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

Since the show debuted the first episode of its African franchise nearly three years ago, Coke Studio has facilitated pan-African music collaborations from artists so culturally diverse in their genres and approach to music that every performance in unexpected and unconventional. Every week, Coke Studio pairs two distinct acts on the continent to exchange pre-released material and perform cover versions of each other’s tracks. This is often a prelude to both artists working together for a Coke Studio original composition in collaboration with a producer. Though the show has prided itself on these genre-mashing experiments for more than four seasons, recordings, performances and original compositions have struggled for clout outside of YouTube clips and the 44-minute run-time of the live show. Thankfully, one of Coke Studio’s recent episodes featuring RunTown and Nasty C spawned a track that proves there may be hope yet for Coke Studio to deliver some actual cultural value beyond ratings and marketing a capitalism.

In a video showing the first meeting between Nasty C, RunTown and Shado Chris, Nasty establishes his intent to tell a story with their collaboration regardless of what the direction the music takes. True to his word, his contribution to “Said”, is a sharp inward look at his path to glory against odds of hate and initial uncertainty from his future fans. This largely sets the tone for RunTown’s cut of “Said”, as the singer hedges both chorus and verse on calling out everyone who had little faith in him. It’s almost reminiscent of RunTown’s similarly hater-targeted “Lagos To Kampala”, especially when he contrasts his life starting from the bottom with the superstar lifestyle his life has since evolved into.

“Said”, is produced by Ivorian veteran mixer, Shado Chris. Shado himself is an artist who decidedly makes Ivory Coast’s signature Coupé-Décalé music, an electronic percussion-based dance music style with minimalist arrangements. Some of that minimalism surfaces on the opening moments of “Said” with Nasty C’s voice coasting on nothing but trap synths and an electronic guitar sample. A beat break and a drum-roll follow Nasty C’s intro, before the arrangement bursts into an electrifying bounce of synths and bass drums, melded together by RunTown’s melody.

Much of Coke Studio’s original compositions may have sailed under, but “Said” combines the best of African hip-hop with the acoustic flavour of West African Afropop, for a song that passes off as a light-bulb idea someone should have executed a long time ago.

Stream RunTown and Nasty C on “Said” for Coke Studio Africa via Apple Music.


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

Essentials: BOJ is doing the mainstream thing on sophomore album, ‘Magic’

Since his days with the DRB crew, BOJ has cooked up a star-making campaign, and “Omo Pastor”, off his debut BOTM album was its warm, gooey center. An impossibly sweet, plainspoken song that showcased his uniquely laidback vocals and a sense of humor that seemed to appealed to all social classes in Nigeria. Yet, despite his music connecting with Nigerians, the album didn’t quite have the crossover effect to move him out of the indie scene and into mainstream acclaim.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BaLzhHCF9ZQ/?hl=en&taken-by=bojonthemicrophone

But lately, we’ve seen BOJ take some positions that have to be seen as an attempt to properly cement a place in Nigeria’s mainstream following his HF Music label signing last year. His Magic sophomore album is more like a canyon to shoot him past former indie glory. While BOTM featured indie acts like Teezee, Bo-J and Fresh L, Magic is a star studded 15-track offering with features from YCee, Falz, Simi, Willy Paul, Lady Jay, Ayo Jay, Wande Coal, Seyi Shay, Banky W and Olamide on pre-released “Wait A Minute” single.

The album begins grandly with titled track, “Magic” as BOJ intones, “O To Ojo Meta Ta Ti Ri Arawa (Translated roughly as ‘Its Been a while since you’ve seen me’) with the solemnity of a bible reading. He goes on to establish the track’s showy theme with a sexual undertone over the mid-tempo beat Studio Magic produces. And though these themes are reflected through a number of tracks like “Nowo” featuring Banky W, YCee assisted “Antidote” focuses more on the affectionate themes with a dance inclined highlife harmony.

“Aisha” finds BOJ venturing into Reggae territories backed by Wande Coal who has proven time and time again that no genre is too complicated for his Afropop melodies. Simi’s feature on “For Sure” gives the album’s pseudo-romance theme a more genuine outlook as she performs a duet with BOJ who even calls out Simi’s name at least twice to punctuate their affection.

There’s no shortage of joyful live instrumentation on Magic, and it all comes together with piano, trombones, trumpets, layered call and response vocals on tracks like “African Lady” featuring Willy Paul from Nairobi. Though there’s a painful lack of a breathtaking moment on the album, it won’t surprise anyone if the album pops with the right marketing strategies.

You can stream BOJ’s Magic below.

Featured Image Credits: Instagram/bojonthemicrophone


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 BOJ’s music video for “Wait A Minute” featuring Olamide here

Going for the Ake Festival this year? These are some of the guest speakers we’re excited to see

Just in case you haven’t heard, we’re in the final stretch before the 2017 Ake Book and Arts Festival kicks off in mid November. The Ake Festival has grown to become one of the most important festivals for writers, artists and book lovers on the continent and with each year, the festival attracts more international writers, artists and activists looking to connect with their Nigerian audiences. This year’s theme “This F Word” is especially interesting, considering it centres the experiences of women in and out of the literary scene and asks us to engage them. The team at Ake have gathered a very diverse panel of women who are artists, creators and writers to speak, hold panels and interact and we are little awed by just how many young women there are on this year’s roster. These are some of bright young talent and veterans we’re eager to connect with at the Festival.

Amara Nicole Okolo

As a writer, Amara Nicole Okolo’s work is distinguished by her ability to focus on the things we’d normally consider boring or transient, mining deep human emotion from these mundane moments and forcing us to feel in the process. She is the author of two short story collections, and most recently her non-fiction memoirist essay on Catapult, dissects her parent’s fraught marriage and lays it bare.

Alexis Okeowo

Alexis Okeowo is best known for her journalistic essays and her by-lines for many of the world’s most reputable news organizations and magazines. Her work in recent times has been centered on Nigeria and its many complexities, and she recently released a A MOONLESS, STARLESS SKY: Ordinary Women and Men Fighting Extremism in Africa”, a collection of her journalistic reporting and creative non-fiction of the people affected by religious extremism and sectarian crisis like Boko Haram. But Okeowo is versatile as her latest essay for the New Yorker on fellow Nigerian creative and disruptor Amaka Osakwe suggests. She will be bringing much needed journalistic insight to the Ake Festival this year.

Ayọ̀bámi Adébáyọ̀

Not many writers, especially ones who have a thriving career and a critically acclaimed debut novel shortlisted for the Bailey’s Prize insists on tonal marks when their names are reproduced in print, but this is one of the ways Ayọ̀bámi Adébáyọ̀ asserts herself in a world that seeks to homogenize her. With a long pedigree in Nigerian literature (she helped start Saraba Mag), and an intimate knowledge of navigating western spaces as a Nigerian writer, Adébáyọ̀’s insights will be invaluable at Ake this year.

Ifeoma Chuwkuogo

There is nary a person who has seen Ifeoma Chukwuogo’s 2016 film Bariga Sugar and not felt strongly about either way. A gifted story teller using the medium of film, Chukwuogo uses nuance and empathy to tell the stories of Nigerian women of all ages, normally banished to two dimensional self serving portrayals.

Joyce Olong

We’ve been huge fans of singer/songwriter Joyce Olong since she first pop up on our radar on the Olma Records PGM EP. Since then, she has signed to the label and is about to put out her debut EP Merci Beaute (reviewed here) which revolves around sisterhood and the telling of complex female stories.

Koleka Putuma

Nigerians will finally get to meet rockstar poet Koleka Putuma whose debut poetry collection Collective Amnesia sold out its first and second print reissue’s thanks to her undeniable moxie and a marketing plan and book tour that saw her connect to thousands of poetry fans in South Africa. Koleka’s already recieved some major press here in Nigeria but it would be great to see her finally bring her magic here.

Mona Elhatawy

When Mona Elhatawy released her controversial collection of Essays Of Headscarves and Hymens, few people could have foreseen just how much it would challenge the beliefs, presumptions and assertions of Muslims across the world. Praised in some circles and vilified in others, Elhatawy has become an avatar for Muslim women navigating their place in a world that seeks limit them. If not for anything, you can be sure that Elhatawy’s panel at the Ake Festival will be electric.

Yvonne Owuor (Dust)

Caine Prize Winner Yvonne Owuor’s Dust is finally making its way through the Europe and America and getting the global attention it deserves. But we have always been in awe of her superb storytelling and her great Kenyan epic, a book that challenges everything we think and know about how to write about Africa. We’ll certainly be sitting at her feet at Ake Festival.

Olumide Popoola

Olumide Popoola’s new novel When we speak of Nothing (which I have actually read) has an unconventional protagonist who falls somewhere on the LGBT spectrum and navigates a world that doesn’t quite know what to do with him. Between the UK and Nigeria, parents that are both protective and secretive and difficult friendships, Popoola asks us to imagine the very thing that we often overlook, that LGBT persons are among us, and they are far more normal than we’d care to admit.

Olutimehin Adegbeye (TED)

“Who Belongs In A City”this is the question that Olutimehin Adegbeye asks in her TED Talk heard around the world. Timehin’s TED Talk and much of her activism in the last year has revolved around the forced evictions of people in Fishing villages in Lagos state, where the governor is trying to ‘create’ a luxury megapolis by erasing anything contradicts that dream. Unafraid to tackle important questions, unapologetic about her convictions and utterly convincing with her arguments, Timehin is certainly going to be one of the highlights of this year’s Ake festival.

Poetra Asantewa

Poetra Asantewa already has somewhat of a love affair with Nigeria. She was chosen as part of the Farafina Creative Writing Workshop class of 2016 and is very enmeshed in Nigeria’s creative writing scene thanks to her riveting essay on Olisa TV’s Supplement. But she is also a major voice in Ghana’s growing spoken word poetry scene, where she helped create Black Girl Glow, a collective created to help raise the profile of female artists in Ghana. She’ll be bringing her words and ideas to Ake.

So what are you waiting for, go register. 

 


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


PSA: Our histories and cultures are not a gag for you to get some internet attention

See love from Maleek Berry’s POV on “Let Me Know”

The core  concept behind Maleek Berry’s Last Daze of Summer EP released last year, was the transience of Summer. Though his loose storytelling may not essentially allow us call the EP a concept album, all 6 tracks on the project are tributes to the joie de vivre of Summer and the romance it inevitably inspires. While hit track, “Kontrol” details his lover’s assertiveness and remains relevant regardless of the season, the video’s vibrant and colorful motif cached it aptly into summe

https://www.instagram.com/p/BaMChqzlSmt/?taken-by=maleekberry

His latest release is a music video for “Let Me Know” off the EP. JM Films directs the summer tinged video with filters and themes that are once again reminiscent of romantic getaways and exotic vacations. The video however brings a new dimension to Maleek Berry’s music  as he features in the video, but only as an observer while his love interest is shown through the eyes of her easily distracted boyfriend.

The lover’s vacation has a number of happy moments but the occasional fights and disagreements shown mean there’s hope for Maleek’s helplessly romantic singing—“Omo Let Me Know/ You Don’t Want To Be Solo/ Put You On My Team For Sure”. And without breaking character or even bothering with costume change, the video morphs into a video for “Lost In The World” where he gets into a fight with the same love interest from “Let Me Know”‘s video.

It’s unclear if the video follows the same storyline, but both videos are unmistakably summer.Watch the video below.

Featured Image Credits: YouTube/Maleek Berry


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: Go behind the scenes with Maleek Berry on Tidal’s short film, “Where I’m From”

The Shuffle: Revisiting Endia’s “Me and My Guys” for all the lost ones

On the first breath of “Me and My Guys” , Endia allows synths and drums to preclude his entry before asking: “Me and my guys dem, shey we go live long?”.

If questioning death is considered a sort of omen in this part of the world, asking if death would be delayed for long enough to witness the actualisation of dreams and aspirations, is downright negative thinking. Yet Endia’s existential hook for a song that could be presumed a squad anthem only comes full-circle when core themes of process and inner-circle support resurface elsewhere on the single. Process as a part of creative growth is highlighted when Endia sings of making “Music wey dem make them people start to gyrate/ cos when dem gyrate/ E mean say we dey penetrate”. It’s a cheeky way to describe how he and his crew study the market, but it comes with self-awareness of the slow but gradual journey to the fame and success.

The early years of an artist’s career are earmarked by uncertainties and doubts. But the hustle is especially tasking in Nigeria where newcomers are expected to thrive against odds of a faulty industry where music sales are low and radio alone determines the market. This is why “Me and My Guys” particularly rings deep in the light of DJ Olu’s demise. Affiliations and associations are vital to an artist’s becoming and the late DJ Olu, was an entrepreneur and producer who worked closely with Davido during his formative years in the game. His residency at a handful of London nightclubs gave him the chance to create platforms for many Nigerian artists to get their foot in the door of what later became a global crossover for Afropop—through the UK—in the years that followed.

It said that the top is a lonely place, but as Endia attests, the come-up grind ironically requires strength in numbers. Listening to “MAMG”, one wonders if the top is lonely because of backstage figures like the late DJ Olu, who like many lost ones are only around for long enough to assist the climb to the apex, and nothing more.

Stream Endia’s “Me and My Guyz” below.


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


Best New Music: Kiss Daniel is still making brilliance of alt-Afropop on “Yeba”

Cina Soul’s “00:01” is a torch song par excellence

The torch song is a trope that has been utterly owned by black women since the late 1800’s. Greats like Nina Simone and Billy Holiday made their reputations through torch songs, compositions that somehow manage the capture the entirety of human emotion, particularly loss and despair while remaining uncluttered and accessible. Save for a handful of independent artists, the sub-genre has never really caught on in Africa, understandable considering the kind of expectations we place on music made by women. But ever so often, you come across a song like Ghanaian singer Cina Soul’s “00:01” and you’re reminded why torch songs persevere in a vastly different world from the one where they became popular.

“00:01” an allusion to the magical hour, a stripped down ballad carried almost entirely by droning synth chords, an understated piano loop and an expressive bass guitar that adlibs almost as much as Cina herself. Cina Soul addresses a lover, earnestly professing her love even though she can sense it is somewhat futile to compress herself into her expectations of her. There’s a wantonness to Cina’s voice, a yearning that is best expressed when she lets herself go and really commits.

A genre chameleon, Cina Soul proves (again) that there really is no genre she can’t own.

Watch “oo:o1” here.


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


Best New Music: Kiss Daniel is still making brilliance of alt-Afropop on “Yeba”

Vader puts his emotions through the wringer on “Missing You”

In the 90’s, heartfelt confessional songs was the hallmark of male driven R&B. It was in, we’d even dare say fashionable for singers and rappers to turn the lens on themselves and excoriate the deepest recesses of their minds, offering us carthasis in the process. Sure that era is gone, but the sentiment still remains, and singers like Vader returning to those dark halls and finding themselves in the process.

On the heels of Vader’s debut EP ‘King Of The Night’, an EP on which the singer established his bonafides as a confessional singer, unafraid to tackle themes that are often taboo for men, he proved himself a voice for the millennial generation, tortured by their search for something real in all the facile superficiality that characterizes our lives, the singer just put out “Missing You”, an ambient single, flush with foreboding synths that thump like a subdermal pulse, conjuring despair and helpless. A complex drum loop with a flourish of staccato hi-hats, provide a trap bent to the music, as does Vader’s delivery, digital altering providing a gruff underbelly to his voice and offering him a somewhat aloof stance, as he sings about an ex-lover whose absence continues to haunt him.

“Missing You” is the perfect excuse for a dreary night of wallowing in pasts we are often forbidden from allowing ourselves to miss.

Listen to “Missing You” here.


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


Vader debuts with a brutally honest “Wasted Dreams” single featuring Bawa

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

Reggae supergroup Major Lazer has easily been one of the most progressive collectives working today. The group has been using its influence to put on a number of amazing artists, including Anitta and Pablo Vittar from Brazil and Skales and Yung L from Naija. They have had a strong presence in Africa following their string of features with Nigerian artists (Wizkid, Mr Eazi, Skales and more) and a Diplo visit back in April. Coinciding with Afropop’s recent global fame, their role in African music’s representation on the world stage cannot be understated. Though the 6-tracked Know No Better EP released in June was packed to the brim with guest features from around the world, they left room for Patoranking, Ice Prince, Jidenna and South Africa’s Nasty C on the 3rd track, “Particula”.

The “Johannesburg 1979” text displayed at the start of the “Particula” video sets the scene for an Afrocentric and retro motif of the video before props like Afro wigs, old stereos, tribal face paints and 70’s style dressing consolidates. Nasty C, Ice Prince and Jidenna perform their parts of the song—Nasty C sings in a car, Ice Prince on a roof and Jidenna while is seen fixing his signature coif —before converging at a dance club where DJ Maphorisa spins and gets the crowd dancing. And though Major Lazer only appears via a poster at the club with a picture of all three members of the group, their presence can be heard on the EDM harmony of the Afropop beat.

Stream Major Lazer and DJ Maphorisa’s groovy and retro video for “Particula” featuring Nasty C, Ice Prince and Jidenna below.

Featured Image Credits: YouTube/majorlazer


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: Major Lazer’s Know No Better EP features some of the biggest acts in Africa

Abra Cadabra features Burna Boy on “Lemme At Em”

Since Grime’s golden age in the 00’s, many have wondered about the future of the genre artists like Giggs, Skepta and Nines laid the foundation for. But after Stormzy’s Gang Signs And Prayer album’s international fame, the genre shone brightly especially with the new generation of grime artists like Abra Cadabra who are aren’t too shy to explore and experiment with Afropop’s affection.

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Abra Cadabra’s recently released “Lemme At Em” single that Fred Gibson produces enlists one of Nigeria’s top Afropop artist along with Jelani & Fred. Effectively killing two birds with one stone—adding an authentic Afropop flavor and flaunting his friendship with people in high places—his aggressive boasts get a justifying outlook.

Burna Boy’s history with London may have tinged his slack Afropop patois flow and caused him to lean a few melodies too close rap. But the video for “Lemme At Em” reminds everyone he is Nigerian with the flag displayed boldly behind him.

You can stream the video for “Lemme At Em” below.

Featured Image Credits: YouTube/GRM Daily


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: There is a remix of Mabel’s “Finders Keepers” featuring Burna Boy and Don-E

Johnny Drille gets a second chance at love in his video for “Romeo and Juliet”

Since joining Don Jazzy’s Mavin Dynasty label earlier this year, Johnny Drille has been doing the most with his music video releases. Though his first official release as a Mavin artists was a video for his pre-released “Wait For Me” single, the video was his debut thus leaving him a clean slate to create a image for himself. And so far, his magnum opus begs a question that has never been asked by anyone under Don Jazzy’s label before: Is Johnny Drille some kind of weirdo conceptual artist working in epic music-video mode?

https://www.instagram.com/p/BaG0UxIHThV/?taken-by=johnnydrille

It’s rare for Nigerian artist to take the wheel of their video rollout the way Johnny Drille has by creating a series of conjoined videos. While it’s still unclear if the videos mean his anticipated debut album will follow one storyline, the video for “Wait For Me” and his follow up single, “Romeo And Juliet” seem to tell the same story of Johnny Drille, or at least a version of him.

Over the course of the two videos—both directed by Mex Films—Johnny Drille is a helplessly romantic who is constantly falling for long-hair wearing dark skinned models who play damsel in distress oh so well. After losing his love interest to a fatal ailment while at a military camp in the first video, the video for “Romeo And Juliet” sees him get over the loss and into the arms of a new partner who he’s again ready to “(Give His) Heart. Give It All/ Won’t Take It Back”. 

The same retro motif used in the video for “Wait For Me” that supplements Johnny Drille’s country-esque folk music style and his homely love themes continues on the the video for “Romeo And Juliet”. And as if to emphasize the continuity, the same model used in the first video is seen in a photography but quickly forgotten when the new woman in his live needs saving.

You can watch the video for “Romeo And Juliet” below.

Featured Image Credits: YouTube/MavinRecords


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: Johnny Drille’s video for “Wait For Me” is gloomy as hell

Mannywellz’s new single abstracts Nigerians “American Dream”

Despite growing up in the DMV (District of Columbia, Maryland, Virginia), Mannywellz wears his Nigerian quirks proudly on his sleeves. Back in June, he released “Watermelon” where we heard him invert black stereotypes with a humor born out of his third person perspective of the American society. His latest single, “American Dream” though similarly comical, focuses more on the Nigerian society.

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

“American Dream” was recorded as a freestyle: “This freestyle is so rough that the second verse is just gibberish” he says on his Soundcloud. And yet it still conveys Mannywellz’s impression of the American dream aptly enough to be released as his 5th single for the year. It finds him detailing how he ended up in America with very little say in the matter over a somber piano led instrumental with acoustic guitar licks and backup choir melodies.

His lyrics, “If It’s My Own Way/ I’ll Tell Her No Way” suggests he wasn’t as excited about the migration as his parents who were obviously sold on the American dream of a better life. And though it’s a refreshing enough sentiment, its transcendent vibe eclipses its plainspoken origins. His old works though clearly experimental, shared links with Chance The Rapper’s singing rap style but “American Dream” is full on pop.

You can stream Mannywellz’s “American Dream” below.

 

 

Featured Image Credits: Instagram/mannywellz

 


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 Mannywellz’s “Watermelon” here

Best New Music: Kiss Daniel is still making brilliance of alt-Afropop on “Yeba”

As far as Afropop goes, Kiss Daniel’s guitar-led breakout single “Woju” couldn’t have him figured for anything out of the ordinary.

Produced by DJ Coublon who works best with acoustics, “Woju” is built on an R&B-Folk inspired composition, that shares some of Highlife’s melody and subtle percussive. “Woju” played Kiss Daniel into many hearts, but he was still tuck-away in the same obscurity for every newcomer with a breakout single that doesn’t automatically catapult the said artist into instant limelight.

As though his management realised this, “Laye”, his follow-up single, was released bearing the same acoustic and percussive highlife markings as “Woju”. Albeit “Laye” proved a worthy follow-up to his debut single, critics accused G-WorldWide of trying to amplify Kiss Daniel by milking the same idea twice. The vindication for the label, however, came with “Good Times”, a shimmering Afro-Jazz inspired third single, primed with Kiss Daniel’s preference for melody and chock-full with snares, drums and trumpets, all mashed with synths and backup chants. It’s not a sound to immediately brand ‘alt’, but when compared with everything else on the radio at the time, the inherent inventiveness of “Good Time” proves Kiss Daniel always intended to play by his own rules; a trait that surfaces on his New Era debut where he seamlessly infuses folk songwriting while drawing doo-wop, ska and Afro-Carribean influences.

There’s as much to say about Kiss Daniel’s experimentation with fringe melodies on “Yeba”, as there’s little to say of its pop value. It’s unclear if Kiss Daniel intended “Yeba” as a potential radio hit, or as a part of the grander idea of what he is gradually solidifying into the art of finding harmony in concept mashing. The lines blur at Kiss Daniel’s true popstar ability to build earworms along the composition with melody hinged on couplets, starting with a call-and-response hook laid on a fusion of Latin-inspired baseline and Afrojuju backup vocals. Kiss Daniel is not one write songs without imagery and mid-track additional vocals bring an atmospheric layer to “Yeba” that accentuates the overall sensuality of his subject matter.

“Yeba” is an addition to Kiss Daniel’s smooth sail since the singer broke out nearly two years ago. The biggest hack of his craft perhaps remains how the singer manages to explore a range of fringe soundscapes to create relatively distinct Afropop, Kiss Daniel is the truest anomaly of a genre usually overwrought with cliches and regurgitated ideas.

Stream “Yeba” via Apple Music below.


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


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

Actor O.C Ukeje just put out his first single, proving just about anybody can make an Afropop song

Here’s a little bit of history for you post millennials who only really got into African cinema because of New Nollywood; In the early 2000’s, Nollywood was coming into its own as a global heavyweight and creating its first crop of celebrities whose fame came solely from their acting careers. A lot of money was flowing into the industry and directly into the pockets of the producers, instead of being distributed fairly proportionately between the people who actually ensure these films are profitable (not that much has really changed today). Global exposure (i.e, the internet) gave a handful of these actors whose faces were selling out VHS batches just how influential they are and just how much their international counterparts were making per film. So they banded up and asked for a raise. And the producers responded with a now infamous industry wide ban. In the two years those actors couldn’t work, they moved to Ghollywood and got famous there too, and they also put out a rash of hastily made buzzy singles and albums. Patience Ozorkwor, Nkem Owoh, Jim Iyke, Geneveieve Nnaji and Omotola Jolade Ekeinde (aka Omosexy) all have albums floating out there in the interwebs that they’d much rather pretend doesn’t exist (except for Mama Gee and Nkem Owoh, obvs, their albums were fire).

So it turns out actor O.C Ukeje is taking the same route but for very different reasons. He is signed to Kingstone Records and is releasing a debut single on the 13th of October called “Potato Potahto” featuring Vector The Viper (who also recently started acting) as part of the sountrack for Ghanaian film Potato Potahto. All the hallmarks of the average afropop song are on O.C Ukeje’s debut, autotune, synth heavy instrumentals, a pidgin patois mix, frolicking on the beach. What else could you want in a debut single?

Don’t believe us? See for yourself.

 

The Nollywood problem no one is talking about

Emtee’s riveting hip-hop ballad, “Manando” gets a befitting video

The amount of lives claimed by violence in impoverished communities across the world (often referred to in rap lingo as the ‘streets’) often forces rappers to  they associate the communities they come from to war zones. And though Emtee sang through the pre-released “Ghetto Hero” single off his Manando album, the album still managed to deliver the rap style he’s more known for as well as the street themes he’s loved for. On the album titled track, he grieves the loss of a close friend and his inspiration over a somber piano led number.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BZ6rhXgh6Jz/?hl=en&taken-by=emteethehustla

His Nas-esque storytelling is one of the album’s highlights as he performs the heartfelt tribute that celebrates the life of his fallen brother—“He Was Real. Wasn’t No Pretender/ Beat Your Whole Squad Up. He Had No Contender”. The recently released video for “Manado” released under Ambitiouz Visuals pushes the tribute further with a cinematic motif that reenacts the life and eventual death of song’s tragic hero.

His emotional ode to his friend who is credited as Nthandoyenkhosi Trevor Moremi already described their relationship and the remorseless violence on the street, but the video captures the compelling sense of loss that may get lost in Emtee’s catchy trap flow. Watch the video for “Manado” below.

Featured Image Credits: YouTube/Ambitiouz Entertainment


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 Emtee’s video for “Me And You” featuring Tiwa Savage here

KiDi’s “Odo” gets a major boost with features from Davido and Mayorkun

Underground Hip-life sensation KiDi and winner of MTN’s Hitmaker reality tv competition has been blowing up in Ghana, and making the industry here in Nigeria sit up and take notice with his distinct sound that sits somewhere between the lazy droning of Mr Eazi and the frenzy of Wizkid and showcases his talents as a polyglot and songwriter (he sings in English, Twi and Pidgin). His best performing single however was August’s “Odo“,  a love song that riffs of Davido’s incredibly popular catch phrase “30 billion for the account” from monster hit “If“. While “Odo” isn’t necessarily the most original song out there (there are a handful of other loosely adapted samples),  KiDi does a great job of truly owning his sound and creating a hit.

It seems “Odo” found a fan in Davido, who is about to start his cross country “30 Billion” tour because KiDi just put out a remix of Odo, with guest features not just from Davido, but also Mayorkun. The pop instrumental of the original song is given an afropop make over and he sheds two of his verses to make room. Mayorkun follows in the thematic style of Kidi and references Ghanaian viral hit “One Corner” in his verse and Davido’s verse becomes like an unorthodox duet with KiDi that contrasts all the qualities that extols on his verse. This remix has genuine crossover potential and before long we could see him gaining mainstream traction here in Nigeria.

Listen to “Odo” here.


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


Danagog tags Davido and Mayorkun for “Bambiala”

PSA: Our histories and cultures are not a gag for you to get some internet attention

A random twitter user tweeted this in response to a tweet by actor and comedian Bollylomo. This has been happening with some frequency since October 1st, when the comedian, as part of a trip of Nigerian influencers exploring Akure for travel start up Tripzapp, photographed himself simulating foreplay with a shigidi (an effigy of a Yoruba deity). The comedian was swiftly and overwhelmingly chastised for his impropriety, many pointing out that as a public figure, Bollylomo should have known better than to ridicule yoruba religious imagery for a laugh and some retweets. Bollylomo largely ignored the overwhelming reaction that followed his original tweet before eventually capitulating and quietly deleting his tweet. But the damage was already done and as the tweet above suggests, the internet never forgets.

Unlike most other cultures in Nigeria, badly affected by years of colonialism and then forced Westernization, Yoruba culture and Orisa worship have remained largely unharmed, with the rituals and festivals around these cultures still as relevant in the lives of indigenous Yoruba people today as they were 500 years ago. Orisa worship is a living culture that has evolved  to encompass Western Orthodox religions that tried to use violence and indoctrination to suppress the worship of the deities; new iterations like Santeria, Voodoun and Lucumi. There are millions of adherents to actively practice Orisa worship but have to hide their beliefs because they are considered backward and savage. This idea that African culture is somehow ‘dead’ and available to be disrespected, exploited or destroyed is sad.

While Bollylomo’s actions were particularly distasteful, he isn’t the first or the only Nigerian celebrity who has taken the culture of people he/she doesn’t understand and misappropriated it for personal gain or some attention. The Nigerian entertainment industry has a recurring problem with this. Take for example, Nigerian cinema, especially the ‘epic’ sub genre. There are dozens, nay, hundreds of films by Nigerian directors and producers set in pre-colonial Nigeria, where the costuming of the characters pay no attention to the task of accurately representing the clothes of the people from the time being portrayed. They choose instead to rehash colonial ideas of what ‘ancient’ Africa looks like, drawing inspiration and mutilating traditional ceremonial dress from the Zulu and Xhosa tribes of South Africa (think beaded armour and hide shields) and the Maasai of Kenya. Our music videos are rife with ‘African’ warriors who are dressed and represented in ways that could have been culled right out of a colonial text book.

Why does it matter that Nigerians are finally taking notice of the ignorance, disrespect and absentminded misappropriation that often characterizes celebrity interactions with Nigerian culture?

Well, it means we are finally realising that the idea that our traditional cultures are ‘barbaric’ or ‘outdated’ is misguided and ignorant residue of centuries of Western influence. It also suggests that even though we might not longer personally believe in these cultures, we are finally understanding that they should still be respected and if they are going to be used in contemporary pop culture, the people who want to use them are obligated to make sure that their representations are respectful and accurate. The blurring of the unique traits of individual cultures into  one amorphous ‘African’ stereotype will no longer fly.


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


Tiwa Savage and the curse of the groupie effect

#SluttyGirlFears and the real reason women can’t embrace sexuality like men

The hashtag “Slutty Girl Fears” has received over a thousand tweets in response to a request from notable relationship blogger, Oloni.

If there’s any proof you need that even you who say it’s best to be yourself or not care about being judged, it’s in phrases as subtle as “This might sound like a weird question but…”, or “I Know this may come out a little too judgemental…” or “I know I may be judged for saying this but…”. It surfaces in small yet frequent ways. That a woman has to be constantly prompted to speak truth about parts of her sexuality, sensitivity or womanhood, pre-sheeted for fear of men and fear of being judged by fellow women, brings to the table ideologies of feminism and sexism in a romantic relationship.

To your left, are guys in general. To your right is a girl who is an innately sexual being but instead diminishes or shields herself and her desires so she isn’t labelled a slut. At some place however, are both beings who find these revelations either outrageous or outside acceptable moral boundaries. Right beneath this post, you’ll see all.

But these revelations (as such you find on #sluttygirlfears) are a swirling microcosm of uncharted futuristic territory, aiming to debunk the fear of being judged and missionary sex approaches, by stacking the odds in peoples’ own favour.

The apparent reason for this fear of being labelled such derogatory term however, is that the energy of wanting things to be great in bed is a slutty one. Telling their men what they want could lead to disrespect. But why date someone if you’re doubtful he can’t respect you? Love is respect and in respect, truth must come in.

While this tag certainly touches on gender double standards and slut-shaming, it goes without saying that some aren’t in search of love anyway, but no more than fun. It’s about satisfaction either ways.

See below for tweets and search the tag for results if you’ve been missing out.

https://twitter.com/foreversimma/status/916220373514977285

https://twitter.com/Whereisemma_/status/916248137559363584

https://twitter.com/TemiTisha/status/916054657566375936

https://twitter.com/Kwayylo/status/916360940383297536

https://twitter.com/IndieNightSky/status/916053300289486848

https://twitter.com/QueenCleo_92/status/916052711476428801

https://twitter.com/Kkbricx/status/916053209944276992

https://twitter.com/QueenCleo_92/status/916051017468403713

Featured Image Credit: thrillist.com

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


ICYMI: Amaa Rae Sings of sex like a worshiping session between lovers

6 videos you need to see this week

Kiss Daniel – Yeba

At the risk of sounding repetitive, Kiss Daniel’s video for “Good Time” is always a good way to spend three and a half minutes. When he released it, it showed an artist who understood his sound, his fans and the ambience his songs carry. The club set and retro costumes endorse his dance music as well as his Yoruba lyrics and metaphors respectively. And apparently, he also believes in the popular “if it ain’t broken, don’t fix it” ideology as his recently released video for “Yeba” recreates the retro party theme. This time directed by Clarence Peters who adds some special effect to give the time travel a more holistic perspective.

Jay Sean What You Want Feat. Davido 

As the year draws to a close and top Nigerian artists continue their battle for dominance, Davido scores some extra points with a guest verse on Jay Sean’s “What You Want”. Flexing his global influence, he sings the chorus along with the British singer who is signed to the same Sony label Davido has been linked with. And though his contribution on the song isn’t the most remarkable, he features in the video directed by Miles & AJ.

Unsolved Thriller

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t9q9KMJcae4&feature=youtu.be

The unsolved murders of TuPac and The Notorious B.I.G. has caused a lot of grievance to their families, fans and everyone with any sense of sympathy. The recently released “All Eyez on Me: Tupac Biopic” failed to live up to fans’ expectations for the hip-hop legend’s prestige but USA Network’s true crime murder drama, “Unsolved” believes they can better reenact the story. Ahead of the 2018 premiere, the first trailer has been released for the series directed by Anthony Hemingway who also directed “The People v. O.J. Simpson”. The series stars Marcc Rose from “Straight Outta Compton” as Shakur and Wavyy Jonez as B.I.G. while Josh Duhamel, Jimmi Simpson and Bokeem Woodbine appear as members of the Los Angeles Police Department.

Phyno – Augment Feat. Olamide

On “Augment” both Phyno and Olamide want more blessings and sing as though in prayer over the midtempo beat Masterkraft produces with chants of “Amen”. The video directed by Unlimited LA also continues the gospel premise with the subdued motif and a choir in white robes.

Wu Tang Clan – People Say Feat. Redman

For die-hard Hip-hop fans, Wu-Tang Clan’s grittiest tracks are an unholy matrimony between pornography and the scripture. Their recently released video for “People Say” featuring Redman is set at a street night scene directed by Navegante. The dark and mysterious video is filled with guns, mean mugs, ninja chic, sword and everything that makes the Wu-Tang Clan so potent. Methodman, Redman, Inspectah Deck, and Masta Killa perform their verses off the single from the forthcoming Wu-Tang: The Saga Continues album expected to drop on Thursday.

Sam Smith – “Too Good At Goodbyes” SNL Performance

It has been three years since Sam Smith’s debut appearance on “Saturday Night Live” but this weekend, he made a delightful return to the show with two performances; “Pray” and “Too Good At Goodbyes”. Both singles are expected to feature on his Thrill of It All album slated to drop on the 3rd of November via Capitol Records. But in anticipation of the album, the singer delivers a soulful live performance with SNL’s adjoining backup choir.

Featured Image Credits: YouTube/G Worldwide 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: Watch Dammy Krane recreate his arrest and trails in his video for “Prayer”

Hear PatricKxxLee’s uplifting new single “Rise”

Through the recent successes of Lil Uzi Vert, xxxTentacion, emo-punk, a nostalgic sound that emerged in the 80s has made a strange but progressive comeback through its fusion with hip-hop amongst other genres.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BZ_wReaF2vi/?hl=en&taken-by=patrickxxlee

PatricKxxLee’s debut album, Diary Of An Arsonist showed his ability to channel his dark emotions as muse for his music. He offers this strife-filled rhapsody on his releases and “Rise”, using the rush of whirring electronics, orchestral flourishes, bass drops and electronic guitar samples to create a haunting ambience for his detailed misery.

However, the somber sonics are ironically uplifting balanced against PatricKxxLee’s worries about past regrets and the occasional insecurities that come with self-awareness. Encouraging, “Rise Above The Fall”, he offers unfiltered ecstasy and hope coming from someone who knows what it’s like being down. He could be a broody fellow sometimes, but his reflective lyrics are aware of his gloom and trying to be better for a love interest—“I’ve Been Missing/ From Your Life”. 

Listen to PatricKxxLee’s “Rise” below.

https://soundcloud.com/patrickxxlee/rise

Featured Image Credits: Instagram/patrickxxlee


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 PatricKxxLee’s “Run” somewhere between horrorcore and rap

Is the future of Nigerian films in chick flicks?

Imagine you’re a rebel heart in a subservient world, taunted and discriminated against, you admirably persevere, wearing their scorn like a crown, then one day you wake up and realize you’re not alone, the world has accepted you, finally you belong.

The same could be said of the moniker “Chick Flick” and it’s evolution from a derisive term, to a film genre, a term whose earliest appearances as a cultural form of popular media, dates back to 1988 in America, with movies like “Beyond the Valley of the Dolls” and “Black Mama, White Mama”. in 1996 Helen Fielding’s novel, “Bridget Jones’s Diary” provided a starting point for the British chick cultural explosion, and at the same time the TV series “Sex and the City” based on the book by Candace Bushnell aired. In 2004, Bollywood’s “Bride and Prejudice” a version of Jane Austen’s classic, suggested the presence of chick flicks in the Indian culture, and in 2007, “Letters to a Stranger” marked the introduction of the chick flick culture into Nigeria’s film industry.

It wasn’t hard to see that chick flicks, like chick lit, was a deliberate attempt to appeal to female audiences, as this not only suggested a growing recognition of women’s significance in pop culture, it also provided evidence of concerted efforts, to influence the spending habits of young women, whom at last had been identified as a huge force in an economy, based on consumption. but it was only a matter of time until the definition of “Chick Flick” broadened to include Thrillers, Drama Series and Romantic Comedies.

Following the audience and pristine fame attained from this particular film culture, after “Letters to a Stranger” Nollywood saw the chance for advancement and understood the need to put out movies to the general public, allowing them gain insight into the cultures and traditions of Nigeria and Africa at large, customs that aren’t often presented in the media, or when done, lack authenticity.
By adapting and remaking some of Hollywood’s drama series and stories like “The Desperate Housewives, “Everybody hates Chris”, “Maid of Honor”, “My Best Friend’s Wedding”, “Bridesmaid” etc Nollywood gave to us the best of both worlds in the ever progressive era of global culture.

One could say, the influx of those Hollywood chick-flick replicas into Nollywood at that time, helped subsidize the market globally, and put her on the map, largely owing to nostalgia from Africans in diaspora and their bittersweet yearning for the motherland, and partly to Nigerians with a longing for westernization.
In 2013 with the making of “Alan Poza”, “Gidi Up”,“Lagos Cougars” etc Nollywood though a burgeoning film industry shot up and was listed as “a major economic driver” by Graham Sheffield, a director of arts at the British Council.

Being recognized as a major income source, the federal government afterward made a film village in Calabar and put 1 billion naira towards supporting Nollywood, but despite the funds channeled towards upping the movie industry, quality and content wise, Nollywood is still faced with the challenge of digital film making techniques, in connection with action thrillers and comic book movies.

Ever noticed how Nigerians flood to cinemas when Hollywood movies are showing?, or how Nollywood movies barely stay 3 weeks in the cinema, while Hollywood movies like Avengers, Batman vs Superman etc hardly ever leave the cinemas? This is because comic books have a long and expansive canon that spans at least 70 – 80 years and whole generations of young people were raised on these comics and mythos of the fictional characters that populate them. Seeing these characters translated to real life through life action adaptations is the kind of lure, few comic book faithfuls can resist. Even when the films fall below expectations, fans have such intense nostalgia they continue to revisit and watch these films and actively anticipate new adaptations.

Comic book movies and action thrillers however, are most successful when they stay true to their source and it’s imperative we take into account the cost of producing movies of that scale, and realize, we not only lack the technology and equipment, we also lack consistent consumers, as it will be an economic blunder to make a movie for $100,000, when the average amount a Nigerian movie makes in return is less than $40,000.

Fast forward to 2017, Nollywood sits pretty on the No.2 spot for best film industry worldwide, and movies that are neither dark nor gritty are still much in vogue among Nigerian screenwriters and producers. having generated a massive income from last year’s releases ,with the likes of “The Wedding Party”, “Thirty Days in Atlanta”, “Okafor’s Law”, “10 Days in Sun City” etc. It’s quite telling that these non-violent movies hold a multi-million sector of the film industry, thanks to its marketability and prevailing relevance in the literature and film aspects of popular culture.

Not going to harp on anymore about how non violent movies are governing the scripts of many Nollywood screenwriters, but I’m truly hopeful that one day, when the men and women currently in their 20s and 30s, who grew up watching these Hollywood action thrillers/comic movies and wishing to see great, if not better replicas of them in Nollywood, get to take hold of filmmaking, we might actually see wholly uncynical and digitally improved thriller adaptations, hit the Nigerian film industry.

But as long as producers and directors come from that safe and commercially friendly box of surface level, non-threatening film making, and until Nigerians start paying money to support all kinds of Nigerian movies, we very much are stuck with mass produced, poorly scripted and badly executed chick flicks.


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


The Nollywood problem no one is talking about

Stand up and “Grab The Mic” Nigeria, Comedy Central is coming for the next big comedian

Since 2013 when Nigerian celebrity comedian, Basketmouth debuted for the whole country as a host on “Comedy Central Presents…Live at Parker’s”, Nigeria’s reputation for having good comics has grown. Popular act, Bovi also went on to feature on Comedy Central’s show in Johannesburg, South Africa two years later but the time has come for new acts to be discovered.

With Seyi Law as host, Comedy Central is organizing a three part audition for comedians in Nigeria. Their hunt for the next big comedy act will take them to three states in Nigeria; Lagos, Port Harcourt and Jos where amateur comedians are encouraged to come out for a stand-up comedy session that could potentially change their life. Participants asides the immense recognition Comedy Central will provide, will also stand to win a 1.5 million naira grand prize along with a chance to share a stage with the reputed Ali Baba.

See the audition venues below.

Lagos, Sheraton Hotel, Ikeja
Date: 15 October 2017
Time: 9 AM to 3 PM

Port Harcourt, The Presidential Hotel
Date: 21 October 2017
Time: 9 AM to 3 PM

Jos , SS Lounge , Silk Suites 
Date : 28 October 2017
Time : 9 AM to 3 PM

Featured Image Credits: www.cc.com


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


Luvvie Ajayi isn’t cutting corners for her new comedy show, “I’m Judging You”