#HLFDW2017: 6 designers we’re excited for at this year’s Lagos Fashion and Design Week

Holy shit! It’s fashion week!

The Lagos Fashion and Design Week is the very pinnacle of the Nigerian fashion calendar, drawing designers of Nigerian/African descent from all around the world who come to showcase their newest ideas brought to life on the Lagos Fashion and Design Week Runway. The showcase has also served as a springboard for its own crop of homegrown designers, models, stylists, journalists and photographers who have grown to become internationally celebrated for their groundbreaking work. Now in it’s seventh year, the Lagos Fashion and Design Week is moving house to the Eko Atlantic and promising the best show in years. We are particularly excited about the designers showing this year and have compiled a list of our designers you absolutely have to see this year.

CHRISTIE BROWN GH

Ghanaian design label Christie Brown is finally making its Lagos debut at this year’s Lagos Fashion and Design Week. The brand is known for its attention to detail, its cosmopolitan clothing that celebrates a meeting of African heritage and world class tailoring and its stylish accessories. From what we’ve seen at the Glitz Africa Fashion Week, for this collection Christie Brown has brought on Ghanaian powerhouse talent Papa Oppong. Oppong is master illustrator and a creative genius in his own right, and a collaboration between these two brands is bound to be something to behold. This will be a show you have to see in person.

TITI BELO

Titi Belo rose through the ranks, participating in the 2014 Lagos Fashion and Design Week Fashion Focus Incubator programme where she won a scholarship to study at the Instituto Maragoni in the UK. Since then Titi Belo has honed her talents and built a brand that actual every Nigerian women love and wear. She has focused  her energies on creating clothing for contemporary Nigerian woman and takes inspiration from contemporary Nigerian pop culture. Her collection this season is inspired by her time at Queens College Lagos, and by the secondary school experience in general, and we are intrigued to see how she translates the very specfic style of the 2000’s into contemporary 2017 looks.

GERT JOHAN COETZEE

Another internationally renowned designer making their Lagos Fashion and Design Week debut is South Africa couturier and design behemoth Gert Johan Coetzee. The very apex of design in Africa, Gert Johan Coetzee’s designs have been worn by Hollywood royalty, South Africa’s elite and Nigeria’s biggest socialites. Coming to Nigeria is a strategic decision for him, considering he just finished showing at the South Africa Fashion Week. What better plan to dominate Africa than show on the continent’s two biggest fashion platforms back to back.

CLAN (DEOLA SAGOE)

Since Deola Sagoe focused on her bridal line, Komole by Deola Sagoe, her hip, ready to wear diffusion line run by her daughter Teni Sagoe was put on the back burner for a bit. But now that the Deola Sagoe bridal and bespoke line is firmly established, the designer is turning her attention back to Clan, and making a splash by returning to the Lagos Fashion and Design Week stage. It will be interesting to see just how much of Teni’s influence will play out when Nigeria’s favorite tween high fashion brand makes a play to take back its throne from the other diffusion line by the offspring of a celebrated Nigerian designer.

BRIDGET AWOSIKA

It is always, always, a delight to see Bridget Awosika on any runway. With her attention to detail, her unique and often whimsical approach to design inspiration and her excellent silhouettes, Bridget Awosika has become the label for the woman who wants pieces that will remain evergreen. A firm staple in Tiwa Savage’s dress repertoire, Awosika’s collections are always the standard for subtle but excellent storytelling and we are eager to see where her whimsy takes her this season.

MAKI OH.

Where Bridget Awosika is subtle, Maki Oh is jubilant. Amaka Osakwe never makes a collection that doesn’t take you by the hand and guide you through a whirlwind of emotions as it tells back to you, some intricate but often ignored aspect of living as a contemporary Nigerian woman in a culture that is simultaneously progressive and restrictive. She will be bringing home her Spring 18 collection (which she sort of already debuted in New York) and introducing it again, to us, in person. And anyone who has seen a Maki Oh show in person knows absolutely nothing substitutes for the seeing the real thing up close.

Fashion Week starts today, the 25th of October 2017. If you haven’t gotten your tickets to see the shows yet, here’s how you do it.

You can register for LFDW 2017 daytime events here

You can buy tickets for the runway shows here 

 


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AV Club: Daniel Obasi’s fashion film, ‘Embers of Bloom’ is a facile narrative about gender in Nigeria

The A.N.A.I Foundation is providing much needed support for Nigerian artists

One of the interesting things we found out while speaking to Aminat Agoro is that while Nigeria consumes what amounts to millions of dollars in ceramics, and has extensive clay deposits, all the ceramics we use in Nigeria is imported. All of it. This is one of the reasons why Peju Alatise, an award-winning contemporary artist created the Alter Native Artists Initiative (A.N.A.I), a non-profit foundation for the visual arts in Nigeria. Aminat Agoro is the arts programme manager at  A.N.A.I. and we got her to answer a few questions about the project and what it means for young Nigerian artists before it launches on the 4th of November 2017.

 

One of the things she told us was that A.N.A.I. has a physical space, that will house a ceramics studio – the first of its kind in Nigeria, a purpose built residency – another first of this magnitude – that will facilitate training of Nigerian emerging and established artists. The project also plans to manage a cultural exchange programme where artists from Nigeria can meet, learn from and collaborate with international artists and vice versa.

In addition, it will build capacity of women in its immediate community – where it is located – through training in creative practices to create goods and reduce the barrier to entry into the craft market.

 

Here’s everything else we talked about:

One of the reasons the Alter Native Artists Initiative (A.N.A.I.) really intrigues here at The Native, is your pedigree as an artist and the pedigree of the artists that young creatives who choose to join the initiative will have access to. Was this a deliberate move on your part?

Yes. The very idea of what drives ANAI is to alter the current state of what is native to the Nigerian artist. This is where our name comes from, a play on the word alternative. What is native to the Nigerian artist currently is a standard that is in dire need of raising. Formal arts education in the country is decent. But it is not world class. ANAI seeks to fill existing gaps by bringing the very best of experts in the world across different mediums to train emerging artists and get them accustomed to global best practices.

A big argument used to discredit some young artists trying to make their own space in our often restrictive art community is that the digital mediums they choose to express themselves in are somehow ‘less’ . Is this a concern A.N.A.I is taking into consideration?

We do not think one medium is inferior to the other. We are rather more concerned about the mind of the artist exploring any given medium: what story are they trying to tell, how far outside the box will they push themselves; is their work relevant to, engaging of their immediate communities? These are the things thay matter.

The ceramics studio really intrigues us, especially because of Nigeria’s long history with ceramics and greats like Ladi Kwali. How will this work?

One of our principal objectives is to revive and develop the art of ceramics to a level compatible with international health and quality standards. To this end we have a purpose built ceramics studio that is equipped for professional ceramics practice, with equipment such as kilns, various throwing wheels, slab roller etc. We will also grant access to the ceramic studio to interested artists for hire.

There are a few residencies in Nigeria, but none that really prioritizes the work of emerging artists quite like A.N.A.I. It’s a huge statement. Why now?

Why not now? Clearly the need is there and it is urgent. This residency is the fruit of a years-long dream by founder, Peju Alatise who by virtue of her work has travelled the world and has seen what obtains in other climes. There’s a global mentoring and grooming chain for artists to experiment, grow and thrive and that’s how you keep an industry alive. This is missing in Nigeria. To answer your question simply, for anyone who cares about keeping the Nigerian art industry alive, this is necessary. It had to be done.

Are there any young artists on the A.N.A.I roster already, or artists that the collective is interested in bringing in?

Emerging artists will be taken on through applications through a specific residency for same. Our programme will focus on supporting emerging practice and will enable emerging and mid-career artists in Nigeria an opportunity to produce new work, on a major public platform.  The residency takes the form of free studio provision and aim to relieve an artist from pressure for a period during which they can focus on their practice and progress within their chosen field.

Exhibitions, any planned now or in the near future?

We’ll be announcing our programme for 2018 in a few months. Till then…


Edwin eats his rice and cabbages. Tweet at him@edgothboy


AV Club: Lola Shoneyin dishes on Ake, literature and everything else on Culture Diaries

Omawumi could have done better with her performance at the World Food Prize Event

Omawumi has been making music long enough to know that opinions on any artist’s output tends to ebb and flow. From her brilliant start and the warm reception for her vocals as a contestant on Idols West Africa to her songwriting’s appraisal in critical communities, terms such as “underrated” have been as overused as “genius” to describe her. Given her dime in a dozen aptitude with stage performance in Nigerian soundscape, the high praises were more than justified and have seen her grow to elite status, seemingly invincible to negative press.

https://www.instagram.com/p/Balx__eDB9X/?hl=en&taken-by=omawonder

But after years of building a fanbase with dozens and dozens of perfectly crafted songs, her performance at World Food Price in Iowa, America left a lot to be desired. The annual event, aimed at eradicating global hunger featured delegates and representatives from around the world. Omawumi was one of the acts invited by the African Development Bank (AfDB)’s, Akinwumi Adesina, the honourary of the night for the World Food Prize (the food industry’s equivalence of a Nobel Prize).

Because Omawumi has proven herself a decent vocalist in the past and she isn’t one to develop stage fright particularly in a hall that small, we could chalk her occasional fleet between keys as one of those off-nights that every artist inevitable experiences. The cringe, however, comes when Omawumi switches from a powerful entry with her own ballad, “The African Way”, to Salif Keita’s “Africa”, beaming all smiles in what easily turned into the most predictable ‘African’ performance ever. All due respect is given to the legacy and works of Malian Legend Salif Keita, but to discuss contemporary African music, one must analyse the music within the socio-political context of the times. Thus is could be said that the identity for popular African music artists from Salif Keita’s generation curated and created for the continent is largely a reflection of their era. Is it so hard to fathom then, that popular African music would have made more advancements nearly twenty-one years after Salif Keita recorded that song?

Omawumi is no stranger to Afrocentric themes; she’s constantly using her music to celebrate her culture. But never has it felt this watered down and deliberate—almost as though she considered it far more important to be remembered as the ‘Nigerian singer’ from far-away ‘Africa’, instead of simply being the amazing singer who caused all the bougee white people seated to lose their breaths. Even more frustrating is that before Omawumi’s set, a trio of women from Ibadan already opened the night with an authentic non-pretentious tribute to the man of the night, Mr Femi Adesina. Why then, did Omawu

mi deem it fit to brandish the African flag again with so much brazen insubstantiality on her own set?

Interestingly, much of the reaction from the internet to the video has been positive, particularly from Rubbin’ Minds Host Ebuka Uchendu who captioned a clip from the performance with well-meaning words to the singer. No doubt his intentions are pure, but he also falls victim to the same cultural hype machine that celebrates achievements and efforts over actual transcendental value. Omawumi’s slight work over the years has produced a fair number of deftly written classics, there is actually no excuse for not bringing her A-game with a more inventive setlist, or this average performance that could have been mistaken for a ‘UNICEF for Africa’ fundraiser theme song.

Watch the full video below.

Featured Image Credits: Instagram/Omawonder


You are meeting Debola at a strange time in his life. He wandered into a dream and lost his way back. Tweet at him @debola_abimbolu


Watch Omawumi “I No Sure” off her new album

Watch Shaydee and Wizkid in new video for “Make Sense”

Lately, Afropop artists have taken a minimalist approach to music making and given rise to an era of smooth sounding Afropop songs. These easy listening dance-friendly songs essentially mean summer songs play all year round in Nigeria. And if Shaydee’s recently released “Make Sense” single featuring Wizkid didn’t already establish that through the Spax produced mid-tempo number, the video certainly does.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BamajgkA87E/?hl=en&taken-by=shaydeeboi

In most climates, the bright and sunny Director Q directed video will be a few months too late for the party. But Nigeria’s bipolar—dry and rainy—season calendar leaves a leeway to continue the song’s romantic and joyful themes. “Make Sense” heralds an escape to the excitement of new love and the warmth of hanging out by the beach.

The easy atmosphere of the single carries right over into the video set at pool party. Fader quoted Shaydee describing the video as; “A Birthday Do That Turned Into A Music Video” and this too is reflected in the video’s fun and simplistic outlook. Wizkid joins Shaydee at his birthday pool party to perform his verse, groove along the Spax produced baseline and look cool in his Luious Vittion shades.

Watch the summer tinged video for “Make Sense” below, hinged on the everlasting warmth of Nigerian summer vibe.

Featured Image Credits: YouTube/506MusicNG


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ICYMI: Check out Shaydee’s Make Sense” single here

See Paybac’s grim video for cult favourite, “Mami Water”

Music videos are as more than just promotional tools to keep people talking about the music for a bit longer. Though the style has evolved from the Michael Jackson era when music videos were treated with the same grandeur of blockbuster films, artists still make cultural impacts through the visual art of music videos. Although Afropop may not be popular for that given the inherent lightness of the music, it’s not a surprise to see Paybac attempt a conceptual video for his “Mami Water” music video.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BajMSeog5gQ/?taken-by=lookatpaybac

But while he has always shown a knack for the profound with his pseudo-conscious hip-hop songs, “Mami Water” is far from his most intellectual release. The love story told through his humorous filters; “She Said Violets Are Blue/ But Water Is Too/ Even My Balls For At Least A Month Or Two” is far from conceptual, but you wouldn’t guess that from watching his recently released video for “Mami Water” directed by Palmwine Daddy.

The video is taken in one shot where Paybac climbs on stage to perform with what seems like his band; a guitarist, two backup singers, a drummer, saxophonist, pianist and a masked dancer. But while he raps into the mic, the camera focuses on the rest of the band who dramatise chaotic relationships. Because their drama doesn’t seem to distract Paybac from performing or even do anything to further the song’s narrative, it’s easy to assume the video isn’t literal.

Perhaps it’s nothing worth considering, but maybe it’s Paybac depicting how the often chaotic life of artists doesn’t get reflected in the music. Either ways, this video is sure to leave you wondering what the fuck you just watched and that’s not entirely a bad thing.

Watch the video for “Mami Water” below.

Featured Image Credits: Instagram/lookatpaybac


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Watch Falz and YCee team up for “Something Light”

How Lupita Nyong’o and other women reopened the global issue of men like Harvey Weinstein

“If you spend your time hoping someone will suffer the consequences for what they did to your heart, then you’re allowing them to hurt you a second time in your mind.”
― Shannon L. Alder

 

Following the first explosive report by  The New York Times, about Harvey Weinstein’s sexual misconduct , a number of actors are coming with their accusations, against the Hollywood mogul.  Majority of his victims are household names, who were young aspiring actresses, at the time of the abuse.  Some of whom he had their careers ruined, when they declined, and silenced when they tried to speak up, using his powerful connections in the industry as a shield.

From Angelina Jolie, Mia Kirshner, to Lena Heady, the list of Harvey’s accusers seems to be growing, and among the recent is Lupita Nyong’.  Who said hearing the stories of these women, resurfaced in her, memories she has tried to forget.

In an op-ed published at The New York Times, The Oscar winning star of 12 Years A Slave revealed in details, two encounters she’s had with Weinstein, in her first encounter, the mogul had invited her to a film screening at his home, and offered to give her a massage, when she turned the table and offered to give him one instead, he asked her for sex in exchange for a booming career, of course she declined.

In another incident, while at dinner, he suggested they go up to a private room, she writes that he said, she should be willing to do that sort of thing, if she wanted to be an actress, again she declined.   And in a bid to be sure he wouldn’t ruin her chances of making it in the film industry, she asked him if they were good,  his response was “I don’t know about your career, but you’ll be fine”.  This in itself was a threat to her worth, as a woman, and an abuse to her right, as a human.

Like these women in Hollywood, many women in Africa, especially Nigeria, have been Weinsteined by bosses, teachers, friends, male family members, hell, you probably know a Harvey Weinstein.   Many a time, women have been forced into silence by societal pressure, to keep abuse and sexual harassment in the same class of taboo topics with homosexuality and gender politics.  And by choosing to remain silent, we’re not only making the abuser powerful, we’re helping him lay a foundation that would affect the next generation of girls.

It’s not hard to see that the ripple sent forth by the women of Hollywood, has gathered a global momentum, with an alarming number of women, all over the world, choosing to nullify the conspiracy of silence that has allowed the abuse thrive, by naming their abuser.  More importantly is the fact that these abusers are being removed from their places of power and are held accountable for their actions.


“Ifunanya is too queer to live and too rare to die” Tweet at her @Iphynaya


 

Tiwa Savage and the curse of the groupie effect

Best New Music: Juls and Burna Boy are as cool as the arctic on “Gwarn”

Earlier this year, Burna Boy and producer, Juls gave us the first taste of an unmistakable sonic synergy on “Rock Your Body”, our best new music from May. In a way, this already pre-wires expectation for “Gwarn”, their latest collaboration, but there was no way to anticipate the track’s edgy smoothness or Burna Boy’s uber laidback sub-woofer delivery. Juls has always favoured the use of acoustics from his days with Mr Eazi, the sleekness of “Gwarn”, however, is in a lightness of touch, a deft skill the producer weaves along with Burna Boy’s melody chord-for-chord. With Burna on verse and hook and low drums to set the mood, the sensual central focus of “Gwarn” is decidedly preset. The rest of the track sails like a boat on the Nile, peaking at a guitar solo outro that feels like 4 AM in the morning. “Gwarn” tips into the same collection of Burna Boy’s bedroom music catalog, bearing mark of all the nuances fans have come to love of his under covers Afro-fusion blues.

Stream “Gwarn” via Apple Music below


Toye is the Team lead at Native Nigeria. Tweet at him @ToyeSokunbi


Revisit: Best New Music; Nasty C and Runtown make an unlikely crossover smash with “Said”

AV Club: Lola Shoneyin dishes on Ake, literature and everything else on Culture Diaries

Wana Udobang’s Culture Diaries is interesting for all kinds of reasons. In the digital media space, there seems to be an obsession with virality, with media jargon like ‘conversion rates’ and demographic, and media companies seem obsessed with eyeballs rather than content. The result is that more often than not, the ideas that eventually go from idea to fruition are ideas that incorporate millennials and a mix of some form of manufactured friction or drama. Udobang’s Culture Diaries takes an entirely different trajectory; focusing on niche audiences and bringing much older, distinguished creators from different disciplines and allow them peel away the layers of mystery and mystique that often obscures the artist/creator and makes their art inaccessible. Their latest episode however is extra special because the guest is writer, poet and curator Lola Shoneyin.

It couldn’t be more timely considering it is less than a month before the fifth edition of the Ake Books and Arts Festival, which Shoneyin founded in 2013 and has grown in the intervening years and become a mecca of sorts for writers, readers, artists and other creators. Outside of literary circles, the Ake Festival isn’t quite understood because Book Festivals aren’t really a thing that is accessible to non-literary folk. By and large the Ake Festival has cracked this code by diversifying the palate at Ake, with art exhibitions, artist talks, musical performances and plays. At Udobang’s succinct urging, Shoneyin breaks down her motivations for starting the Festival, and how the festival has helped hundreds of readers connect with their mentors and each other, and how the festival has become a place of validation for younger writers struggling to find a place in Nigeria’s restrictive culture.

It was also pretty interesting to hear Shoneyin talk about her writing, and especially her critically acclaimed book The Many Lives of Baba Segi’s Wives, which is as beloved as it is controversial and what she intends to do in the future, especially as regards literacy.

If you ever wanted to know a little more about Lola Shoneyin, or Ake, or just literacy as a whole, this is one you should watch.

Watch Culture Diaries here.

 


Edwin eats his rice and cabbages. Tweet at him@edgothboy


AV Club: Joseph Nti’s “Off The Top” doesn’t take itself too seriously and therein lies its magic

6 videos you should see this week

Nasty C – Allow Feat. French Montana

Since growing from obscurity to continent-wide acclaim, Nasty C has been a shining beacon for South African rap. And given rap’s foreign influences, his feature on Major Lazer’s recently released Know No Better EP and several nods from international award communities, it was only a matter of time before his reputation pulled in more international features. His latest release, the video for “Allow” features French Montana and reminds listeners the heights his efforts have taken him with French Montana’s cameo in the neon filtered adjoining video.

Falz – La Fête

Excuse my French but the popular consensus that French language is the language of love is just verbal masturbation. But popular consensus being popular consensus, the stereotype provides artists with creative direction and Falz has taken inspiration from it for his latest single, “La Fête”. His humorous rap narrative takes on a more sexual motif assisted by a few phrases in French; “C’est le moment de fait la Fête.” Capital Dreams Pictures directs the video in a garage set, emphasizing the dance motif of the single as the models dance to the Demsa produced beat.

A-Q – Lekki Expressway Feat. Wavy The Creator

Off his recently released Blessed Forever project, A-Q’s “Lekki Expressway” just got a deserving video directed by Brother Lee for Temple film Productions. The track’s house house infused harmonies and Wavy The Creator’s vocal contribution on the hook give the Jayy produced track an experimental undertone as A-Q’s push the boundaries of his hip-hop sensibilities without compromising his style. The video mimics his drug infused lyrics as he takes viewers on a trip into the wilder Lagos nightlife with psychedelic lighting, smoke-filled rooms and fancy smoke bongs.

Masterkraft – I Go Dance Feat. Reekado Banks

Released a few months ago, Masterkraft’s “I Go Dance” is primed for dance floors and with Reekado Banks’ accent, its place was set on DJ turn tables. Masterkraft has gone a step further by releasing an adjoining music video for the dancehall number. The Adasa Cookey directed video follows the song’s groovy themes with dancers and set at a party; basically all the things you expect to find at a Nigerian dance club.

Tomi Agape – Breeze Feat. Mazi Chukz

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KcjbR9pDnak

Produced by Spax, Tomi Agape’s “Breeze” saw venture into Afropop’s bright and sunny. With the Caribbean tanned harmonies and Mazi Chukz’s blend of reggae and highlife melodies, the single listened like a late bloomer for summer playlist. And given the warm afternoon time setting, the video continues her summer affiliation. Tomi Agape and Mazi Chukz perform the song is the sunny themed video showing off some skin and brightly coloured sunshades.

Tipsy – Hustle Feat. Olamide

After debuting in 2017 with “E Dakun” and “Hustle”, Tipsy’s remix of “Hustle” featuring Olamide functions on traditional-trimmed infinity-mirrored portal into the singer’s universe apocalyptic universe; “I’m The Last Man Standing In My Lane Now/ I Never Die, Them Wan Bury Me”. The song that placed Olamide in the more traditional and less showy Yoruba territories. The flutes and somber percussion heighten the eeriness of the song which the recently released video doesn’t also pursues. The scare theme  video features shots of flame throwers and a bunch of religious symbolism reminiscent of Yoruba home videos.

Featured Image Credits: YouTube/Masterkraft


You are meeting Debola at a strange time in his life. He wandered into a dream and lost his way back. Tweet at him @debola_abimbolu


Watch Falz and YCee team up for “Something Light”

The aftermath of Davido’s police drama and why Nigerians love gossip

There are still only bare facts on the reinstatement or demotion of Acting Police Commissioner, Imohimi Edgal, but news headlines have gone on to suggest the police officer may have been a victim of a witch-hunting by ‘powerful’ people. This particular speculative report attempts cite a timeline of events that indirectly link the Nigerian Police’s failure to ratify the Acting Commissioner’s rank as a result of how he has handled the investigation of the late Tagbo Umeike, an associate of Davido’s.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BZ-5dX5F-n_/?taken-by=davidoofficial

Over the past weeks, there were several reports by media outlets pulling apart all the public details around the recent deaths of DJ Olu, Chime Ameachi and Tagbo Umenike, three men who were known compadres with Davido before their untimely demise. Even before the police got involved,  the information in the media had been conflated by actress and girlfriend to the deceased, Caroline Danjuma, who first alleged her late lover’s body had been suspiciously abandoned at the hospital by Davido’s escort. It didn’t take long for bloggers and newspapers to spin dizzying angles that created the media storm that followed, especially as the days after culminated the mysterious deaths of DJ Olu and Chime Ameachi.

During the week, reports of Davido’s acquittal made once again headlines, but this only comes weeks after all reportage around these deaths have circled back to singer, whom the media and police reports made a focus of the investigation into the death of Tagbo. What initially began as the biggest gossip of the year, snowballed into a narrative that placed Davido at the center of what the public presumed a murder case. Tagbo reportedly spent his last moments in the company of the OBO. A press conference by the Lagos State Acting Police Commissioner Imohimi Edgal also further suggested there were inaccuracies in Davido’s initial statement about his whereabouts at the time of Tagbo’s death.  To counter some of the media recourse that followed, Davido’s team released a press statement, as well as CCTV footage from what is said to be the last encounter Tagbo had with the singer.

Somewhere on the internet, there is a cringe-worthy news clip of the police commissioner of Lagos State revealing Davido’s house address while detailing the recovery of the vehicle CCTV footage captured to have dropped late Tagbo at General Hospital, Lagos Island. That Davido’s team came out to deny allegations of instructing escorts to dispose of the deceased did not stop the media from accusing the singer of providing false information and potentially colluding in the death of his late friend.

In a sense the media is often considered as a reflection of the morals, social code and ethics of a society, and because the media itself is a living breathing part of the same society, their relationship is symbiotic in a manner that compliments content with audience. For example, the media wouldn’t publish gossip as news if—even the most post-modern—African societies are still not relatively traditionalist and conservative and vice versa.

Ironically, even in conservative societies, indoctrination does not always reflect the reality of the people’s everyday life. Public figures merely become scapegoats for everything usually spoken of in whispers because the culture is too sensitive for everyone to break gender norms, be young wild and free, or even speak out against the government.

In this part of the world, the lives of the rich and famous is weighed against values and what should be a centrist stance for a journalist is compromised by indoctrination and socialisation. Public figures become easy targets because how the media presents their life glimpses our society’s ideological boundaries of what is deemed acceptable.

Nigerian media’s dysfunctional relationship with the celebrity culture is told in how quickly the value for a brand can be petered by negative press which shortens the life-span of a music career. Over the years, it’s as though Davido’s occasional media controversies have metastasised with the same incremental grandeur and shock factor as his career. But the same can be said for 2face, Genevive, D’banj, Asa and others on the endless list of Nigerian celebrities, who live in a culture where gossip fuels the news and public figures are considered for their headline value. We need to change our thinking, facts should not be rendered at the mercy of headlines that emblazon artists in history with grotesque captions of their worst moments.

 


Toye is the Team lead at Native Nigeria. Tweet at him @ToyeSokunbi


There won’t be a Wizkid vs Davido face-off at the MTV EMAs

Wande Coal just flipped the script on Niniola with his “Maradona” cover

After releasing experimental singles like “Shabba” and other releases challenging stereotypes for what should pass for pop music in Nigeria, it turned out “Maradona” was all Niniola needed to make the cross to mainstream acclaim. Continuing her African styled EDM harmonies, and a story arch defying female sexual taboos in these parts, she gained pop icon-hood seemingly out of the blue. The hit single asides confirming her ascent as an artist, saw her get booked for shows and boost her fanbase exponentially. But let’s face it, few things scream “Result” louder than a Wande Coal cover.

“Maradona” is proof of Niniola finally hitting her mark and Wande Coal’s recently released cover listens like a testament of that. He offers his own spin to her lyrics but rather than inverting Niniola’s unfaithful lover narrative, he retells it from his perspective as though responding to Niniola’s accusations; “Sey F.B.I. Ni Eh Ni Ton Wa Mi Kiri Oh/ Sey Olopa Ni Eh Ton Shu Mi Kiri”. He goes on to return the accusation singing, “If I Never Had This Money Would You Stay With Me?“.

Wande Coal’s perspective allows him take full advantage of “Maradona”‘s football referencing as he includes more sport metaphors; “Emi Gan Messi Suarez And Neymar”. But Niniola’s mark is still vivid with Wande Coal’s take on her use of ballsy and raunchy Yoruba metaphors. If Niniola wasn’t steamy enough for you, listen to Wande Coal’s “Maradona” cover below.

https://soundcloud.com/musicplugafrica/wande-coal-maradona-cover

Featured Image Credits: Instagram/wandecoal


You are meeting Debola at a strange time in his life. He wandered into a dream and lost his way back. Tweet at him @debola_abimbolu


ICYMI: Revisit our Up close and personal profile Niniola

M.I’s new track is kind of fire but not all of it adds up

If there is one thing M.I especially gets right on his new track, “You Rappers Should Fix Up Your Lives”, it’s the self-awareness that he should be close to retirement. Technically rappers never retire, but the goal is presumably to reach a class of living greats where nothing the artist does can go wrong; for perspective, think JayZ, Dr Dre, Lil Wayne and Eminem.

M.I’s rise to critical acclaim and his career since have been documented as part of the Jude Abaga story through the years. Some of it was recently re-hashed during the rapper’s guest appearance on Pulse’ Loose Talk Podcast, recalling years of the media questioning M.I’s legacy. The going premise is that The Chairman‘s cultural value has gradually dampened over time. For an artist, this can mean his music has failed shelf-life tests, or that holes need to be poked in his overblown ego. Thus, it comes as no surprise that M.I has been defensive with his approach to critical judgment of his place in Nigerian music history.

On “The Finale”, the opening track off M.I’s Illegal Music 3 mixtape, he raps of a realisation of purpose, and becoming a structure that ‘can house the homeless’. Though introspection saves the rest of the tape from delving further into a central focus set on M.I’s repeated promise to ‘save the game’, his latest track is a lone single, and once again M.I is charging himself with the task of a resurgence to usurp the current industry order.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BadmY5RH27E/?taken-by=mi_abaga

Produced by NATIVE #Trybesman, Patrickxxlee, “YRSFUYL” is predetermined with the same ambient synths reminiscent of Patrick’s Disco Utopia days. M.I benefits from Patrickxxlee’s use of low rumbling heavy bass, allowing him to chant over the whole arrangement with the prominence of a man who wants to be heard as clearly as possible. He is not nearly accentuating every word, as he is speaking to his contemporaries with the tampered rage of a kingpin at dinner with his erring mob. ‘Clark Kent, Clark Kent/ we need Superman/ So I had to get in the booth’, M.I raps, self-proclaiming himself, once again as the Messiah to rescue the hip-hop game, in a manner only similar to that infamous mobster movie quote: “If you want a job done right, you have to do it yourself”.

Funnily, this is a narrative M.I has saddled his ride to glory with since he declared himself ‘Naija’s rap messiah’ on “Safe” nearly a decade ago. The years following M.I’s initial success, however, has seen the rapper moving from strength-to-strength by adapting to industry shifts to meet his goals as an artist. Notably, M.I made effort to retain critical reverence with his Illegal Music mixtapes, while cornering the mainstream market with albums primed for radio. Along with other iconic parts of M.I’s discography—where lyrical ability or weight of the subject matter gleaned his deftness as a master wordsmith—Mr Incredible has no doubt made something out of the nothingness, in an industry where rappers are almost predestined to languish in the underground. But it’s 2017 and it appears M.I is being haunted for doing just enough where he could have done more.

The intentions behind “YRSFUYL” are seemingly noble as M.I puts it plainly, when he goes ‘SA rappers out here killing y’all’, an understatement—in fact—of the increasing global interest in hip-hop from South Africa, partially due to the recent international buzz around Casper Nyovest and Nasty C. In a sense, one would also presume the more expansive successes of Wizkid and Davido with Afropop should spill over to related genres like Nigerian Hip-Hop. But the problem lies in the premise of such thinking, firstly, because there is a deep socio-cultural history to why South African music has so many foreign influences, and secondly because M.I is merely alluding to past glory in the oblivion of how much has changed since he first picked up a mic.

Today, digital media and streaming continue to curate and evolve how listeners discover music. And because music tastes often remain consistent over time, even the most stringent soundscapes have broadened to accommodate a blend of ideas. It may have been important to answer questions like: “Who is the best rapper?” a few years ago, but artists are now rated on several scales depending on the direction of the conversation. What is labelled as ‘rap’ today, is solely defined by the listener, and anyone who is still calling out ‘rap-singers’, hasn’t probably been listening to the radio for the last three years or so.

At it’s worst,  “YRSFUYL”  is M.I’s high-minded approach to the failure of Nigerian rap to sustain a place in the mainstream.  Which is almost bizarre, coming from the same man who also profited off an industry where corporate sponsorship artificially inflates artists value thanks to radio being the sole determiner who’s hot and who’s not. Even more questionable is that M.I has often reflected his choice to make commercial albums on fans, but during his appearance on Loose Talk podcast, the Chairman admitted seeking inspiration from his self-publishing millennial counterparts like Odunsi and Tay Iwar. So one wonders which ‘rappers’ M.I thinks should fix up their lives, after all, within the same generation of artists, there are rappers like Sute Iwar, Straffiti, A.T, King Zamir, AYLO, and PayBac amongst others, who are critically revered by small but strong niche followings, against odds of radio support.

Despite a tepid central theme, there are moments of flair on “YRSFUYL”. M.I’s cheeky closing line particularly puts things in focus, when M raps ‘I made this shit easy for ya’ll/ I laid it off the board/ You messing up my alley-oop’.  It may not be enough that M.I is on this #FixUp campaign instead of heading back to the studio to work on altering what may become an uncharacteristic legacy, it’s also hard to fault the man’s claim that someone else should have capitalised on the sacrifices he made.


Toye is the Team lead at Native Nigeria. Tweet at him @ToyeSokunbi


Nasty C, Ice Prince and Jidenna dance their way into Major Lazer and DJ Maphorisa’s “Particula” music video

The Ake Book And Arts Festival tackles the mercurial “That ‘F’ Word”

Books are a huge part of our lives. We study them, we use them for recording and analytical purposes, we consume them for leisure. But we rarely get to celebrate them, really indulge in the enjoyment of books for their own sake. This is why festivals like the Ake Book And Arts Festival matter.

The Ake Arts and Book Festival is an annual five-day programme of cultural and literature focused events centered around a carefully chosen theme.  Book chats, panel discussions, readings, workshops,  performances, and panel discussions, stage plays, film screenings, art exhibitions featuring Nigerian and international authors, writers and thinkers are arranged. Events also include school visits and a comprehensive book fair to which pupils, publishers, book lovers and the general public are invited to visit. There literally is an event for everyone, no matter your inclinations (no football viewing centres though, sorry).

This year’s festival is theme “That ‘F’ Word”. The first word that obviously comes to mind when you considering this year’s guest list is ‘female’. Women have been marginalized in all spheres of human endeavour, especially in literary circles in Nigeria, even though they are the most distinguished and celebrated writers and novelists the country has produced. This year’s Festival will put them in the spotlight, highlight their achievements, offer them a soapbox on which to explain the limitations that hinder their success and prevent them from telling their stories. Of course this year’s festival will also touch the other taboo ‘F’ word; Feminism.

This year’s Festival is happening mid-November, November 14 – 18, 2017 to be exact. One of the reasons we love the Ake festival is that it takes everyone away from the eternal frenzy of Lagos to  Abeokuta, Ogun State, Nigeria. Apart from its significance as a cultural landmark and a major tourist destination (it is home to Olumo Rock) and the capital of Ogun State, it is also home to the people of Ake, an ancient community from the region and for which one of Wole Soyinka’s memoirs is named. Against the backdrop of the rocky hills of Abeokuta in the lush South Western countryside. The main venue for Ake Arts and Book Festival will be the Arts & Culture Center, Kuto, Abeokuta, which boasts of a range purposebuilt event spaces and an amphitheatre.

The best part of Ake however, apart from all the diverse events that will happen over the course of the festival are the diverse guests that have been invited from all across the world world to participate in panels, hold book readings and talks and just generally meet their fans. This year’s line up has a impressive cachet of emerging writers, singers and creators and we compiled our personal wishlist of people we would love to meet and pick brains with. But apart from them, we’d be pretty stoked to see Buzzfeed editor Bim Adewumi, writer and first lady of Kaduna state Hadiza Isma El-Rufai, Director of critically acclaimed film Isoken Jade Osiberu, linguist Kọ́lá Túbọ̀sún, critic and journalist Kadaria Ahmed and memoirist Samira Sanusi, Mazi Nwonu (editor of spec fic magazine Omenana) and Zinzi Clemmons.

The festival this year is organised by the Book Buzz foundation with support from its valued partners; The EU, Ogun State Government, Annoying Logo, Etisalat Nigeria and Park Inn, Abeokuta.

You can register here for this year’s festival OR in person at the Ake Festival Registration Point from 14th.

Once we know more, you guys will know more.

See you at the festival.

Featured Image Credit: Twitter/@Akefestival


Edwin eats his rice and cabbages. Tweet at him@edgothboy


ICYMI: Here’s everthing you missed at the Accra Food festival; celbrating everything we love about Ghana

Nova is torn by the ambivalence of an unrepentant lover on “Heartless”

If you grew up in the late 90’s – early 2000’s then your childhood/teenage years are defined by the explosion of Caribbean inspired music. We all know by heart that distinctive island inspired four count percussion that everyone from Shaggy to Kevin Lyttle used, and when singer Nova interpolates this iconic beat, subtly tweaking the base elements to infuse it a significant more pop influenced sound. Add a simple four chord piano progression and some tambourines, and you have the perfect tableau on which to lay out “Heartless”, a new take on some good old heart break.

We don’t often get to hear men sing about emotional distress, especially when it is the result of a straying lover, but Nova really leans into the misery, betrayal and confusion that exact situation could bring. He sees her duplicity, her unwillingness to commit to him and the relationship they’re supposed to be building together, and her infidelities, but the intensity of the emotions he feels for her keeps him trapped in their destructive relationship, somehow hoping that maybe she’ll change for him. But it is obvious to us, if not to him, that there’s no silver lining to their situation, no scenario in which they end up together.

It’s never gonna end well.

Listen to “Heartless” here.

 


Edwin eats his rice and cabbages. Tweet at him@edgothboy


Listen: Nova goes the lo-fi route with King Zamir for ‘Maddness’

Get on Juls’ “Gwarn” featuring Burna Boy

Six months ago British Ghanaian producer and Disk Jockey, Juls released his Leap of Faith EP to almost immediate acclaim. Three days ago, Juls is nominated for the MOBO awards under the Best African Act category. Today, Juls releases new song “Gwarn”, a natural bop, with Burna Boy. “Gwarn” is their second collaboration thus far, following Burna Boy’s “Rock Your Body”.

https://www.instagram.com/p/Bad7Wp0gYx8/?taken-by=julsbaby_

Their teamwork again is organic on “Gwarn”, with twangy guitar riffs, synths and mid-tempo drums of Ghanaian highlife.

Over four minutes, “Gwarn” slowly reveals itself through salacious lines that Burna manages to conceal under his not so conspicuous way of speaking in patois. With lines like “You have to know everything your woman need o before you loose her to a bad man like me”, “She wants me to leave everything I dey do and come along with her”, and a voice murmuring remarks like “Pussy Specialist” woven with Twi in the background, you are assured he tells just one story on “Gwarn”, yet it feels deliberately granular with details that never fully crystallise.

Burna speaks in direct English and metaphors. And when rapping or singing, it’s really no news he always seems to be speaking a jargonistic language of his own. Some lines are easy to spot, but that ambiguous lyrical style always works in the song’s favour. Juls here is the one that takes this thing Burna utters with this thing called time and beats.

Stream DJ Juls’ “Gwarn” featuring Burna Boy via Apple music below.



Fisayo is a journalist in search of words. Tweet at her @fisvyo


ICYMI: Essentials: Juls Did His Homework Before His ‘Leap Of Faith’ EP

AV Club: Joseph Nti’s “Off The Top” doesn’t take itself too seriously and therein lies its magic

Video is lit right now.

Ever since digital marketers worldwide pressured Facebook into optimizing its algorithm to prioritise video, everyone has been trying break into the video industry and become a pioneer. Even MTV dissolved its well respected long form news room and channelled all that money and expertise into a video unit. Africa isn’t too far behind on this trend either, from Capetown to Accra to Casablanca, small media companies seem to be setting up video units and trying out wild and wacky ideas that build on the reality tv, millennial opinion craze that crystallised in the podcast industry and is spreading everywhere. But getting it right is easier said than done, with various talkshows coming and going, just as quickly as they arrived

Joseph Nti’s Off The Top, has proven a runaway success with little PR and just four episodes. Nti, an experimental filmmaker who’s known for his documentaries, went on a tangent with the show, whose premise is similar to many other Q&A shows, except for two fundamental differences; every episode is decidedly Ghanaian, and every episode is deliberately trivial. There are no existential questions thrown at the show’s rotating roster of guests, no fancy make up or elaborate hair dos, no expectations of anything other than an off-the-top-of-your-head answer. There’s a self deprecating silliness to the show that allows us laugh with the show’s cast, even when they make a mess of themselves, flubbing perfectly easy questions. We laugh because we know that they should know the answers, and we root for  them when they bluff their way to a win. Joseph Nti’s created a show so carried by its cast’s excellent chemistry that we end the episodes sated and eager for another one.

We don’t know how Off The Top will evolve in the coming months, but we’re curious to find out.

Watch Off The Top Here.


Edwin eats his rice and cabbages. Tweet at him@edgothboy


AV Club: The guys behind “Dawn of Thunder” want to bring our very own thunder god to life

Erykah Badu compiles fourth edition of celebrity-curated Fela Kuti reissue

In manner no one before or after him has managed, Fela Anikulapo Kuti’s took our music to the world. But what transcends his legacy past his designation as a musical ambassador, is his role as a public figure and political activist speaking against the oppression of his people. As the world honors his inspirational music and ideologies with the celebration of his 79th birthday anniversary, Knitting Factory Records have announced they are a releasing a fourth installment of their critically acclaimed Fela Kuti Vinyl Box Set with Erykah Badu as curator.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BaUC-78Ho5T/?hl=en&taken-by=erykahbadu

The soul goddess of the galaxy has selected some of her “Favorite Fela Pieces Of All Time” for the 7-album box set expected to be released on the 15th of December. The albums include Yellow Fever (1976), No Agreement (1977), J.J.D. (1977), V.I.P. (1979), Coffin For Head Of State (1980), Army Arrangement (1984) and Underground System (1992).

The limited—3,000 copies—edition box set comes with a 16-inch by 24-inch poster by Lemi Ghariokwu, who designed 26 of Kuti’s album covers. There will also be a 20-page booklet featuring 7 essays by Erykah Badu as well as 7 in-depth commentaries by music critic and historian, Chris May. Never before published photos of Fela Kuti have will also be features in the package selling for $120 a piece.

Erykah Badu through a press statement said, “Fela Kuti is a Fucking Genius” and would prefer if her compilation is played while smoking “A Nice Blunt.. With A Nice Slow Burn”. Pre-orders are going on here but you can see the tracklist below.

Yellow Fever
Side A. “Yellow Fever”
Side B. “Na Poi ‘75”

No Agreement
Side A. “No Agreement”
Side B. “Dog Eat Dog” (Instrumental)

J.J.D.
Side A. “Part 1”
Side B. “Part 2”

V.I.P.
Side A. “Part 1”
Side B. “Part 2”

Coffin For Head of State
Side A. “Part 1”
Side B. “Part 2”

Army Arrangement
Side A. “Part 1”
Side B. “Part 2”

Underground System
Side A. “Underground System”
Side B. “Pansa Pansa”

Featured Image Credits: Instagram/erykahbadu


You are meeting Debola at a strange time in his life. He wandered into a dream and lost his way back. Tweet at him @debola_abimbolu


The Shuffle: “Trouble Sleep Yanga Wake Am” was Fela at his most succinct

On “Afro Lover” Ozzmanic bids for Afropop earbuds

The personal and the pursuance of approval can often be at odds. For Ozzmanic, it remains to be seen. But he seems poised for a crossover with “Afro Lover”.

Young and interesting, Ozzmanic, very passionate about Rap, emerged in the Toronto music scene as a Trap artist in 2013 with a Diss song titled “Benjamins”, a track that inspired a follow up EP, The Risk Tape in 2016. But Ozzmanic found that what had become his signature sound wasn’t good enough for him to make an introduction in the current Nigerian music scene, so to kick off, Ozz chose to collaborate with Jinmi Abduls for “One Question”, a dancehall number running on over sixty thousand plays on his soundcloud, released in July. His new single “Afro Lover”, Off his upcoming sophomore EP titled Rainbow, is among the more sonically African songs on his small catalog yet. It showcases a person who is trying to get his start in the Nigerian music scene, by conducting his own investigations into the Afropop world.

Despite this, “Afro Lover” is in equal parts compromising and as straightforward as the typical romantic Afropop track.

Right before entering Duktor Sett’s scene, “Afro Lover” begins a little cheeky, set as though he were in a studio session, with one or two voices telling him to kick off with a freestyle. But much of the song exists in the world of Ozzmanic’s and producer Duktor Sett before embarking on a sampling moment on the two-minute mark to detail half a verse from Mo hits’ 2008 track “Booty Call”. While he can’t downright be accused of imitation all through the four-minute track, the way he utters his lyrics and harmonies via his baritone voice, finely begs for a parallel with Boj.

On the song, Ozzmanic bids his love for another’s, seeking to be their ‘Afro lover’. The percussions and synths nods as much to Afropop as his lyrics but even as it progresses, it still refuses to settle into what we could call Ozzmanic’s and may come off a tad corny. There’s nothing more cliched than singing Afropop on a love theme anyway.

However, Ozzmanic, still building and constructing the body of his music, seems set for the Nigerian Music scene with “Afro Lover”. The EP, Rainbow that’s soon to arrive should showcase Ozzmanic’s actual mind or charm and should be more satisfying. So get ready.

Meanwhile, you should bump his new single “Afro Lover” produced by Duktor sett below.

Featured Image Credit: Instagram/Ozzmanic


Fisayo is a journalist in search of words. Tweet at her @fisvyo


ICYMI: Mannywellz’ New Single Abstracts Nigerians’ “American Dream”

Sess and Spax are still working on their joint project but “Don’t Worry” is out already

There is an on-going conversation about rewarding producers and lately, more and more producers have put out independent releases in an attempt to step out from behind the curtains and share some of the limelight they are otherwise merely instrumental to creating. For his part, Sess has released an instrumental PRBLM EP earlier this year, but with next to no promotion, the tape didn’t get the most encouraging feedback. Not one to go down without a fight though, he has announced a joint Short Renditions tape with Spax, expected to be released at a yet-to-be specified date.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BaRt1k6BSLb/?hl=en&taken-by=sessbeats

Perhaps learning from the failings of his PRBLM EP, Short Renditions won’t focus on instrumentals alone. And to prove this, “Don’t Worry” is pre-released to give a tip of the iceberg. Spax sticks to production, creating an atmospheric and uplifting Afropop harmony with piano samples, guitar riffs and horns. His mid-tempo synth layering gives Sess the chance to show off his vocals (albeit auto-tuned with experienced precision) and a taste for love inclined lyrics.

Both producers have been prolific in their respective rights, but if “Don’t Worry” is anything to go by, we could see their careers head in different direction. Despite the short—just over a minute—length of the single, Sess has shown promise for a singing career that could potentially see him rise to Don Jazzy-esque acclaim. But “Don’t Worry” is just “The First Piece Off The Project” and we don’t want to get ahead of ourselves. The suggestive Short Renditions project title and “Don’t Worry”‘s brief listening time gives the impression that the project won’t be lengthy but then again, the man did make his name as Sess ‘The Problem Kid’ off working with other artists, who knows what he will do on his own production.

While we wait, you can listen to “Don’t Worry” below.

Featured Image Credits: Instagram/sessbeats


You are meeting Debola at a strange time in his life. He wandered into a dream and lost his way back. Tweet at him @debola_abimbolu


ICYMI: Check out Sess’ instrumental PRBLM EP

Wande Coal’s “Funkeh” shouts out to infamous YouTube prank video

The path to making popular music is often divided along the moral lines of how much pop culture referencing is allowed before it becomes illegal and plagiarizing. However, Nigerian music’s reputation for unapologetic sampling makes it particularly difficult to defend the nostalgic appendage as a form of art or creativity. But every now and then, artists like Wande Coal who have been around long enough to understand the traitorous moral terrains, deliver songs like his recently released “Funkeh”. Reminding us that popular culture should be reflected in pop music and if sampling is what it takes, then so be it.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BaXfN9onRlB/?hl=en&taken-by=wandecoal

Perhaps because the allure of “Funkeh” is Wande Coal’s all too familiar vocals and his penchant for sexually exciting songs, his reference to popular “Funke!” meme only heightens the already catchy number. Plus with the distinctly sounding upbeat guitar riffs, piano samples and drums Killertunes produces, the song listens fresh and devoid of samples save for the occasional chants of “What?” and Falz’s “Wehdone Sir”, used here as adlib.

Though “Funkeh” is released as Wande Coal’s gift to fans for his 32nd birthday celebration, the song’s narrative is classic humorous love declaring Black Diamond—“I Say Shout Out To Your Daddy Oh Ah/ Awon Lo Fun Eh Ni Idi Nla/ To Fe Ma Sako Funwa.”

There’s no denying that the meme-ification of music helps in its dissemination. But given the song’s release on Wande Coal’s birthday and his widespread appeal, “Funkeh” is more than a scheme. It is his appreciation of the viral trends in Nigerian popular culture. Stream the catchy new single below.

https://soundcloud.com/user-391678699/funkeh

Featured Image Credits: Instagram/wandecoal


You are meeting Debola at a strange time in his life. He wandered into a dream and lost his way back. Tweet at him @debola_abimbolu


The Shuffle: Revisit “That’s Wot’s Up” song that predicted the eternal reign of Wande Coal’s

“Sneak” by DJ Java, Poe and Kiitan showcases Nigeria’s artistic diversity

Not to take anything away from the greats of the past, but this era of Nigerian music has been really exciting. The dizzying variety and richness of Nigerian music has led to the incursion of global sounds like EDM within the context of African music.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BaTtLzfBvP4/?taken-by=djjavaofficial

Released after “Lady”, DJ Java’s third single continues his Afro house intimacy with Kiitan and Poe as guest features. Affirming the increasingly diverse Nigerian music scene, “Sneak” is engineered for the dancefloor with electro/house harmonies rather than the typical highlife and pop influences. Yet, in spite of the ringing difference, the groovey effect is identical.

Kiitan’s looped vocals are so soft, they blend into the beat’s tropical ambience as Poe’s rap flow cuts through the haze without missing a step or bass drop. He performs a club friendly chorus and 2 verses with love themes as anchor for his pseudo-confused-romantic narrative; “Backup Rewind It/ Should I Anoint It Or Bind It?” Asides the undeniably harmonious take on the electronic genre, DJ Java strikes Afrohouse gold on “Sneak” by incorporating Poe, one of Hip-hop’s biggest acts.

Afrohouse’s incursion in mainstream Nigerian music gets a worthy earmark by DJ Java Kiitan and Poe. And you can stream it below.

featured Image Credits: Instagram/djjavaofficial


You are meeting Debola at a strange time in his life. He wandered into a dream and lost his way back. Tweet at him @debola_abimbolu


DJ Yin and BankyOnDBeatz make Afrohouse perfection on “What You Started”