26 August 2025 3 min

Nirvana Nokwe - Reclaiming the magic of music, screen, and community

Written by: Nirvana Nokwe Save to Instapaper
Nirvana Nokwe - Reclaiming the magic of music, screen, and community

Nirvana Nokwe is not easy to define -  actor, singer, collaborator, entrepreneur, and now student of the business behind the music, she is shaping a creative identity rooted not in any single title, but in the preservation of something much bigger: the magic that art once carried, and the responsibility it still holds to inspire, challenge, and unite.

A member of the Nokwe creative dynasty, Nirvana grew up in the world of performance, trained from the age of four by her family’s outreach programme, Amachiva Youth and Children Arts. She was already recording vocals for soundtracks at the SABC as a toddler. That early exposure to multi-disciplinary environments shaped how she now approaches her work.

“I did not study acting at ASE, but I did the higher certificate in Screen Arts and Television and later the diploma,” she explains. “Being in that diverse environment sharpened my networking muscles. I was used to spaces where people worked across disciplines, but ASE provided that structure. It helped me cultivate meaningful community and taught me how to engage with everyone, whether it is a producer at Metro FM or a casting director at Generations.”

That fluidity across music, screen, and sound is no accident. For Nirvana, it is not about picking one path but about protecting a certain soulfulness she feels the creative world has lost.

“There was a time when movies and music felt magical. You could almost touch the feeling they gave you. I want to preserve that. And it is not just about art but about professionalism, ethics, and being a good human. The world is hungry for that kind of intention again.”

At ASE, Nirvana often collaborated with sound engineering students, re-recording vocal covers for practical projects and working behind the scenes on live productions like Ram Jam and Five Live. She speaks about the respect that comes from understanding multiple sides of the process.

“When you have worked behind the camera and in front of it, you develop this professional empathy. You notice things like continuity errors and lighting shifts. You care enough to flag them, even if it is not your job. That kind of awareness improves the final product and deepens collaboration.”

Now, as she steps more boldly into music, Nirvana is embracing an entirely new role: that of the business-savvy artist. Through ASE’s Music Business Masterclass, supported by SAMRO, she is learning the hard realities of contracts, rights, royalties, and revenue streams, lessons she admits were humbling.

“I come from a family of musicians, but I realised just how little I knew. Being known in music circles is not the same as being prepared for the business. Knowing how to negotiate master rights, track where you are earning, whether it is needle time, or co-producing, are different skill sets altogether. But once you know more, your posture changes. People start taking you seriously because you take yourself seriously.”

For Nirvana, ASE has been a launchpad for a renaissance of purpose. Whether it is through her music, her work in television, or her semi-secret supper club that connects changemakers over curated dinners, she is committed to doing work that honours the magic of the past and helps co-create a future that is ethical, inclusive, and true.

“Everything needs each other. Music, screen, community, spirit. It all works together. And when it is aligned with intention, you can feel it,” concludes Nokwe.

Total Words: 578

Submitted on behalf of

  • Company: Academy of Sound Engineering
  • Contact #: 0733511325
  • Website

Press Release Submitted By

  • Agency/PR Company: ByDesign Communications
  • Contact person: Nhlalenhle Dlangalala
  • Contact #: 0733511325
  • Website