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Afrobeat | Zikoko!
  • 7 Times Nigerian Artists Sang About Bad Electricity

    Nina Simone once said, “It’s an artist’s duty to reflect the times,” so Nigeria deserves all the artistic scrutiny it gets. While there are uncountable songs about the many social issues that resonate with Nigerians at the moment, we highlighted the seven that are articulate about our collective sentiments on electricity issues.

    NEPA — Tony Allen

    In 1985, the late Tony Allen released Never Expect Power Always (NEPA), and he just might’ve jinxed us for good with that title. The song was all about how useful electricity supply is to society and how its inconsistency affects people.

    Just Like That — Fela Kuti

    Fela trolled the government on “Just Like That”, a track off his 1986 Teacher Don’t Teach Me Nonsense album. “White man rule us for many years, we get electricity constantly. Our people come take over, dem come build Kainji Dam. Dem come build the dam finish. Electricity come stop.”

    N.E.P.A. Bring The Light — Neo

    N.E.P.A. Bring the Light is a 2007 pop-rock song by a Nigerian band called Neo. Listeners will croak at the part that goes, “I went to NEPA office, they told me they never took the light.” 

    2010 Light Up — Sound Sultan feat. M.I Abaga

    Sound Sultan sang, “When we ask our government o, when Dem go give us light, dem say na 2010,” over a decade ago. It’s 2024 and nothing has changed. We’re still asking when we’ll have stable electricity.

    Rara — Tekno

    In 2016, Tekno bemoaned how frustrating generator noises are on this danceable hit. He talked about fuel scarcity and encouraged government officials to invest in structural development. That was eight years ago. Nothing till now.

    Nepa — A-Q

    On “Nepa” off his 2020 God’s Engineering album, A-Q reminds us that Nigerian electricity always disappears anytime rain comes around. He compares NEPA to rappers that splurge on shiny jewellery but have no longevity. Another proof Nigeria’s messy situation is still bad enough to remain a relevant pop culture reference. 

    UP NEPA — XYZ

    When hip-hop music producer and rapper, XYZ, lamented about the light issues on UP NEPA in 2023, he told us ceiling fans don’t roll when there’s no light. But the call-and-response chorus is where all the fun is at — “When I say Up, you say NEPA / Up! Nepa!” NEPA, please, answer our desperate cries.


    Psst! Have you seen our Valentine Special yet? We brought back three couples – one now with kids, one now married and the last, still best friends – to share how their relationships have evolved in the last five years. Watch the second episode below:


  • The Ultimate 2023 Guide to Knowing Fela Kuti

    To celebrate legendary musician, activist and progenitor of Afrobeat music, Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, who passed away 26 years ago this week, we bring you the most current guide to his life and music.

    His large discography

    This might read obvious, but to really know the man named Fela Kuti, his music is the best place to start. With a discography of 41 studio-recorded albums, five live albums and three compilations of his best songs, his music is one of the closest dives into his person, thought processes and ideologies. 

    Recommendations: Expensive Shit (1975) and Zombie (1977)

    (Spotify)

    “Fela: This Bitch of a Life”

    This is arguably the most popular book about Fela. It was written by Cuban writer and social researcher Carlos Moore, and was first published in France as “Cette Putain de Vie” in 1982. The 328-page book was born out of his friendship with Fela. Moore told the story majorly in Fela’s voice and documented his relationship with his native doctor, “Professor”. It also has interviews with 15 of his 27 wives.

    (Booksellers)

    “Dis Fela Sef! The Legend(s) Untold: A Memoir”

    From the start of Fela’s career till his demise, Benson Idonije was there as his first manager (1963 – 1970) and friend. It’s no wonder he published a memoir in 2016, that tells untold stories about the late musician — from his ancestry to being a music producer at Nigerian Broadcasting Corporation to his promiscuity.

    (BookArtVille)

    “Fela: The Life and Times of an African Musical Icon”

    A Yale ethnomusicology professor, Michael Veal, wrote this book on Fela in 2000, and it’s considered the best publication on the Afrobeats legend. It covers everything about Fela’s life and music, politics and hedonism. It’s a collector’s item— it’s the most extensive research on Fela, the Nigerian music scene back then, and also a very cheap book.

    (AbeBooks)

    “Fela Kuti: Music Is A Weapon”

    At the peak of Fela’s career in 1982, French directors, Jean-Jacques and Stéphane Tchalgadjieff, travelled to Lagos to shoot a documentary about him. “Music Is A Weapon” is arguably the most sincere and intimate interview Fela has ever given. His famous quote, “Music is the weapon. Music is the weapon of the future”, came from this interview. The documentary shows the interview and visuals from his performances at The Shrine.

    “Finding Fela!”

    This is a music documentary made by Oscar award-winning director, Alex Gibney, in 2014. It features the Broadway musical biography, Fela! by Bill T. Jones, and interviews with Tony Allen, Seun and Yeni Kuti. It’s impossible to talk about Fela Kuti and leave out this music documentary.

    “Konkombe”

    Aside from the “yabis” of his music, another way to get his undiluted truth are through the interviews. In 1979, Jeremy Marre directed a music documentary, Konkombe, based on the Nigerian pop music scene. The documentary has performances, recording sessions and interviews from musicians like King Sunny Ade, Sunny Okosun, and of course, Fela. His popular quote, “Music cannot be for enjoyment. Music has to be for revolution”, is from this documentary.

    https://youtu.be/4waYY1HZ318

    The Kalakuta Museum

    The Kalakuta Museum was Fela’s home and recording studio until 1997. Fela’s iconic photographs, posters, album art, line the walls of this iconic building which also houses his musical instruments, shirts, stage suits, shoes and famous underwear. Visit the place today, and you’ll feel close to the legend, his personality and upbringing.

  • Marketing 101: How to Blow As a Young Nigerian Music Artist

    Are we the only ones noticing that BNXN and Ruger only fight when one of them wants to drop music? 

    With new music dropping left and centre these days, Nigerian artists are doing the most to grab our attention these days. 

    If you think fighting is extra, wait until you read some other ways Nigerian artists trick us into listening to their music. 

    Claim to be the best in the game so fans can argue 

    Wizkid has done it, Davido does it once in a while and Burna Boy does it every three to five business days. Claiming to be the best, knowing fully well that your career is built on autotune, is a sure way of attracting all the stan groups to come and defend their faves. By trying to insult and drag you, they’ll end up giving you the visibility you need. 

    Look for other artists to fight with because violence is sweet 

    If there are two things Nigerians like, it’s amebo. To capture our attention, you must combine both of them stylishly, and the only way to do that is to cause drama by fake fighting on the TL. From Victony and Omah Lay’s pretend fight to Buju and Ruger’s monthly fights, everyone is doing it. Get on board!

    Pray and fast that a messy tweet from your past shows up so you can be temporarily cancelled

    Cancelling has become one of the quickest ways to blow. The moment the internet decides to drag you like Tiger gen based on something you said or did, everyone starts trying to catch up with the gist. Before you know it, you’ve become a hashtag, and people start streaming your music either out of curiosity or spite. It doesn’t make sense, but I guess it is what it is. 

    Ask Korty if she has free time to gist with you 

    Korty recently said she’s the goat of YouTube, and if that whole African Giant thing worked for Burna Boy and got him a Grammy, then yes, sis, talk your shit! As the goat of YouTube and Gen Z content creation, Korty should also be on your “How to Blow” list. Make a video with her, pretend to be into some weird shit like cooking based on astrology, and watch the internet eat you up like plantain. 

    Visit the nearest MFM for anointing and night vigil

    It doesn’t matter if your song is about how all power belongs to someone’s bum bum, you still need the support of the Holy Spirit for your song to blow. Remember, what God cannot do doesn’t exist. Find the nearest Bible-believing church and start kabashing ASAP!

    RECOMMENDED: 10 Things to Take to Shiloh Instead of Your Partner’s Picture

    Backflip and summersault until you come up with a viral dance move 

    Having a good song is important, but having viral TikTok dance is important-er. Argue with the Gen Zs who are running the world right now. 

    Post a chat screenshot of how you got a feature 

    Do you think getting people like Wizkid or Olamide on your song is easy? You have to tension everyone with screenshots of these icons telling you that you’re the next big thing. You need us to know you’re not on our level. 

    Post screenshots of your Apple Music and Spotify rankings

    How else will people listen to your music if you don’t show them that other people are also listening to it? Quick maths, bro. 

    Post image or video of yourself in the studio 

    As an artist, you must remind everyone that the grind didn’t start today. Before dropping your album, a dimly lit studio picture or video filled with smoke everywhere is compulsory for the TL. The best caption that goes with this post? “Something is cooking *insert flame emoji*”

    ALSO READ: Halfway Into 2022 and These Are the Best Nigerian Albums We’ve Heard

  • Only True Wizkid Fans Will Get 9/11 On This Quiz
    Wizkid Made in Lagos

    Everybody loves Wizkid. Or so they claim. With the release of his new studio album, Made In Lagos, everyone is claiming to be a day one fan. This quiz will separate the real fans from the people trying to ride the wave.

    [donation]

  • 12 Afrobeat Songs To Play Before a Job Interview
    Ever heard music is everything? There are certain times you really need music especially Afrobeats to either get you hyped, confident, relaxed or less nervous. We made a list of Afrobeat songs you should listen to before a job interview. Come thank us when the interview goes well.

    1. Wizkid – Ojuelegba

    Considering you are coming from a rough past and you need something to relate to, to get you determined to get the job.

    2. My Woman – Patoranking ft. Wande Coal

    Are you in a relationship and trying to get a better paying job to cover expenses properly? This is the song to motivate you.

    3. Adonai – Sarkodie ft. Castro

    Quite the religious person? And you need something with a steady tempo to relax your mind and remind yourself “you know what time it is”. This is your song.

    4. Owo Ni Koko – Davido

    Is the money your motivation to succeed? You heard you will earn twice what you were earning previously? This is the pre-interview song for you.

    5. Ashimapeyin – Wande Coal

    Sometimes you may get ahead of yourself and skip the line, because you are too eager. Chill, calm down listen to this and relax.

    6. Hol’ It – Shatta Wale

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YMZBKA4amYw
    This steady paced Afrobeat song will put you in the groove and ready for your interview. Going to have you ready to Hol’ it (the job)

    7. Godwin – Korede Bello

    This is probably the best Afrobeat song to listen to before an interview. Makes you confident you already landed the job.

    8. Shoki – Lil Kesh

    This is a motivational, hype, energizing song to put you in the mood! *Disclaimer: we said “listen to” before your interview, not dance to.

    9. All Eyes On Me – AKA ft. Burna Boy, Da L.E.S., JR

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uc3b-G4NPx8
    Put yourself on the spot by listening to this. If you work better under pressure, this song will get your adrenaline levels up for action.

    10. Dorrobucci – Mavins

    The hit single from the Mavins has everything to do with getting you ready for a job interview.

    11. Don Gorgon- Burna Boy

    This song puts you in the “Don” mood. What else do you need to put your confidence level on a 100?

    12. Soke – Burna Boy

    This perfectly paced song will put you in a very relaxed mood, ready and calm enough to wow the interviewing panel. What are your own favorite afrobeat songs to listen to before a big event?

    What are your own favorite afrobeat songs to listen to before a big event?