Wizkid and Mut4y’s “Manya” revives evergreen classic Afropop

It’s no surprise that music today is heavily inspired by the past, when musicians were innovators paving the way for the future. But it’s not every day you come across one that isn’t also an insult to the memory of the classics. VIP’s 2003 hit single, “Ahomka Womu” gets a tribute from Wizkid and Mut4y’s on their new collaboration, “Manya”.

https://www.instagram.com/p/Bbh5F7dAq1K/?hl=en&taken-by=wizkidayo

Produced by Killertunes, the synth is set on a rolling bass line, drums and piano harmonies on “Manya” sounds uncanningly similar to “Ahomka Womu”. Couple with the melody Wizkid sings for the chorus, it comes off as a bit of hero-worship from the same Starboy-Legendury Beatz team-up that gave us “Azonto”. Mut4y’s vocals add a tinge of Igbo flavour that heightens the highlife melody that Wizkid fuses into the verses.

Wizkid’s romance-themed lyrics on “Manya” however leave a lot to be desired, as he occasionally gives off the vibe of a one-take freestyle. Though it’s not one of his memorable performance, the nostalgia of the VIP classic is familiar enough to rescue the single. Regardless, it’s a win-win for everyone because the attention on Wizkid will shine the spotlight on one of the gems from Ghana.

Listen to Wizkid and Mut4y’s “Manya” below.

Featured Image Credits: Instagram/wizkidayo


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: Listen to Legendury Beatz and Mr Eazi’s “Heartbeat”

Fall Out Boy announces release date for ‘Mania’ and a Burna Boy feature

There has never been a better time to be a fan of music in Nigeria. Internationally celebrated homegrown artists are not only now a norm, their presence in the mainstream space has also created a feedback loop for collaborations with genres outside of the soundscape.

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

Burna Boy is currently enjoying some of this spotlight for African music, has fronted himself as an Afro-Fusion artist. As such, it is not is not odd that after working through collaborations with A.I on “Chilling Chillin”, Juls on “Gwarn”, and more recently, with Jidenna, on “A Little Bit Of More” remix, that Burna’s new collaboration would be with American rock band, Fall Out Boy.

Fall Out Boy has Burna Boy as a feature on their highly anticipated 7th studio album, Mania, maintaining the Afro-Fusion singer’s growing reputation for knowing how to be at his best when he’s genre-blending. The ten track album was originally scheduled to arrive in September, but was delayed by the band because it wasn’t ready. They revealed via their cheekily named IsManiaDoneYet.com website on Monday that the album is done and will finally be released on the 19th of January.

Of the 10-tracklist, “Sunshine Riptide” featuring Burna Boy is the only track with a featured artist. You can see the full tracklist below.

  1. Young and Menace
  2. Champion
  3. Stay Frosty/ Royal Milk Tea
  4. Hold Me Tight or Don’t
  5. Last of The Real Ones
  6. Wilson (Expensive Mistakes)
  7. Church
  8. Heavens Gate
  9. Sunshine Riptide Feat. Burna Boy
  10. Bishops Knife Trick

Featured Image Credits: Instagram/falloutboy


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


Revisit: “Burna Reborn”, a glimpse into the country’s most mercurial talent

The Shuffle: Revisiting Trybesmen’s “Plenty Nonsense” as a reflection of the African youth’s everyday angst

Nearly 18 years ago, Trybesmen, dropped their debut album L.A.G style, following the success of classic club hit, “Shake Bodi”. The album also housed “Plenty Nonsense”, a heavy-bass set rap song, featuring verses from the group’s earliest members, Freestyle, K.B and Eldee.

“Plenty Nonsense”, is the Trybesmen’s take on some of the frustrations of being young in an African society. Though the Trybesmen speak in broader terms of the hard knock life as a whole, the social commentary embedded in the track captures uniquely African experiences. Following a chorus simply decrying how there are many everyday realities that shouldn’t be a norm, Freestyle, starts off with a story about a typically Nigerian Police checkpoint stop by officers looking for any reason to harass and assault young people seen driving flashy cars. K.B takes the next verse, to church, only to subtly play out a narrative of how blind faith in religion is used to keep the poor, impoverished. Eldee’s for his part, reflects on how the intense competition for public universities left a lot of young people stuck in the JAMB/WAEC limbo between high school and college in the 90s, while also managing to infuse a correlation between marital abuse and poverty.

On “Plenty Nonsense”, all three Trybesmen deliver verses that carry some of the familiar post-teen angst of a society where random hardships are normalised because of the surrounding situation.

Freestyle’s crime was being a young person driving in a car he probably didn’t look like he could afford, his experience recalls some the familiar instances of police harassment often cited on social media till date. K.B does the more daunting task of challenging the popular belief that blind faith in God is a requirement for prosperity. He exemplifies how the few rich of the church who are testimonies to such tenets of spirituality, encourage and entrap poor members in this flawed mindset by exploiting their situation.

Agreed, unlike Eldee’s poignant final verse, the increase in number of private universities has reduced some of that needle’s eye difficulty of getting a higher education, but not much has changed today either in terms of ease of admission process. And though, abuse against women is being discussed more publicly today, there is still a long way to go in terms changing beliefs and attitudes, which especially difficult in a continent where a lot of people are still poor and uneducated.

“Plenty Nonsense” recalls some of the frustrations that are present in the life of anyone under 40 in Africa, in a sense, this also reflects the general chaos of life itself. How else do you explain, a Zimbabwean coup being the only way out of thirty-seven years of an unpopular Robert Mugabe regime? In 2017 for that matter. Or how does one explain veteran actor Sadiq Daba who should be a national treasure, beckoning to the public via social media for funds to treat a series of terminal ailments? In fact, how does anyone explain to an alien that has never been to earth, how Donald Trump is president of the free world? It’s really all a just a world of “plenty, plenty nonsense”

Stream “Plenty Nonsense” via Apple Music below.


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


Revisit; The Shuffle: 2Baba’s recent Twitter rant recalls the resilience he preached for his “No Shaking” years

Where Art Lovers Come To Play: Ake Books & Art Festival 2017

Ake Books and Arts Festival is to creatives what Wimbledon is to tennis lovers. With every edition they continue to attract different people from all works of the world, who share a  passion for one thing. Art. I’ve never heard of Ake until a few weeks ago through a friend [yeah i can show you the rock I’ve been living under]. With all the book readings, panel discussions, film viewing, and palm wine and Poetry lined up in their programme, I knew this festival needed me. So when the opportunity arose here at NATIVE,it was only right that I took it. While the programme was at best tempting, the way to get here was anything but! But all that detouring together with the hurdle that came with waiting for accommodation, took nothing away from my first experience at the Concert. In fact all of that made it better.

Held at Hubert Ogunde Hall, The live concert opened with a guitar and a voice that evoked in me a sense of belonging, although I couldn’t understand what Celeste was talking about in her song, with her alto rising and falling like waves, to match her fingers on the guitar. I felt she was telling her truth. One that deeply resonated with others in attendance as there were murmurs of agreements. Her second performance Aditi, a slow song about the stress that accompanies hoarding secrets close our hearts. The telltale sign of it’s presence on our fallen faces and the kinship that comes with sharing the burden.

The second act by Joyce Olong was, definitely one of the  highlights of the night as she spoke and touched a lot of hearts with three songs over flowing with three core themes. Marriage,Depression, Anti Violence. The  conflicting ideas of every mother and daughter about love and commitment. the idea that marriage should be every girl’s aspiration and the uncertainty revolving around finding the perfect one  “They say it’s a man’s world …If the love drives you crazy, bring him home”. her second performance was born from her struggle with depression. One she hopes will inspire someone to get better, with this message. “I want you to stay for another day”.  I certainly had goosebumps during her last performance, listening to her sing about shackles and the violence associated with those in the armed forces, whom as opposed to their sworn oath to serve, go about lording over people and responding with violence. To the soldiers she asks

“If I challenged you with your face, would you be able to stand for long”

Still savoring in the delight of Joyce’s act, I paid zero attention when the third act came on stage. Singing about the desire of everyone to be loved, Then Aramide entered her second performance with a song about the indescribable nature of love. Strumming her guitar, she strummed my attention too but didn’t hold it because i didn’t want to believe someone could out do Joyce’s performance.  Not until she switched the atmosphere with her “Money” song.  Throw in a guitar, her ever changing vocals fused with her backup singers’ and a sample from Rihanna’s “Bitch Better Have My Money” then you know why, I had to walk up to her after her performance to personally congratulate her on proving me wrong.

Lola Shoneyin came on stage to announce the fourth act “Adunni Nefretiti” a band of four women, who took us to these places with their songs. Abeokuta, Ijebu,Hausa, Edo, Benue, Igbo, Urhobo. At some point we left the boundaries of Nigeria travelling to Ivory Coast, Pakistan, Ghana, South Africa. One of the noteworthy detail of their act is that giving no care to what country the song originally came from, each track was accompanied with the drum, giving it that Afro flavour. With the drummers, flutist rising swiftly to every switch and turn as we journeyed to these places. At some point I couldn’t tell if the singers were directing the flow of the instruments or if the reverse was the case. Just when the Nefretiti were packing up to get off stage, something happened. A lady came up with a request for an Arabian song and right there with the mic in her hand, without the aid of any instrument, Adunni broke out with an Arabic song, backed up by her Nefretiti gang they gave a notable performance. I feel like this is definitely one of those moments you need to experience for yourself to get the hang of it, because even your imagination will fail you.

The last performance was by Salawa Abeni and her band with strings of songs that literally brought the house down. While everyone was on their feet jumping and singing along, I, the girl under a rock could only nod my head and pretend I knew what was going on. When an older man turned to me and said “I grew up listening to her” . I sat down to reexamine my childhood and wonder where I’ve been all my life to have missed out listening to these Afro songs fused with  fuji, a sound she defined as Waka Music. oh right, A rock. That’s the beauty of attending Ake Fest to engage and allow your mind discover for its self new interest, new guilty pleasures. After the powerhouse Salawa ended her session, I felt educated, or was it emancipated, I’m still deciding.


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


 

These are what you missed at #AKEFest2017

Essentials: Deelokz’ worries and thoughts are vast on “Vinyl Plays” and he writes accordingly

On his second body of work, Vinyl Plays, Deelokz tries to create something existing outside of time, while closely relating it to modern times.

The only description you’ll find on the Soundcloud page for Vinyl Plays, reads “a collection of timeless music that cuts across different moods.”

Categorically, this artist already makes clear the legacy he wants for his craft —one that isn’t affected by the passage of time or changes in this ever-evolving industry. Yet, that word ‘timeless’ raises a couple of questions.

Fusing rap, chants, spoken word poetry and very little singing, Deelokz floats through his 10-track project, Vinyl Plays released just two years after his first body of work titled, The Story of A Lonely Clown. His recent work is rich and transformative, centred on introspective mid-tempo pieces that aim to evoke a pensive ambience. This careful choice of melody, harkens back to mood-set places where some of our favourite musicians and ancestors (think, Count Basie, Earl Sweatshirt, Fleetwood Mac, Ratking, Lagbaja, Bob Marley, Raury and Roots) are or have once been.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BbCTnktB5U_/?taken-by=deee.lokz

On his new project, Deelokz entices us to stay away from the mundane, instead, spend time in grand places. On “A Short Protest”, Deelokz sounds like he’s prophesying biblical doom. Yet this is where he formally introduces you into this collection, when he chants over the talk drum in Yoruba, “heeee, Ati de” which translates into “We’ve/he has arrived”, on the track he also tells, “only the time that he’s about to die, does he feel alive, but he’s ready for war”.  “Broken Records” featuring “Mami-Water” rapper, Paybac (Iboro), is also introspective. It highlights self-destruction, as such you hear when he says: “my comfort zone is a haunted house”“Reign”, the seventh track featuring Joel Prodigee, is one of the well-produced tracks on the lo-fi catalogue, kudos to Producer Alicks. On it, Joel and Deelokz rap about that collateral beauty that is difficult to see amidst pain and hardship.

The first track, “Quarter Past Heart Break” slowly begins with a light and airy tune, transporting you into a similar feeling you’ll get when listening to ambient music in Titanic. But when he begins rapping context into it, you’re pretty sure we are in 2017. The piano on “Gramophone Music” calls to mind emotions from watching an old-school Hollywood musical like La La Land. Like this, Deelokz balances familiar adages and melodies from the past, as such you hear on “Friends That Are Family” with relatable experiences on “African Night”; a mix of today’s music and that of the 40s/50s bound together to create Vinyl Plays.

The true test of music, however, would be the question of how many years later people will still be listening to the song/project for. So how do you make timeless music when/if the tracks haven’t been indeed proven and tested timeless? Another is do you plan to make timeless music or does music become timeless only after release, continued popularity and reliability?

A yardstick of evaluation is definitely to take a look at the patterns of top songs as such you hear from legends like Michael Jackson, Marvin Gaye or Arctic Monkeys and then follow suit to produce good music. But even then, what may prove to be erroneous is the assumption that music is timeless when it has resembling qualities with tracks that have indeed been christened timeless over time.

Deelokz’ desire is to be deemed as one that would transcend his time; he imitates rhythmic patterns and sub-woofer static you would hear on a gramophone or vinyl. Another artist who has similarly tried to register this kind of ambience is Lady Gaga, who recorded Joanne as an analog album, with traditional reel-to-reel tapes that originated in the late 1920s. He does a good job of recalling a part of that era without completely rehashing it —these tracks you’ll hear are remarkably modern too. But the dilemma here is even as he sounds and speaks with some level of gravity beyond his years, it sometimes feels a little too composed. This man Deelokz, purposefully wallows in complicated language. Maybe it’s me of course since I’m the listener and writer right now, or it is these poets and poem-enthusiasts who just wouldn’t say what they want to say in plain terms. Darnit!

Asides being a rapper, Deelokz is also a writer of poems and articles. You’ll find some in his digital booklet for Vinyl Plays. And as you know, creativity in poetry is expressed in metaphor and structure-rich language. His tone and writing style more or less reminds me of famed Journalist and author, Peter Enahoro.  I compare him to Pa Enahoro also because Deelokz’ sometimes writes with satirical humour and because he also feels like old African Literature, with many cryptic sentences that hinder understanding in a single sitting.

Deelokz addresses worldly, grounded issues from a personal view —stuff we can all relate to. His worries and thoughts are vast and he writes accordingly. Much like the quality of music Vinyl Plays emulates, the result does leave a lingering impression on the mind.

Stream Vinyl Plays via SoundCloud below. The music video for “Isoulation” will be out on his Youtube account in January.

Featured Image Credit: Twitter/@Deelokz_


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


ICYMI: Essentials: Joyce Olong’s “Merci Beaute” is excellent, heartfelt storytelling

Listen to Femi Kuti’s New single, “One People, One World”

https://www.instagram.com/p/BbmehEGHx4v/?hl=en&taken-by=femiakuti

For Afrobeat singer Femi Kuti, 2017 has been considerably successful, following concerts held at Paris and Dublin together with his Felabration performance in Nigeria. Perhaps all of these performances helped him realize that his last album “No Place For My Dream”  was actually released 4 years ago.  Or could it be said, his not releasing something new, should be attributed to the artist’s penchant for perfection. Whatever the reason may be, Femi Kuti is ready to redeem himself. For one who is heavily invested in advocating for human rights, it is not surprising that on the note of social injustice, racism and discrimination of every kind, Femi Kuti drops  “One people, One world” the track title of his forthcoming album set to drop February 2018.

Following in his Father’s footsteps, “One World, One People” which basically is, a song calling for the need for a unified world, opens with the sound we’ve come to know so well as “Afro”. He sings on how important the need to love ourselves is, on how we need to see each other without colour, as the only race is the human race. For an artist whose target audience are primarily Europeans, it’s no surprise he would address Europe’s most sensitive social issues.

Listen to “One World, One People” below


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


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

It took a minute, but YCee is finally getting back to rap

Though rap is largely regarded as a mainstream genre, conservative rap heads are always quick to distinguish hip-hop from pop and all its other commercial derivatives. Their loyalty is sworn to rappers who manage to stick to the genre’s quirks while also appealing to mainstream fame like YCee did with “Jagaban”, his breakout single in 2015. He cut his teeth on rap flows and won the hearts of rap fans in Nigeria, only to be nudged into a pop scene a little more concerned with state-of-the-art Afropop and dance music than the clever wordplay he excelled at. His debut project, the First Wave EP gestured to sultry-Afropop with singles like Seyi Shay assisted “Need To Know” and radio favorite, “Juice” featuring Maleek Berry.

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

While the switch secured his relevance in Nigerian music conversations with his songs getting airplay on radio and his guest features on club inclined songs, it made him the scapegoat of MI’s recent unprovoked jab at pop rappers on “You Rappers Should Fix Up Your Lives”. Anyone who shares the same sentiment with Mr Incredible about popular music somehow being less critical because it’s primed for mainstream audience might have to admit their contrarian and contrived bias. Regardless of what beat he sings or raps on, YCee still exhibits the same energy that he puts towards spitting something hard. His latest single, a freestyle titled “I Wish” could easily be aimed at anyone, but the decided hip-hop beat and his conventional rap flow hints at a lone cavalry charge even before his boastful and insulting lyrics.

His first lines, a reference from Batman’s twisted universe—“Like The Joker Going Right Off The Bat”—confirms his blood lust as he maintains the intensity over the synth heavy beat Beatsbykarma produces. Attacking his critics, he reminds everyone he’s still a deft wordsmith while also showing off his mainstream success; “The Hip-hop Game’s Been Ignoring Me/ Act Like They Don’t See What The Boy Be Doing Globally/ Things I’m Doing On A Large Scale Will Leave Your Mind Pale”. 

Though “I Wish” bravely pushes YCee’s artistry into hip-hop’s darker, more aggressive territory at some cost to his chart traction, it highlights his largely understated diversity. You can stream “I Wish” below.

https://soundcloud.com/yceemusic/i-wish-prod-by-beatsbykarma

Featured Image Credits: Instagram/iam_ycee


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: Listen to YCee’s debut project, ‘First Wave’ here

Espacio Dios debuts new single, “Uri Fire”

Last year, Espacio Dios emerged with an immediately identifiable voice that stood out in South Africa despite usually being paired with experimental pop instrumentals that could easily be housed in their EDM scene. While most pop artists usually save their tougher side for rapped bars, or don’t expose it at all, Espacio Dios is unafraid to let his singing voice slip into ragged, arresting territory. And his latest single, “Uri Fire” is so hard, it’s basically hip-hop.

https://twitter.com/espacio_dios/status/928950674729111553

BLFR produces the trap beat with ambient synth sounds and base drops that swims in and out of the looped synths. The trap beat encourages Espacio Dior to dive into fits of showy, aggressive and hungry bars with occasional adlibs. leaving behind all his softer tendencies from singles like love inclined “Ayaba”, Espacio Dios goes for ferocity rapping “I Got It All/ Now Give Me Some More” and referencing some of some of Kendrick’s more memorable line from DAMN; “If I Had Slap On A Bitch Ama Make It Look Sexy”.

Singing a few lines, he makes a convincing case for how malleable hip-hop and R&B can be on “Uri Fire”. He rides the beat comfortably while still going ape shit on the bars. Listen to “Uri Fire” below.

Featured Image Credits: Twitter/espacio_dios


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: Rage with PatricKxxLee on his energetic single, “Run”

The video for “Basiri Mi” establishes why you can’t rule out a 9ice comeback

Even a year ago, if anyone had said 9ice will be having this type of run in 2017, we… well, honestly, we would have have believed it. He’s a well connected man who makes the type of music that transcends time with his quirk for intelligent yet relateable songwriting. After the mainstream success of “Living Things” off his Id Cabasa album doused all preconceived notions about his relevance in today’s Afropop, 9ice continued to show his resilience with “Basiri Mi” released a few months ago. And while it struggled under the weight of Afropop’s unwearying releases, he just released a video—employing the same tactic that helped push “Living  Things” to widespread acclaim.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BRzBuNijgpO/?hl=en&taken-by=iam9ice

“Basiri Mi” finds 9ice in a familiar pseudo-prayerful mindstate where he sings with a peculiar mixture of seriousness and humor—“Make I Fit Go London Hundred Times In A Year/ Make I Fit Follow Rihanna Wonu Baluwe”. TonyWhy’s upbeat instrumental produced with synths, drums, and horns provide the backdrop for 9ice’s blend of Yoruba and English vocals as he lists out what might still go down as this year’s most memorable Christmas wishlist.

9ice throws some of his coins at Clarence Peter’s Capital Dreams Pictures to help make his artistic visions a reality and the payoff is this video for “Basiri Mi”. The greenroom production is far from seamless but you’ll be hardpress to find anything wrong with the artistic direction. 9ice is shown in a virtual monochrome universe where he strolls around watching his wishes animated around him.

You can stream 9ice’s video for “Basiri Mi” below.

Featured Image: YouTube/CAUTION TV


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 9ice and 2 Face’s loyalty to the streets and humble beginnings on “Street Credibility”

DIY Afropop finds fulfillment on Bizzouch’s “Dodo Mayana” featuring Minz, Ichaba and L. A. X

Afropop has always been flashy but lately, big corporations and labels have raised the profile of Afropop artists to almost elusive heights. Watching artists of Wizkid or Davido status look cool as fuck in their music videos and working with top bill producers who can’t seem to do any wrong gives them an insurmountable air. But that hasn’t stopped a few DIY artists from emerging in the soundscape, threatening to give the superstars a run for their money.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BbeesRABIVu/?taken-by=bizzouch_

Bizzouch can boast of past works with L. A. X and DJ Consequence (“Jo Disco” and “Jikolo” respectively) but with less than 100 Soundcloud plays combined on both songs, he might as well have released them into thin air. However, for “Dodo Mayana”, his latest single, he features other artists who have managed to keep a string of noteworthy singles without big label spending. He teams up with Minz, Ichaba and L. A. X for a mid-tempo club inclined love song where they promise their love interests the world.

Over the mix of synths and drum riffs Bizzouch produces, Minz starts off with a verse and also takes the chorus with his vocals filtered through autotunes. Ichaba and L. A. X get a verse each showing off their love and the lengths they’ll go it. Listen to Bizzouch’s “Dodo Mayana” featuring Minz, Ichaba and L. A. X below.

Featured Image Credits: Instagram/bizzouch_


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: Minz has a story to tell on his NATIVE profile and he wants everyone to hear it

6 videos you need to see this week

Jidenna – Boomerang

Brands are creeping into pop music so rapidly these days that before long, your favorite songs and music videos might just be adverts. Off Jidenna’s recently released Boomerang EP, the project title track produced by Diplo was among the standouts of the 6-track tape but you wouldn’t guess that from watching the recently released video for the EDM number. Though Jidenna’s presence is only represented through a bubblehead car-ornament, he provides the soundtrack to a dance-off between two stranded passengers in what seems to be an ad for Instagram’s Boomerang plugin.

DJ Maphorisa – Midnight Starring Feat. DJ Tira, Busiswa and Moonchild 

No one does house music in these parts better than South African DJs and DJ Maphorisa has been around long enough to know the perfect mix to get raves started. He co-produces his latest release, “Midnight Starring” with Destruction Boyz while incorporating vocals DJ Tira, Busiswa and Moonchild who sing of the challenges in today’s communicating channels. Their combination is a joy which this video also brings to light with the neon lights, fancy cars and energetic dance-offs.

Nonso Amadi – Radio

Released December last year, Nonso Amadi’s “Radio” told two stories over the guitar led single with tin-pan drum riffs and piano percussion Juls produces. Coming after his crossover hit single, “Tonight”, his lyrics place him in a familiar romantic terrain where he grieves being separated from his love interest. But while he remains charming for the most part, his brags are unmistakable; “I’m In Your Radio/ I’m Always There”. The recently released video Ua. X directs is similarly sly with the aesthetically satisfying retro filter and seemingly random shots. It’s so easy to miss Nonso sending a letter that brightens his love interest’s day with the nonsensical, fragmented narrative, that we’ll wager that it was intentional.

Richie Benson – Stay Feat. TheBlackBoyJohn

As much as we love to sing along to our favorite pop songs, sometimes the lyrics are so ostentatious we have to check ourselves before a particularly staunch person nearby calls us out on it. This hasn’t stopped anybody though since pop stars usually rely on the illusion of acclaim to market their songs. Music videos also help emphasize their celebrity through the models, blings and everything else the industry thinks you want. However, Richie Benson doesn’t have the label backing or the range to afford a video glamorous enough to backup his flamboyant lyrics on “Stay” released back in August. Featuring TheBlackBoyJohn, “Stay” promised a “Room Full Of Bouquet” and “A New Bugatti” but neither was actualized in the video. We got to see some “Panties Off” though, courtesy of whatever unnamed strip club was featured in the video.

LSMK – Nostalgia

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=29iiQgowmGk

Released a month ago, “Nostalgia” is LSMK’s first single for the year, since debuting with his Lush EP. The single continues his indie-pop affections by utilizing the elements of an autotuned bedroom-seduction and transforming it to a time portal to the “Good Times”. Over the piano led mix of horns and drums mimicking the rhythm of heartbeats that he produces, he references some classic pop singles from artists like Pharrell, Aliyah, J Martins and a few others, wishing everyone would’ve heard and enjoyed them like he did. The video for “Nostalgia” is testament of how resourceful a DIY artist can be as he directs a minimalist and low-budget video set in his studio and taken in one long shot with black and white filters waving in and out of the shot.

Justice League – Heroes Official Trailer

DC and Marvel comparisons gets more and more dated with each new DC Comics adapted movie. While Marvel is sure to deliver the laughs with their witty dialogues, DC tends to focus on creating anarchic universes where human morality is stretched to its fine limits. The trailer of “Heroes”, the follow up to “Batman versus Superman” continues their dark fantasy as Batman tries to assemble the Justice League in the wake of Superman’s death. While many expect that Superman will return, the trailer does nothing to confirm that. It however promises a new threat—possibly from aliens—and a looooot of CGI.

Featured Image Credits: YouTube/Warner Bros. Pictures


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: Rage with PatricKxxLee on his energetic single, “Run”

Masterkraft brings in Wizkid to give “YAPA” remix more traction

Pop music is a lot like television: The good stuff is gripping and expressive, but also bound by format. The quest for longevity sometimes leads artists to embrace worn-but-proven formulas. While on TV, that can mean the addition of a famous face playing a new character—like Sean Astin’s all-purpose role as a computer whiz who solves a few puzzles in the 2nd season of “Stranger Things”—the music analogue is tracking down the biggest artists in order to offer your own twist on the prevailing sound on radio. Released a few weeks ago, Masterkraft’s “Yapa” showeed off the depth of his phonebook with features from Reekado Banks and CDQ. But the recently released remix adds the Starboy to the already star studded number.

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The mid-tempo mix of synth harmonies, rave DJ horns and Afropop drums is produced by Masterkraft for the showy single. The chorus embodying the ostentatious theme of the “Yapa” is taken by CDQ and Reekado Banks who also take a verse each. Wizkid is at that stage in his career where his name and status alone can lift a song from mediocre to a radio banger, but that didn’t stop him from turning up the heat and dropping some rap bars in the process. Though Reekado Banks and CDQ were far from mediocre, we’ve not heard Wizkid rap since his freestyle over Meek Mill’s “Ima Boss” at Tim Westwood’s studio in 2012.

Listen to Masterkraft’s remix of “Yapa” featuring Wizkid, Reekado Banks and CDQ below.

Featured Image Credits: Instagram/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


ICYMI: Masterkraft and Wizkid have another one, “Odoo”

Tekno and Wizkid collaborate on inspirational new single “Mama”

Afropop has had a great past couple of months, and naturally, the increased stakes make competition more fierce and collaborative efforts between the top acts few and far between—until now. Tekno and Wizkid have set aside their industry-manufactured competition for a constructive new single titled “Mama”.

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Tekno has always aimed for affecting composition without taking away Afropop’s dancehall sentiments. Over the mid-tempo beat Spotless produces for “Mama”, he blends melodious singing with motivational speak, backed by Wizkid who confirms “Ojuelegba” suspicions that he’s a better writer when being introspective.

Though the ‘Started From The Bottom’ narrative isn’t the most original, their personality allows them to bring a perspective every Nigerian can relate to. Singing “My Story Go Inspire You But E No Mean Say You No Go Hustle/ Say You No Go Struggle” with a subdued voice, Tekno is thought-provoking before Wizkid provides the much-needed floss; “Them Be Plug But Na We Be Socket/ Money Dey For Bank, E Dey For Pocket”.

Listen to Tekno’s “Mama” featuring Wizkid below.


Featured Image Credits: Instagram/teknoofficial


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: Watch Tekno sneak break dancing moves into the video for emotional single, “Yawa”,

Essentials: Jidenna brings bright and sunny to hip-hop on ‘Boomerang’ EP

Part of what made Jidenna’s last album, The Chief so grand in scale—despite dealing with themes like heartbreak and police brutality—was its many arresting samples designed for warm weather events. Production from various producers; DJ Mustard, Nana Kwabena, Nate Wonder and more let him feature on more than a few Spotify playlists but at the expense of a distinguished sound for his debut. His new EP, Boomerang is exactly how you’ve always envisioned Jidennaa—having a suit for every occasion—as he tries out different variations of pop hip-hop over the 6 track EP featuring Tiwa Savage, Wale, Maleek Berry, Quavo, Burna Boy, Sarkodie and Cromwell.

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After nearly a minute of listening to a someone rant about being ignored, Jidenna finally opens, “Decibels” saying; “With A Snapback And A Suit On Like It’s Draft Day”. Rapping over a mid-tempo base heavy hip-hop instrumental, we hear Jidenna show off his increasingly refined tastes after the success of his already sophisticated “Classic Man” debut.

The title track, “Boomerang” which Diplo produces expands on the experimentation of “Particula” off Major Lazer’s Know No Better EP. With the absence of the other guest features, Jidenna takes centre stage and performs a love song but it’s Diplo’s classic EDM beat with piano samples and 808 drum riffs that stand out. “Spy Candy” continues his romantic story arc focusing on the paranoia that often comes with the relationship. Tiwa Savage features to add a bit of perspective as they sing over a synth-driven beat with an unmistakably similar synth harmony with Nana Kwabena produced “Classic Man”.

Of the 6 tracks on Boomerang, 2 are remixes of tracks from The Chief. “Bambi Too” features Maleek Berry, Quavo and Sarkodie who highlight the allure of the mellow beat Jidenna and Nate Wonder produced. Jidenna’s pidgin English lines on “Little Bit More” weren’t convincing enough to achieve the Afropop eccentric that Jidenna seems to be aiming for but with Burna Boy’s feature on the remix sampling of Fela’s “Arararara/ Ororororo”, the singer is ushered into Afropop territories, no questions asked.

The closing track, “Out Of Body” confirms that Jidenna is aware of his brand’s major criticism through yet another rant session; “With Your Little Black James Bond Shit/ You’re Just Doing That Shit For The Likes”. He continues to ignore the bashing as he hops on a new wave. “Out Of Body” finds Jidenna in Trap music’s spacious synth soundscape where he on “Scrr” away from a Travis Scott impersonation.

Over the 24-minute playtime of Boomerang, Jidenna pop sensibilities stand out as raps over the pleasant sounding beats. You can stream the EP below.


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


Revisit: Jidenna, One African Fest and how we are getting this African time thing all wrong

Listen to Koker’s gospel mash-up on “Testimony”

 

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Using Yoruba lyrics and Fuji infused melodies, Koker’s music always manages to reflect pop culture through contemporary Afropop medium. His latest single, “Testimony” further cements his position in both antique and pop culture as he reinvents some popular worship songs for a faith-inspired new single.

Reinhard produces the organ-led “Testimony” single with upbeat drum riffs, synths and trumpet samples. Koker refixes popular “Joy To The World” Christmas carol, to open the single before going on to perform a love song where he has to prove why he’s worthy of his love interest’s affection. Listing “My Love Na One Of A Kind” and “I’m Solidly Behind You/ I’ll Never Deny You/ Wetin I Go Do, Nobody Ever Do” he’s charming and eventually hits the bullseye with his lyrics referencing “Dorobucci”, “Bad Belle”, “Reggae Blues” and “Oleku” in the same breath.

Koker covers Yinka Ayefele’s “Many Many People” off his Gratitude (Part 1) tape and heightens the song’s gospel undertone but with the old-fashioned arrangements, nothing seems out of place. Listen to Koker’s “Testimony” below.

Featured Image Credits: Instagram/iam_koker


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: Watch Koker head to the street for his video for “Okay”

Hear Jinmi Abduls’ on new single, “Stranger”

Asides being an engaging interviewee, passion and desire seem to be the essence of Jinmi Abduls’ art: His music always circles back to a boy yearning for love. After releasing his JOLAG debut tape earlier in the year and following up with “Itan”, his latest single, “Stranger” is an exercise in tension-building and suspense. He narrates his doomed long-distant romance on a song about perseverance and hunger, about ambition and appetite, and every other emotion that has kept the flame of R&B alive since its inception.

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Though Jinmi Abduls wears his folk music influences proudly on his sleeves, he is careful not to rehash the past on “Stranger”. He produces with synth strings, blocky piano chords, and vast harmony stacks lifting his vocals into a melancholy cry to the heavens—“You See I’m Praying That You Love Me”—hoping to get enough money to get the girl he loves.

The song has many strengths—it’s catchy, economical, and perfectly paced. It makes lush and melodic pop seem like a natural extension of Jinmi Abduls’ aesthetic, rather than a calculated change in scene from his indigenous influences. Listen to Jinmi Abduls’ new single, “Stranger” below.

Featured Image Credits: Instagram/jinmiabduls

 

Best New Music: Davido has something to say about avoiding drama on new track, “FIA”

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Since the Nigerian Police acquitted Davido from the investigation into the death of Tagbo Umenike, the singer has somewhat stayed off radar in a sense of public appearance and controversy. Even his appearance at Heineken’s Lagos Fashion and Design Week to unveil his collaboration with Orange Culture was brief, as the singer exited the Eko Atlantic venue as soon as he took the runaway alongside models donning cuts of his “IF” capsule collection. Sources close to the singer also corroborate this new low-profile, which has in-part been influenced by his on-going 30 Billion World Tour, but mostly the need to stay off the media’s radar for negative press.

There is nothing strange here, it is customary for celebrities all over the world to try to keep their heads low after a major media storm, usually with the aim of separating their public life from their private one. For Davido however, silence has never been his game. Collaborations with Humblesmith on “Osinachi” remix and Falz on “Bahd, Baddo, Baddest”, are recent incursions of times Davido’s personal agenda with Sophie Momodu and Dele Momodu surfaced in his music. Thus it is unsurprising that following the media nightmare from getting wrongfully placed at the centre of an investigation, Davido would release “FIA”, a song about testing limits.

“FIA” is set on a mid-tempo neo-highlife baseline that occasionally gleans jazz inspirations with trumpets and drum stops, a textural combination that has made 2017 Davido’s year with “IF” and “Fall”. Where “FIA” towers above all other OBO releases from this year, however, is in songwriting. It manages to reflect some of his recent personal struggles, without directly dishing into sensitive details. Such genuinely emotive lyrics are rare in a genre dominated by the urge to make people dance, but it is a welcome departure from the norm on what is the third single from Davido’s forthcoming major label debut album.

The central story of “FIA” is told from the perspective of a Davido who is starting to feel used and manipulated at the realisation that his relationship may be inherently materialistic. “But you say If you no get money hide your face/ I hide my face” Davido sings, buttressing his claim on the chorus where he refuses to put himself in a bad way for the sake of love. Albeit in  a different context, Davido uses the second verse to subtly reference his arrest and Caroline Danjuma’s role in fueling the initial false narrative that he had a role to play in the death of Tagbo. “Caroline save your drama”, he says,  as if to shove negative energy away. This part of “FIA” is relational to the synopsis of Davido’s real life as an international African superstar, with all of its own characters and  plot twists. You can hear him affirming this much when he adds,  “You don’t need me in your soap opera”. 

Projecting his real life onto his music has been one of Davido’s greatest tools since his Omo Baba Olowo days. In an era where artists seem to do most of their honest talking through temporary social media posts, it is at least admirable for one of the genre’s leading stars to consistently keep it on wax. After arguably his most successful year since his debut, trumped up charges, tragedy and the Nigerian rumour mill threatened to derail his career, but Davido responded in the only way he knows how: with a hit.

Davido headlines his first Lagos show in five years this December.

Watch the video for “FIA” below, and stream it via Apple Music.


Best New Music: “Che Che” is a well-earned win for Mayorkun’s year long slow burn

A decade-long mystery about the instrumentals for Terry G’s “Free Madness” has been solved

Artists’ dedication to being relatable yet mysterious makes them challenging and compelling. These curious and eccentric bunch have captivated us with their clever wordplay, fascinating vocals and in more peculiar cases, outlandish stunts that can’t be explained even years after the shock effect. We’ll probably always wonder “Who Let The Dog Out?”, if Kim is really having “Sex With A Pharaoh”“What These Bitches Want From A Nigga?” and at least 21 other questions artists left us in the wake of their hit songs. In this part of the world, the puzzle is a decade-long mystery about the instrumentals of Terry G’s “Free Madness”.

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Here’s what we know about “Free Madness”: It was a single-take freestyle, Terry G recorded it while fairly stoned, it supposedly found it’s own way into Alaba DJ mix CDs without Terry G’s knowledge and grew to become the biggest hit from Nigeria when it was released in 2008. All of these made logical sense given the decidedly incoherent lyrics that said so much without actually saying anything for nearly 4 minutes.

However, a post by Twitter user,  @Xcel_101 revealed that Terry G had originally produced the song for a group called Soji Mopol. According to the tweet, “They Came To The Studio, Went Outside And Started Smoking While Terry G Stayed In And Freestyled To The Song”. He confirmed that this was made known to him while smoking with the singer in 2013 after Terry G’s set at Etisalat’s CliqFest at the University of Lagos.

His story is quite the revelation; It explains some of the more cryptic lines from “Free Madness”. His lyrics, “People Wey Get This Beat Eh/ Omo Dem Dey For Outside Eh/ Me I Dey Drop The Freestyle Eh/ To Test My Microphone Eh” listened like a part of the song’s nonsensical universe with gibberish lines. But now we know better and recognize those lines for being the premise the entire song is built on.

You can listen to “Free Madness” below with this new discovery and perhaps get a new perspective to the song and Terry G’s artistic genius.

Featured Image Credits: Instagram/iamterryg


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


Revisit: Terry G’s “Free Madness”

Pana producer, Krizbeatz debut’s “911” featuring Yemi Alade and Harmonize

Since Krizbeatz caught the attention of mainstream media with Tekno’s “Pana”, he has gone on to produce songs for some of your favorite artists, including opening up a Music Academy, for aspiring music producers. In April 2017, he started his own music label “One Wave Empire”.  So far he has released two singles, “Erima” featuring Davido and Tekno, “Boss Whine” featuring Skales. With this newest release “911” . There is no doubt that Krizbeatz’ directive is to challenge the misconception most people have, about music producers remaining flat characters, in the music industry. “911” which features Yemi Alade and Harmonize, is , the first and only song these two have, together.  Krizbeatz’ “911” is fused with just the right amount of mid-tempo highlife and neo-Afrobeat.

The originality apparent in most of Krizbeatz’ works, earned him a “Best Music Producer” nomination at the 2017 Nigerian Entertainment Award, and “Music Producer Of The Year” nomination at the ongoing 2017 AFRIMA Award. If anything these singles from Krizbeats could very much be appetizers to the general public, as he gears up for his forthcoming EP “King of New waves” which is set to drop before 2018.

Listen to “911” below


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


 

Yemi, Falz and Maraji recreate the story behind most broken homes in “Single and Searching”

Watch the video for Yemi Alade and Falz’s “Single & Searching” featuring viral sensation, Maraji

Yemi Alade has officially dropped the video to her freshly released single, Single & Searching  ahead for her BlackMagic Album. To the excitement of a lot of fans, it features Instagram sensation Gloria Oloruntobi aka Maraji.

The video directed by Clarence Peter brings to light the ordeal of women at the hands of their husbands,  those set of married men who constantly act more single, than even the Bachelors. It showcases also the betrayal young girls face when they finally discover they’ve been lied to. These revelations often come with violence and harm, either from the man’s spouse or by the victim’s hand. While it’s refreshing to see creatives use their platforms to address real issues via, videos, it hurts the eye, to see it sometimes done in such satirical manner, which oftentimes undermines the seriousness of the addressed issue.

But again we can’t all depend on artists to make the world better with their craft.  With all her collaborations and solo offerings, the anticipation to Yemi Alade’s third studio project is building up.

Watch “Single & Searching” below


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


Yonda and Mayorkun’s return go to school in “Bad Girl Riri” video

The title of songs are often a signpost offering directions to the music within. Sometimes they suggest what the songs sound like, sometimes they’re a statement of a theme—a clue as to why the song was written. But sometimes the titles appear to be deliberately trying to mess with people’s expectations. Technically, there’s nothing wrong with the “Bad Girl Riri” title for Yonda and Mayorkun’s collaboration given the affectionate dancehall song theme the title explicitly suggests. But the “Bad Girl” lingo subtly hints towards Caribbean melodies. And though Yonda and Mayorkun aren’t exactly known for seeking foreign influences, “Bad Girl Riri” is one of their most traditionally Nigerian dancehall efforts.

Spells produces the upbeat piano-led beat that revives Afropop’s dancehall fascination with gongs, horns and soft guitar riffs in the early 2000’s. Against a backdrop of layered melodies, Yonda and Mayorkun perform their verses in primarily Yoruba language but masterfully blend in other languages from Igbo, English and something in between. The cluster of rhythmic words are just intelligible enough to convey the song’s folk love-story narrative through the Cele-palm-wine music fusion.

The video directed by Unlimited L.A finds Yonda in a classroom where he can’t get the ‘love of his life’ while Mayorkun—of the 30 Billion gang—has no trouble with his Ferrari labeled bicycle.

Watch the video for “Bad Girl Riri” by Yonda and Mayorkun below.

Featured Image Credits: YouTube/DMW HQ


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 the video for Mayorkun and DJ Consequence’s “Blow The Whistle”