The two main cultural events are the Incwala in December and the Umhlanga in August. The Incwala is sometimes described as a first-fruits ceremony, but, spread over six days, it is a much more complex ritual of renewing and strengthening the kingship and the nation, with songs and dances used only on this occasion. The Umhlanga, or Reed Dance, brings together the maidens of the nation to cut reeds for the annual repairs to the windbreaks of the queen mother's village; it lasts for five days. It is also symbolic of the unity of the nation and of its perpetuation through the massed ranks of young women. Both ceremonies are held at the national capital of the queen mother.
Other ceremonies are associated with the communal weeding and harvesting of the king's fields and with customary marriages. Most ceremonies are accompanied by orthodox music, songs, and dancing. Musical instruments are simple in design, a kudu horn used for hunting or herding cattle, a calabash attached to a bow for love songs, the reed flute, played by small boys while herding, and rattles made of seedpods attached to the wrists and ankles. more typical of the homestead nowadays are the radio and record and tape players.