
DJ Ready D on curating the soundtrack for Spinners
Spinners is now streaming, and Showmax has released a 31-track Spotify playlist from its soundtrack, curated by music supervisor DJ Ready D. This includes bangers from the likes of Onesimus, Early B, YoungstaCPT, DJ Vitoto, Ishmael, Isaac Mutant and the gone-too-soon Angie Oeh, among others.
Premiering on Showmax next Wednesday, 8 November 2023, Spinners follows Ethan (Cantona James), a 17-year-old driver working for a gang on the Cape Flats. Needing to support his younger brother but increasingly disgusted by gang life, Ethan discovers a possible way out via spinning, an extreme motorsport where he can put his driving skills to better use. With a gang war looming, can he turn his life around fast enough?
Watch the trailer for Spinners
A co-production between Showmax and CANAL+, Spinners became the first African series selected in competition at Canneseries; won three awards at Dakar Series, including Best TV Series; received standing ovations from its sold-out premieres in Paris and Cape Town; and was the opening night screening at MIP Africa, generating rave reviews.

As Fortress of Solitude says, “Marrying elements of gritty gang tales with the thrills of a sports drama, Spinners is a masterclass in storytelling. It’s got all the right ingredients: a fire cast, visuals that are on-point, and writing that’s sharper than a blade. This is what local TV should be like — every shot and every scene crafted for cinematic magic… Spinners is the real deal, and it’s telling Mzansi’s stories like they deserve to be told.”
In addition to being the music supervisor on Spinners, DJ Ready D has a cameo as an announcer at the pitch, and also composed tracks for the eight-part series, alongside 2023 SAFTA winner Pierre-Henri Wicomb (Gaia).
We caught up with the hip hop legend, also known as Deon Daniels, to find out more about spinning and Spinners:
Why did you want to be part of Spinners?
When I was first approached by the French team and they broke down the story, the first thing they said was, "Cars." I was like, "Okay, I'm in."
Apparently, they miked-up the cars in Spinners, because they’re characters in themselves.
A lot of the culture is based on the sound of these cars. When you're spinning, these guys and these ladies are throwing these cars all over the place and there's a very distinctive sound that a spin car makes because you're in the rev limits all the time. And it's like people know, the culture knows, kids know that sound and when it starts climbing, it really gets people very, very excited. Especially when it's the E30 BMW you know; they call it the Gusheshe elsewhere in the country. They’re very, very distinctive. So when you come from this community, that's fully aware, you're able to connect with that sound emotionally as well. So I think that was a brilliant call to make.

What did spinning mean to you growing up?
Through the dark days of apartheid, spinning was probably one of the greatest forms of defiance. It was an opportunity for people to come together socially as well. When I was a little boy, I used to go to places like Strandfontein Pavilion, and another place out in Athlone. In Cape Town, we used to call it "Pop-a-wheelie". Right in the heart of apartheid, 1 000 to 3 000 people came together to buy Gatsby's, with all these cars busy spinning and pumping the wheelies and all these things. Not even the cops could break up the ‘Pop-a-wheelie’ gathering. The cops would rock up, but you're not going to move the people, you know…
I don't think that we ever knew that it would reach this point: where people will actually be interested in turning it into a series and big commercial brands like Red Bull would latch onto it, with their Shay'Imoto spinning battles. With youth culture, on a grassroots level, spinning is one of the biggest movements right now - not just in Cape Town, but across the country as well,
Is spinning still an act of defiance?
Ja, you know, spinners are always in trouble with the law, all the time. The way you drive a spinning car is everything that you're not supposed to do in a car. The driver jumps out of the driver's seat, he or she is hanging out of the door, she's standing outside the car, while the car spinning, then she jumps on top of the car, and opens up the bonnet, standing inside the bonnet, where there's such a lot of moving parts. For those that don't understand it, it's complete madness. It's chaos. And there's so many people that criticise that.
Motorsport is still something that is seen as being reserved for the elite. But on the grassroots, there are kids and community members that’re going, ‘We can't get access to the tracks; the city hasn't got a dedicated space for us. So we're going to spin. We’ll take it to the streets, we'll take it here, we'll take it there.’
So it's just defiance, defiance, defiance. This is a generation of young people that's even more defiant, because there's way more spinning cars and the drivers are becoming younger.
What did you think when you read the scripts for Spinners?
I grew up in Mitchells Plain; I grew up on the Cape Flats. I've been in situations, you know, where guns were blazing. I've seen people shot in front of me. We had to run from the guns going off. I've seen many people laid out to them, right in front of my mother's door. So I understand all of that. I understand all the tricky and challenging situations that pop up when people get rowdy and the crowds are out of control. Spinners reminded me of those experiences.
How did you choose the soundtrack for Spinners?
When I read the scripts, I'm already sitting and I'm mapping out the beats in my head as I read. I think of it in music, I think of it in beats. I'm not sure what the outcome’s gonna be, but I know this is the energy that’s needed. So to find the correct artists that will sync with the scenes, that was the one thing.
I also needed to get the most relevant artists, from the young ones to the established ones. They all have something to say, and it all plays a very, very important part in terms of where we are culturally. With spinning, if you look at the culture, this series is as current as it gets at the moment.
It was very, very important for the music to be authentic, and, to a certain degree, it's extremely challenging as well, because it's a story that was filmed in Cape Town city on the Cape Flats. To get that right, you have to understand the culture and you have to understand the history as well. At certain points, I had to make the team understand: ‘This music you’re asking for: it’s cool but that’s not what people are listening to on the Cape Flats.’
There's so many different genres and styles of music that's quite popular, that makes the community tick. The staple of the Cape Flats is yaadt music but the Cape Flats is also listening to amapiano and hip hop and then they have a huge community that's into dancehall and reggae music as well. And the youth, they’re into trap and this new drill sound, that's the new-school vibe.

You also composed some new tracks for the series?
Oh gosh ja, I even had to rip out the microphone and start rapping again.
I was actually telling my wife, I probably recorded the hardest hip hop song ever to be released in this city, if not the country: Wie Maak Die Jol Vol by Agro. It is so gritty, dirty, grimy, in your face; the thing just comes with these balls.
What surprised you about the recording process?
It's funny how low-fi and low quality actually sometimes means authenticity.
Sometimes, it’s like, ‘Why are the vocals not sounding right? Because they're not recorded through a phone on WhatsApp.’
I kinda had to discipline myself and pull myself back and go, ‘DJ Ready D, you can't get too nerdy, you can't get too technical on the production.’
I tried to get the sound as close as possible to the way a kid would share it on Whatsapp groups, and keep in mind how it’s going to sound in the taxi or somebody’s boombox or through someone’s phone.
Why are you excited about Spinners?
There's so many artists that a lot of people do not know about, so just to enable them to get another level of exposure, it's very important. This series is doing that; it’s groundbreaking.
In terms of what Cape Town city, and specifically the Cape Flats, have to offer, I think movies, series, and documentaries have barely scratched the surface. There’s so much more to unpack.
Spinners is like a gateway into that world and it just goes to show how broad culture is, and how it's constantly evolving.
About Spinners
Spinners is co-created by producer Joachim Landau and showrunner Benjamin Hoffman of Empreinte Digitale, currently up for the International Emmy for TV Movie/Mini-Series for Infiniti. Spinners is helmed by Jaco Bouwer, director of the 2022 SAFTA Best TV Drama winner 4 Mure and the 2021 SXSW Cinematography winner Gaia, which just won four 2023 SAFTAs, including Best Film and Director. Spinners’ story was developed by and head written by SAFTA and Silwerskerm winners Sean Steinberg and Matthew Jankes. The 16LVPD-rated English/Kaaps/Afrikaans series is co-produced by Locarno, Amiens and FESPACO winner Ramadan Suleman (Zulu Love Letter, Fools) from Natives at Large, Spinners’ local co-production company.
STUDIOCANAL is handling international sales.
Listen to the soundtrack:
Add Spinners to your Showmax watchlist.
More like this

Alert: Missing Persons Unit S3
Showrunner John Eisendrath and Jamie Foxx are behind this police procedural. After her son goes missing, Nikki Batista joins the Philadelphia Missing Persons Unit, helping find people's loved ones as she searches for her own.

Lehlohonolo Mayeza on Leruo’s battles in Outlaws Season 2
New love, old foes: Lehlohonolo Mayeza unpacks Leruo's journey in Outlaws S2, on Showmax from 17 November and Mzansi Magic from 22 November.

New seasons of your favourite series, now streaming
The latest seasons of Youngins, Outlaws, Hacks, The Equalizer, Tokyo Vice, and more are all streaming on Showmax.

Last Breath (2025)
Woody Harrelson and Simu are in a race against time in this thrilling true story that follows seasoned deep-sea divers as they battle the raging elements to rescue their crew.

20+ addictive South African reality shows to stream
Stream The Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip - Africa, Vaal Riviera, The Real Housewives of Durban, The Mommy Club, and more of South Africa's best reality shows on Showmax.

The best romantic series on Showmax
All you need is love — and these addictive series: Northern Lights, Love Island: All Stars, Love Island Games, Outlaws S2 and more.

IT: Welcome to Derry
Set in the 1960s in the town of Derry, this horror series explores its strange happenings, disappearances, and the origins of Pennywise the Clown.

St Denis Medical S1
"The Office" meets "Scrubs" in this wacky medical comedy that follows an eclectic group of underfunded yet dedicated doctors and nurses trying to hold an Oregon hospital together.
Spinners: Meet Chelsea Thomas
A sit-down with Cantona James of Spinners
More binge-worthy series to stream

You Were My First Boyfriend (2023)
In this introspective high school reunion movie turned inside out, filmmaker Cecilia Aldarondo relives her tortured adolescence.

Love Has Won: The Cult of Mother God S1
This HBO docuseries explores the rise and fall of cult leader Amy Carlson, aka Mother God. As her health declined, followers awaited UFO salvation.

Stand Up & Shout: Songs from a Philly High School (2023)
This heartfelt documentary follows a unique music programme at Hill-Freedman World Academy, which teaches students to create original songs.

“No one wins in war” - Nikki Comninos on Unspoken War
Nikki Comninos talks about directing the raw and haunting documentary series Unspoken War, now streaming on Showmax.
Latest Stories

Manchester City vs Liverpool: The Rivalry Reignites

What to watch on Showmax in November 2025

Can LFC rediscover the form that saw them crowned champions?

Conor Bradley on Liverpool's difficult run and the path back

Outlaws S2: Meet the new Sihle, Noluthando Ngema

Gallery: Showmax Fan Day with Youngins brings the heat

Must-watch trailer: The Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip: Africa

IdeaCandy docuseries Unspoken War looks to start a national conversation

Creating The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim

Bafana Bafana composed for Durban showdown against Zimbabwe

Clementine Mosimane, Mondli Makhoba and Luyanda Zwane join Spinners S2

Arsenal and Liverpool early front-runners ahead of Premier League international break

Married at First Sight's Portia Baloyi on the reunion and her ex
Must-watch trailer: Slay Queens doccie coming to Showmax

The Premier League canvas: a Saturday masterpiece painted in blue and red

Relebogile Mabotja to host the two-hour Married at First Sight reunion special

South Africa in third place at International Emmys, with four MultiChoice nominations

What to watch on Showmax in October 2025

The clash of the new number 9s: Gyökeres vs Woltemade

Married at First Sight: Themba on his "stunning" wife Nelisa

June Squibb wins Best Actress award at age 95 for Thelma

Red vs Blue: Showmax Premier League serves up a blockbuster weekend

Blockbuster Premier League weekend: Red vs Blue

Gerard Butler and O’Shea Jackson Jr chat about Den of Thieves 2: Pantera







