Review: Rigo Kamp’s ‘Rigo Kamp’ EP

For the most part, ‘Rigo Kamp’’ is moored by a sense of melancholy, but it doesn’t stop the project from providing moments of downright elation. 

Back in the mid-2010s, when alté started transforming from a niche SoundCloud phenomenon to an all-inclusive creative haven, the music branch of the scene basked in a sense of eclecticism that stood in sharp contrast to the staid conformity of Nigerian Pop. The flows were different; the themes explored and expounded on by acts like Odunsi (The Engine), Cruel Santino, Tay Iwar and others sounded lived-in and cogent to the experiences of the young people who pressed play on their music; and the beats didn’t stand in one position, dipping into the sonics of different eras and borrowing from a range of genres–it all felt like an endless search for wonder. 

In many ways, Rigo Kamp’s music evokes the starry-eyed purity of that early alté epoch, when acts created work that affirmed their consciousness while attuning their community to newer soundscapes. His sound is at once eerily familiar and ambitiously transcendental, moving between Alt-Pop, R&B, and Soul with a practiced precision. For the uninitiated, the Abuja-born, Lagos-based singer has been turning heads for a while. Last year, he performed at the inaugural edition of The NATIVE’s unDer Live, alongside well-regarded up-and-coming acts like Kold AF, Superjazzclub, and Toye. Later in 2024, he made his debut with the double-pack release of “Summer/Morning Sun,” landing recognition as Apple Music’s Up Next artist in November 2024 and joining an alumni that includes Rema, Tems, and Burna Boy. 

In a statement shared with The NATIVE following the release of “Summer/Morning Sun,” Kamp said that a project was on the way and would explore “where I was and where I am right now.” In truth, his self-titled debut makes sense of his past and his present and aims to set the stage for his future while dealing with romantic hopes, personal pressure, and familial bonds across its 18-minute runtime. For the most part, ‘Rigo Kamp’’ is moored by a sense of melancholy, but it doesn’t stop the project from providing moments of downright elation. 

Marathon,” the project opener, starts off as a Juju-influenced bop in instrumentation and lyrics before mutating into a spirited soul refrain that anchors the rest of the track. “Tell Tiwa Savage I get Stamina/ This one no be sprint the game na marathon,” he sings in the song’s riotous opening section. It’s the sort of lyric you’d usually find on a mainstream Afropop banger, but here, it serves as a portal to an astral terrain where Kamp emotes about a would-be lover’s character with a nod to the Juju sound popularised by Sir Shina Peters. It all comes off wonderfully and is a powerful reminder of how alté music can bridge the gap between generations and sounds. 

There are several Odunsi (The Engine) production credits on ‘Rigo Kamp’ and he also serves as the project’s executive producer, helping the rising singer craft a body of work that captures Rigo’s zest for life much like Odunsi’s lauded tape, ‘Time of Our Lives,’did when it was released nearly a decade ago. Where ‘Time of Our Lives’ was cheery and outward-leaning, ‘Rigo Kamp’ is quirky, dark, and mysterious but no less earnest. Kamp’s feelings are not abstracted or muted for an attempt at arcane sophistication. He’s unabashedly paper-chasing on “Forbes List” and he’s not afraid to admit the paranoia that comes with seeking prosperity. “Will I ever make it?” he asks rhetorically on the song. In another part of the song, he’s even pondering if his quest for material success makes any sense. That fidelity to feeling is what makes Rigo Kamp such an engaging listen. 

The answer to Kamp’s existential musing on material wants and needs comes on the next track, “Summer,” where he rhymes, “Get that money yes you need it, you deserve it,” in the song’s opening seconds. Originally released as a single alongside “Morning Sun,”Summer”  positively affirms the concept of winning through a Pop framework. It’s the sort of song to turn on a celebratory morning or tune in for motivation on bleak, rainy days. Within the project, the groovy essence of  “Morning Sun” serves as a counterbalance to the heart-wrenching candour of “Miss You” where Kamp is wistfully longing for a lover to live in the moment with him without tuning out over a soul-inflected instrumental. It’s a well-written song that manages to capture the melodrama of a contentious relationship without drowning in the messiness that characterises flailing romances.

Earlier this year, there was a lot of online chatter about the state of the alté community and the heights many expected its members to hit. Many argued about how success should be defined in the alte scene, but the truth is that the true measure of that success has always existed in the intangibles. For them, the journey has always been of greater importance than the journey, and in the sense, Rigo Kamp sits in that unique tradition undoubtedly. Rigo Kamp comes to an end on the pseudo-confessional “Move On” where the singer recounts his come-up story and the changing tide of his career over a buttery soul instrumental. At the tail-end of the song, he calmly recognises the cost of the journey, singing, “Some will go/ I move on/ Some will stay.” They are the words of an artist who knows his path and what it requires of him. 

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