance techniques
Includes video, image, and audio material, tips & tricks for beginners and advanced learners, plus an eBook on beatbox history and culture. All digital, instantly available.
Currently available for just €19.99 (reduced from €99). That's less than a single music lesson — for a complete 4-week programme.
Beatboxing in Sefeteng B
South Africa's diverse musical heritage — from kwaito to gqom to jazz — creates a unique backdrop for beatboxing. In Sefeteng B, Limpopo, beatboxing offers a way to make music that transcends language barriers. With 11 official languages, the vocal nature of beatboxing makes it universally accessible. The South African beatbox community is growing, and Sefeteng B is part of that movement.
Important Note
We are not doctors, speech therapists, or orthodontists. The content on this page does not replace a medical diagnosis or therapy. For speech errors, pronunciation disorders, orthodontic abnormalities, or other health questions, please contact a speech therapy practice, orthodontic practice, or your pediatrician directly. Beatboxing can be a valuable supplement — but not a replacement for professional treatment.









