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  • The Craziest Events in Nigerian Pop in the H1 of 2024

    From unexpected call-outs to headline-grabbing feuds and a crypto scam, the landscape of Nigerian pop culture has been anything but a whirlwind of controversy in the first half of 2024. As the year breaks into its second half, here are the craziest events that have shaped the scene so far.

    Teezee owed money

    In January 2024, singer Prettyboy D-O accused the Native Record label boss of owing a videographer $200-$300. Although the situation got messy and turned into a back-and-forth between Prettyboy D-O and OdumoduBlvck on X, Teezee never addressed the issue. 

    Portable became a Spiderman

    It’s wild to think that after making music and shooting a video with Skepta in London, Portable was back in the country getting in trouble. Portable flew over the gate to escape the police’s arrest over a debt case. He even made a song titled Spiderman out of the situation.

    If you see your future in jumping fences, the viral Portable’s video should be a top watch.

    Bobrisky’s imprisonment

    On April 3, popular socialite Bobrisky was arrested for mutilating some naira notes, AKA spraying money. By April 12th, she was sentenced to six months in jail without an option of a fine. October is so far away, please return our “Mummy of Laygus.”

    Davido on his knees begging

    After a photo of Davido and a US model known as “pinknative” on IG went viral, the lady grew uncomfortable with the harsh comments. She retaliated with a funny and weird video of Davido on his knees. He was begging for what some online users thought was sex. It’s all speculation, and we don’t know what happened. But it has served the public as a meme.

    Wizkid and Davido beef

    Even Wizkid posted that Davido’s video to troll Davido during their back-and-forth on X. Davido suggested that Wiz is a sick man after Wiz called an unnamed songwriter of Davido a pant washer and bragged they couldn’t match him musically. I thought they would finally have their Kendrick Lamar vs. Drake moment, but they fumbled it. It’s only banger tweets they have.

    Don Jazzy is an “influencer”

    Wizkid possibly tweets according to the strain he’s smoking. In June 2024, he called Don Jazzy an amazing human. But less than a month before then, he was a banger boy on X who delighted his Wizkid FC with a mockery attempt at Don Jazzy.

    An overzealous fan tagged Wizkid to reply to Ladipoe trolling Afropop artists for going through a hit recession in H1. Wiz replied with a shot at Don Jazzy, saying he’s “never chatting to anyone signed to an influencer.” The public, in turn, praised Don Jazzy and listed out his impacts and achievements. 

    Portable vs. Zlatan Ibile

    A video of an angry Portable ranting that Zlatan told him to behave and not act dramatically around Davido during a dinner went viral. Portable felt offended and warned Zlatan not to mess with him or speak to him like a kid.

    Davido’s crypto scam

    As if the Racketerli business Davido endorsed in 2019 didn’t hurt people enough, he recently promoted a cryptocurrency meme coin called $DAVIDO, which severely dipped without 24 hours of launch. Immediately, Nigeria’s Securities And Exchange Commission (SEC) flagged it as a “rug pull” and issued a disclaimer to alert investors about the coin. This situation would make part of the public wonder if he needed money for his concluded wedding.

  • First Half of 2024: 10 Hot Songs by 10 Rising Nigerian Artists

    With few remarkable projects churned in the year, Nigerian music’s first six months of 2024 ended with an impressive note of the underground sound. Some of our favourite songs so far have come from up-and-coming artists. So, we shortened our listening history to ten of the hottest jams released from January to June by rising Nigerian artists.

    My Dealer — Kaestyle feat. Omah Lay

    The culture of smoking in Nigeria now perches class with an expensive cannabis strain called Canadian Loud. Kaestyle and Omah Lay crush their inner thoughts, feelings and stress into a blazing escape. My Dealer is more of than a stoner anthem; it’s about vices and escapism.

    Dealer — Ayo Maff feat. Fireboy DML

    Whether it’s a youthful exuberance, drug epidemic or mental awareness, Ayo Maff and Fireboy DML beautifully portray the emotional wreckage of the average Nigerian youth. They can’t wait for a new day to break; their first to-do is to call their dealer to fix what they think is broken. This song’s popularity among young Nigerians is all you need to know about our culture of substance indulgence. Sweet jam still.

    Instagram — Muyeez feat. Seyi Vibez

    Muyeez’s self-titled EP is still pulsating in the streets. But his first single Instagram is where the heart is. It’s cute, holla-at-your-boy-esque and stuns with a Seyi Vibez verse. The song gets one in a hyper sing-along mode; then an afterthought hits that Muyeez would likely serve punishments for being too young to say these lyrics in an African household. But it’s playing everywhere and will be in steady rotation throughout the year. He has his talent, distinctive voice, and charisma to thank for this.

    https://youtu.be/pViYv9qwVLk?si=qEcVGFOor546kdK8

    Wells Fargo — TML Vibez

    TML Vibez released Wells Fargo the same day Muyeez released Instagram, both as part of the rollout for the “Vibez Incorporation Mixtape Volume 1” project. Wells Fargo is a hustler’s anthem, echoing the ethos of street hustlers and scammers on a grand, slowed-down, pop-kissed Fuji production dangling in Maracas.

    DWS — TDB feat. VRSD and Droxx

    This Drill music collaboration is nature-threatening. DWS (short for Don’t Want Smoke) shells out a smug hook and three rounds of shootout verses by rappers TDB, VRSD and Droxx. Their delivery is potent; it’s fade-to-black for whoever looks for these guys’ smoke, AKA trouble.

    Better — Bizzonthetrack feat. Malik Abdul

    In Better, Bizzonthetrack and Malik Abdul remind us that there’s no life better than yours, but you mustn’t forget you’re not as special as the next man. Life lessons and a good time all in one song—inject it.

    Sakura — ShineTTW

    On Sakura, ShineTTW sings in a self-possessed and breathy soprano about devotion to romance and intimate bedroom activities in Afrobeats. He’s a rising Afropop artist currently popping in the Lagos music scene. With Sakura, Hiiii and a few other definitive tracks on his EP, “THE CHOSEN ONE EP”, ShineTTW shows readiness for a bigger audience.

    Left Right — Keys the Prince

    Although Yinka Ayefele’s Tota E Mole, the interpolated song on Left Right, is about fighting spiritual warfare, Keys the Prince’s song stomps on haters just to flex on them. It’s a bop.

    Life of the Party — oSHAMO

    It’s a turn-up on oSHAMO’s Life of the Party. From signal to the opposite gender to money-spending and subtle broke-shaming, this jam’s an active Friday night for ballers in an audio form.

    Quarter Life Crisis — Toyé

    If you’re stagnant and left behind or worried about your progress and life trajectory, Toyé speaks for you on Quarter Life Crisis. Instead of making the song an extension of your brooding, Toyé’s single lightheartedly lifts the spirit in optimism.

    Listen here:

  • This Is the Official Afrobeats Glossary Textbook

    The impact of Nigerian pop music cuts across language and communication so much that it churns out new words and slang every day. And because they move so fast, it’s hard to keep up with what’s new and cool.

    So, we compiled an official list of new and old terms peculiar to Afrobeats. Although they’re a bit chaotic, they’re exciting communication chops.

    To the student reader

    This list will help you learn 50+ Afrobeats words and phrases. You can use the book yourself, without a song or teacher. You can do the units in any order you like.

    People

    Alaye: If you’re an influential person, this is a title. If your name is unknown, this is also what you’ll be called in the street. 

    Aza: Your bank account. It’s credited as a Bini word.

    Azaman: A rich spender, if you like. But in the street, an azaman provides the bank details which G-boys use to pick funds. It’s also a Bini slang.

    Bankulli: This is the name of a famous key player in the Afrobeats world. If anyone calls you this, you’re more likely to be connected than God.

    Folake: This is the friend of Halima, Funke, Dolapo and Aisha, all the beautiful girls Nigerian artists will never stop singing about.

    Idan: This means magic. If your boys call you this, you’re a smooth operator.

    Maradona: This isn’t a footballer. Here, Maradona is a casanova.

    Omo ope: You always have money to give and spend. This is your name.

    Omotena: This is a term for a fine babe.

    Food, drink, substance

    Azul: a critically-acclaimed overpriced liquor sold in Nigerian clubs. It’s Afrobeats artists’ favourite elixir since Champagne, Hennessy and Moet.

    Cana: This is short for Canadian Loud, an expensive cannabis strain.

    Coco: This is also known as codeine, a pain reliever widely misused as a recreational drug. Some call it Coco Melon.

    Eja nla: You use this to describe a big catch: a rich spender or a high-maintenance babe.

    Turkey nla: AKA Big booty. You need to hear that Wande Coal.

    Jollof: This is a rice dish from West Africa. Some say Nigerian jollof is the best, though.

    Shekpe: A local gin for consumption.

    Everyday verb

    Ginger: It means to motivate or stay motivated. It’s spelt “Jinja” sometimes. Remember that Olamide song?

    Gbera: To move with speed like a dog. If you don’t believe me, play Small Doctor’s Gbera.

    Gbe body e: Get your dancing shoes.

    Japa: To travel overseas or escape (Nigeria).

    Ji masun: Wake your ass up.

    Jonze: This means to get high.

    Shack: To drink alcohol.

    Jogor: To get drunk.

    Soapy: This means to masturbate. It went viral after Naira Marley’s Soapy song.

    Tesojue: This translates to “Put it there.” Reminisce’s Tesojue song explains this word in a bigger context.

    Trabaye: It means drunk or high. Figuratively, it means to level up.

    Whine: Although in usage across races and cultures, this means rhythmically and seductively grinding the waist. Your babe can explain better.

    Wire-wire: To send out a huge amount of money. Or to receive it. Hence 9ice’s Living Things.

    Expressions, words and grammar

    Shey normal: Behave accordingly.

    Comot body jor: Mind your damn business.

    Penkelemesi: This is a local pronunciation of “peculiar mess” popularised by former Nigerian minister Adegoke Adelabu.

    Kapaichumarimarichukpako: A meaningless word coined by rapper Zlatan, but something you can yell after completing a task.

    Yawa: This means a problem.

    Ayii: When you get swept off your feet, “Ayii” expresses your satisfaction.

    Arararara: This is a crowd-tester that checks if a party audience is engaging or boring. When the artist calls “Arararara”, the audience responds “Ororororo”. Femi Kuti is credited for the coinage.

    Long thing: A time-wasting situation. If you value your time and others, you say “No long thing.”

    Dey play: It’s a sarcastic statement for nonchalant folks.

    KPK: Short form of “Ko Po Ke”, a term to express surprise.

    Lamba: It means flowery words. It’s an exaggeration and big lies on appropriate occasions, too.

    OPP: It means “O po pa”, translatable to “It’s plenty.”

    No Lele: The meaning is “No problem.”

    Uche’s Face: To look Uche’s face means to give a fuck about something. Uche is one guy with a face that can make the heart melt and forgive. Now you know why Nigerians avoid the guy.

    STMS: This is the short form of “She Tell Me Say”. Sometimes, it’s a gist of what a babe tells you. Most of the time, it’s a filler word used by our Starboy Wizzy.

    Questions

    How far?: Aside from “Hello” and ” How are you?”, this is an everyday way to ask for an update on something.

    Who dey?: It’s a question you ask when you see someone lurking around.

    Places

    Gwagwalada: An unimpressive remote place in Abuja that Nigerian artists love to sing about these days.

    Insta: This is Instagram, a social media app for a drips-and-flex lifestyle.

    Lekki: This is an overrated “rich” area with brown water like Guinness on Lagos Island.

    Lungu: This is a general name for the trenches. Let this entry prepare you before Asake storms the world with his forthcoming Lungu Boy album.

    Southy: Nigerian music references South Africa in this way. Ask your favorite where he shot his expensive videos; “Southy” is a top-three location.

    Things

    Evian: It’s anything you say it is, according to Shallipopi, who brought it to the mainstream. On some days, it’s even Shalli’s family name.

    Kaluba: This is a term for money. 

    Little Money: Stable earning cosplaying as Odetola. Smh.

    Vibes: An activity that’s running on dopamine without thoughts or preparation.

    If You’re Wondering Which Nigerian Artists Use ChatGPT to Write Songs, We May Have Some Names for You

  • 16 Nigerian Songs That Are Perfect for the 2024 Summertime

    ‘Summer’ is a warm season of recreational time and enjoyment. Agreed that it’s non-existent in Nigeria (the rainy season is what we have), but that hasn’t stopped Nigerians from weaving it into our popular culture like music.

    One can call that an effect of Afrobeats’ globalisation and as well tie it to foreign culture adoption like almost everything we import. Over the last decade, Nigerian artists have actively put out songs between June and September to also engage in summer raves. Some of these songs have crossed overseas, ruled airwaves, clubs and streets, and climbed the charts, and they still maintain relevance for newer summers. Here are 14 summer jams that reflect Nigeria in 2024.

    Summer Body — Olamide (feat. Davido)

    There’s no better summer song to kick off your summer than this one.

    Ye — Burna Boy

    On behalf of all Nigerians with aspirations to buy cars, and houses, turn up and enjoy existence, Ye is the national anthem you need right now.

    Chance (Na Ham) — Seyi Vibez 

    Since Seyi Vibez released this song, his music output has increased, and so have his feats and popularity. It’s your reminder to remind the gatekeepers that 2024 is the rise of new players.

    Essence — Wizkid (feat. Tems)

    Don’t waste time. If it’s love you have to chase or money to get, time is of the essence. Especially that money part.

    No Days Off — Teni Makanaki

    In this economic state that we’ve found ourselves in, sleep is the cousin of death and the younger sibling of poverty. If you like, sleep.

    The Money — Davido (featuring Olamide)

    “Life is all about the money eh” is a universal truth that hits close to home Nigeria, the poverty capital of the world. Do what you will with this gospel.

    Rush — Ayra Starr

    When every day’s work, it’s hard to lose sight of things. As money bags and soft living keep falling on you, remember to count your blessings.

    Squander — Falz (feat. Niniola)

    As you ball this summer, the opposite of this song title is what I advise. Or hasn’t Nigeria taught you to save for rainy days?

    UNAVAILABLE — Davido (feat. Musa Keys)

    Be honest: If you called yourself in this current depressing state of the nation, would you pick up your call or drop your location?

    Skintight — Mr Eazi (feat. Efya)

    At every turn on X these days, it’s marriage proposals. It seems romance is up and the last person to marry in 2024 is a fool. Need a wedding vow? Keep Mr Eazi’s Skintight close.

    Buga — Kizz Daniel (feat. Tekno)

    As you work hard and make more money, make time for leisure too, and feel free to feel pompous.

    Lonely At the Top — Asake

    This is for everyone: the liquidly rich, perceptibly monied folks and those hungry for better days. Don’t forget that you may get all the cash and still feel incomplete. But chase the money sha, at least you won’t be completely by yourself.

    Last Last — Burna Boy

    If you like, break your neck and legs in a hundred places to keep anyone, they’ll do whatever they like still. Even the “Emi lo kan” loyalists are not safe from Tinubu’s Nigeria.

    Fia — Davido

    Fia is Davido’s way of separating from a one-sided love. In a larger context, it’s a national protest song. Citizens love Nigeria but it doesn’t love us back. So, why continue to serve what isn’t serving us? That’s something to pick up here for OBO.

    High — Adekunle Gold (feat. Davido)

    You might as well get high and forget the bones to pick with the economy, for a bit.

    Happiness — Sarz (feat. Asake & Gunna)

    Life can be stressful, but you can always find your happiness in whatever you do.

    Well, It’s Summer and You Can Get Your Summer Body in these 11 Ways

  • 9 Takeaways from Ayra Starr and Tems’ New Albums

    Ayra Starr and Tems released their new albums, “The Year I Turned 21” and “Born in the Wild”, in the last two weeks and have since dominated most conversations in the Nigerian music scene.

    Inching close to being the hottest Afrobeats artists of 2024 (so far), their new albums are meant to offer something rewarding. Here are nine subtle lessons that listeners draw from their long-awaited albums.

    Dodging bad energy is serious work

    You can’t avoid bad-belle people entirely. The only way to become a no-nonsense pro max is intentionally and consistently telling them off like Ayra Starr and Tems did on their new albums (“The Year I Turned 21” and “Born in the Wild”). From Ayra’s Birds Sing of Money, Goodbye and Bad Vibes songs to Tems’ Wickedest and Unfortunate, they set a big “fuck you” tone for bad energy dealers. 

    Rollout is MOTHER!

    Your business service is a product, and to attract target users and customers, you need engaging content that not only attracts but also gets them talking. That’s what Ayra Starr and Tems did. They were in everyone’s faces. Ayra’s album appeared on Chowdeck and some Nigerian bank apps, and users were urged to listen. Tems put out announcement visuals and even threw a party for music listeners and industry players a day before her album release. These babes put their new albums on everyone’s lips.

    Good kids make happy parents

    Ayra’s and Tems’ mums appeared on their albums to contribute to their process and album narratives and motivate them. These emotional features prove that parental support is just as crucial as making parents proud.

    Always enjoy yourself

    You don’t have to be told this, but you need a reminder to enjoy what you work hard for and have a good time sometimes. Somebody play Ayra’s Commas, Control, Jazzy’s Song and Tems’ Wickedest, Turn Me Up and T-Unit and turn the fuck up.

    Never leave your squad behind

    Carrying all your real ones with you (including sharing opportunities) shows that you value your friendship and are proud of it. This is how Ayra Starr feels in Woman Commando.

    Women are the biggest gangstas

    On Bird Sings of Money, Ayra says her past experiences have toughened her up in the trait of a gangster. She even made Woman Commando, and Tems made Gangsta. When the other gender is back on top, you’ll get the memo or not. For now, new lords are in town.

    Never hesitate to throw toxic lovers away

    Don’t wait for your toxic partners to fly their red flags before you throw them out like bath water. You better get necessary updates from Tems’ Unfortunate and Ayra Starr’s Goodbye (Warm Up).

    You’re your biggest motivator

    It’s okay to be sad or cry. But when a horse knocks you to dust, pick yourself up and push yourself to be better until you can ride it with a flex like Ayra on Last Heartbreak Song and 1942 and Tems on Burning and Hold On.

    Forever be a dream chaser.

    Ayra wanted to be a pop star before 16, but it only happened when she turned 19. Now she’s 21 and global. Tems had a 9-5 for a while but didn’t let her music dream die.

    Album Review: Tems Finds Optimism After the Wild

  • Tems Finds Optimism After the Wild

    On her debut album, “Born in the Wild,” Tems pays tribute to herself and to her previous state of being. “Wild” suggests a Wild Wild West, perhaps an interpretation of Nigeria, rarely a place for dreamers. But Tems made it out. This album is her musings and good time draped in warm guitar strings, energetic summer vibes, hopeless romantic lyrics, and some busy music.

    Tems opens the album with the titular folk ballad Born In the Wild. Coming from a place where showing emotions is usually and unfortunately taken for weakness, she peels back on the trauma endured.

    Crazy and wild things may happen, but Tems sees them through to the end. On Special Baby (Interlude), her mum encourages her to continue to find succour in the strength of her name, Temilade (the crown is mine). I hear a mother’s prayer manifestation and moral support. You hear a reiteration of the Temilade Interlude from her 2020 EP, “For Broken Ears.” 

    The actualisation of one’s dreams and the juicy fast life of celebrity birthed one of Biggie Smalls’ most iconic lines, “It was all a dream.” A sentiment Tems shares about fulfilment on Burning. It soon flips into a brood about human inescapable suffering that’s susceptible to all regardless of fame and wealth. She choruses “Guess we are all burning,” interpretable to “Me sef I be human being o” in simpler language. Tems’ at her best here. I guess uncomplicated, ambivalent subject matters can be blissful and sufferable feelings are convertible to ethereal.

    The music gets busy on the next three tracks. The bounce is as alive as her confidence on Wickedest. But the Magic System’s 1er Gaou sample fails to magnify the song. Perhaps that’s owed to the jumble recapture of the Makossa spirit and its tale of betrayal and ironies of success for a bouncy, braggart bop.

    Her complete reimagining of Seyi Sodimu’s Love Me Jeje follows before Get It Right (featuring Asake) cues in. They’re party-ready. An adventurous Tems invites Asake into the familiar territory of Fuji-Amapiano-pop.

    On Ready, Tems continues her search for higher frequency like a fiend relentlessly finds their high. “No fear in my mind, it’s a new story” and “All grass does is grow, don’t you think so?” are her declarations that she won’t hide anymore. In one word, her new story is “fearless”. She’s a bad girl in need of a badass partner — the persona she embodies in Gangsta, which interpolates Diana King’s L-L-Lies. But in Unfortunate, one can learn from Tems that to be gangsta isn’t throwing fits up and down; it’s detaching from situations where other parties can’t be trusted. She congratulates herself for avoiding an unfortunate issue; that’s gangsta enough.

    But this gangsta soon surrenders at the helm of love matters. Boy O Boy puts Tems through a scorned love for a despised lover. Forever burns with the same attitude but funkier. It makes juice out of the ex’s desperation. On Free Fall, Tems finds love again. But one can tell it’s just a forlorn hope robbing her heart. J. Cole’s verse, cute though not striking, doubles down that love experiences calm as much storm.

    It gets clinical on the next interlude, Voices in My Head, as Tec — Show Dem Camp member and one of Tems’ managers — offers knowledge about experience, truth, love and motivation as tools to move through life.

    The celebration continues on Turn Me Up and T-Unit, which puts Tems in her rap bag and gives a specific nod to 50 Cent’s Candy Shop. Me & U plays next and throws Tems in an upbeat soliloquy about finding faith, the god of self and connecting to the higher being. But looking back at when we first heard this as the lead single in October 2023, it’s more comfortable as an album track than the perfect album taster. 

    The vibe extends to You In My Face, which speaks to her inner child, a song to go to when everything’s falling apart. The album wraps up in optimism with the closing track. Even when the ship batters, the anchor can still hold. That’s the message Hold On holds onto. It’s giving modern-day negro spiritual with hip-hop and calypso twists.

    As tone-setting conversations about Tems’ musical style continue, more critics agree that she’s excused herself from Afrobeats for a larger U.S. audience. But this is an effect of sticking every Nigerian contemporary singer to Afropop, a genre, as opposed to Afrobeats, an umbrella for popular music and culture out of Nigeria.

    Released a week apart from Ayra Starr’s applauded sophomore release, “Born In the Wild” may be another cautious win for Afrobeats. It’s vintage R&B and neo-soul adorned in an African night of merriment. It’s enjoyable, and so is its mix. Its production, done majorly by Tems and GuiltyBeatz, is endurable. The lyricism is one-dimensional. 

    Without the snappy production, it sounds more like a genius’s ramblings, hard to listen to. This is nothing more writers in the room can’t solve. Due to its non-conformity to the Nigerian mainstream sound, the music is understandably unfamiliar — a dilemma homegrown listeners may struggle with. It sounds like a Siamese twin EPs, yoked by Tems’ high-pitched soprano. It can do without some tracks.

    Is “Born in the Wild” a flawless album?

    A flawless album is loosely defined as a body of work of a captivating and geographic cocktail of shape-shifting songs. By this definition, the answer to Tems’ preoccupation about her debut is in the affirmative: No, it’s not a flawless album. But perfection is subject to different ears. 

    If this is Tems’ music aftermath coming on top of personal woes, it’s an acceptable offering. She made it through the wild, and this is her post-trauma self-celebration.

    Tems Is the Leading Vibe, and We Ranked 8 of Her Best Features

  • 7 Nigerian Female Artists Defining Their Lanes in 2024

    The rise of female Nigerian music stars in the last few years isn’t only applaudable, it’s also sparked a conversation about a possible female takeover: Lady Donli put out one of the best albums of 2023. In 2024, Tiwa Savage released a first-of-its-kind, well-acclaimed soundtrack album and Ayra’s latest album, “The Year I Turned 21”, received even wider critical acclaim. 

    The girlies are up and creating their lanes. They bring newness to the game, and diversity in genre, vocal dexterity, delivery and lyrical content. We know seven on the come-up that should be on your radar.

    Yimeeka

    The combination of a music producer and recording artist in one person is an advantage that usually distinguishes a super-creative individual from an average one. Her musical ingenuity and production skills set her apart among the new wave of Nigerian female pop stars. Her debut EP, “Alter Ego” (2022), expresses relationships, and her latest self-titled EP, “Yimeeka,” explores personal moments. 

    Syntiat

    Syntiat is an impressive vocalist, producer and songwriter who graduated among the best of The Sarz Academy’s class of 2023. Get on her if you’re looking for music to play during heartbreak, as candles burn and you sip wine in a bathtub.

    Mahriisah

    Mahriisah’s pop style interplays with African rhythms, R&B, Highlife and reggae. Her music is perfect for glamming up to go flex outside or in a speedy car ride with your girlies.

    Amaeya

    Since Amaeya moved from Delta state to Lagos to push her music dreams in 2020, she has done backup work for A-listers like Tems, Ric Hassani, Tiwa Savage, Asake and Lojay. But she’s fully focused on her thing now. Amaeya’s stories of love, relationships and identity are bold pictures of the spoken and unspoken emotions of a careful romantic turned into music. Since her debut on “The Voice Nigeria” in 2021, she’s stayed true to her soul-drenched Afropop and r&b sound. Singles like On My Own, Delusion and Too Much will get any new listener started.

    Aema

    From Aema’s solo releases to her notable collaborative work with fellow singer, Kold AF, it’s easy to tell that her alternative soul music won’t be underground for long. When she’s not conquering her ego on No Place to Hide, Aema’s protecting her mental well-being, addressing relationship issues and women’s places in society on “ALT SOUL, Vol. 1” and “No Pity.”

    Clayrocksu

    In recent times, Nigerian Afrorock music has been referenced to the likes of Neo, Modim, The Isomers and Clayrocksu, among the very few women making music in that scene. Clayrocksu’s style blends rock, metal and alternative with Afropop, with relatable tales of Nigerian dreams and hustle, love and romance, optimism and higher calling. Her new EP “Hate It Here” is a mirror of all these and fun experimentation. One of the tracks, Nu Religion, mixes atilogwu with rock. What’s more daring than that?

    Reespect

    Reespect is a rapper who brings all her emotions to her songs. It doesn’t matter what kind of production she hops on; she’s going to spazz and bring out the soul in her bars. Her latest performance on Showoff Rap show (one of Africa’s biggest hip-hop platforms) is proof she’ll rap circles around the competition and still spit vulnerable lines if she feels like doing so. Put respect on her name.

    Nigerian Women Throw the Most Lit Parties, and the Proof Is Here

  • The Rising Teenagers of Afrobeats

    In the history of Nigerian music, teen stars have been few and far between. There was Wizkid, Davido, Korede Bello and a few less popular others. The year is 2024, and the number of teenagers springing up and running things is increasing almost daily. From music charts and playlists, notable stages and mainstream affiliations, we zoom in on the new youngins popping up in Afrobeats. Here are seven.

    Muyeez

    We got to know 16-year-old street-pop artist, Muyeez, when Seyi Vibez Incorporation was unveiled in April. Soon after, he featured Seyi Vibez on his first single, Instagram. In May, he released his self-titled EP, perhaps too soon after bagging his first hit.

    Qing Madi

    When considering the Afropop stars who’ll impact the industry in 2024, Qing Madi should be a sure mention. From peaking on Apple Music charts to featuring global stars like Chlöe, the 17-year-old singer-songwriter and dancer is one to watch out for.

    Ayo Maff

    Street-pop artist Ayo Maff began getting attention after dropping Jama Jama and 7 DAYS in 2023 and 2024. He isn’t just 17 and creative; he makes music that brands him as “an old soul in a young body.” His new single Dealer features Fireboy DML.

    Vasa 

    When I profiled 18-year-old Vasa in 2023, he’d just gone viral on TikTok with his single Treasure. He has since bagged a Bella Shmurda feature on the remix of his song 50-50 and is putting in work on his forthcoming project.  [ad][/ad]

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iM8575IV0oY&pp=ygUEdmFzYQ%3D%3D

    Anni3

    Sensuality, toxicity and obsession are the major themes Anni3 (19) explores in her music. Port Harcourt remains the melting ground of music talents in the country, and she’s one of its latest exports with her mellow Afropop sound. Start with her single Toxic.

    Khaid 

    Thanks to the virality of Carry Me Go with Boy Spyce, 19-year-old Khaid is now enjoying mainstream attention and affiliation. His hit songs, Amala and Run Away (OMALICHA), boast big-name features like Zlatan, Rexxie and Gyakie.

    Uloko

    Uloko is a 19-year-old artist out of Benue state, and he just joined Apex Village, which houses artists like PsychoYP and Azanti. He went viral with Nsogbu in 2023 and came back with his “Problem Child” EP this year. If you’re looking for a mix of Afropop and electronic music, Uloko is that guy.

    READ: The Young Voices of the Trenches

  • “The Year I Turned 21” Is Fantastic, Not the Zeitgeist Hype

    Ayra Starr turned 21 in 2023. But like stars, her reflection is in retrospect. Hence, her second album, “The Year I Turned 21” (TYIT21), appears a year later, aligning perfectly with her birthday. In notice of this, her age-themed albums draw a specific parallel to the British music icon Adele. One can argue that Ayra Starr’s music and sonic concerns are different, but the universality of the experience of marking youth and independence is intact.

    Age 21 was also a year of many firsts for Ayra. She came into 2023 with Sability and ended the year with appearances on two American movie soundtrack albums (Creed 3 and SPIDER-MAN: ACROSS THE SPIDER-VERSE) and a posthumous album of the legendary Bob Marley. She went on her first world tour. She was named Amazon’s Breakthrough Artist of 2023. She climbed the O2 stage for the first time at Rema’s “Ravage Uprising” show. A title doesn’t get more specific. “The Year I Turned 21” is a more profound title than a chronological buildup on her “19 & Dangerous” debut.

    Now enjoying some career moments that surpass most of her predecessors’, conversations about Ayra’s music shift her to a trajectory that may transcend her into Afropop’s matriarch. Alongside Tems, she’s the anointed leader of the new uprising of female Afropop singers. These favourable speculations are fever pitches as her quick conferment majorly rests on the merits and success of her sophomore album.

    The music is saying…

    “I learned to be gangster, way from these dark times,” Ayra shares in Birds Sing of Money, opener of “TYIT21.” She spends the rest of the album owning that fearless identity, finding and defining what it means for her to be 21. How does she separate a fugazi from true love, independent versus dependent? Does she want to express freedom or curb enthusiasm, be a baby or face adulthood, keep her guard up or be a goofy youth, be a people-pleaser or live carefree, workaholism or chill and enjoy the fruits of labour?

    Ayra’s music blends styles — afrobeats, hip-hop, pop, R&B, ragga, dancehall, house, amapiano, indie folk — to probe her conflicting feelings. She plasters them all against the backdrop of her career, expanding celebrity and blooming 20s. Her lyrics can be saccharine, but don’t get to a conventional bore. 

    With numerous global achievements just four years into her music career, Ayra has built her universe so high that the chant on Birds Song of Money ceremoniously likens her to the stars that light up the night. Forty seconds into the song, whose also uneasy but organised violin, heavy hip-hop drums, breezy strings, chiming chords, and reggae undertones thump with a threatening assertiveness, yet it’s also calm and composed, one marvels at the pure sonic mastery. Fantastic production by London and Marvey Again.

    Her melodies are flexible, as is the boomeranging flow she spins on the P2J-produced Goodbye (Warm Up), featuring Asake. Ayra shows a toxic partner the door out, while Asake plays the heartbroken, self-righteous partner who lowkey won’t let go. His verse’s almost introspective that it convinces chronic gossip blog readers that it’s likely his response to his recently broken relationship. Ayra and Asake share chemistry, but this song’s strangely a mellow track hatched for the TikTok girlies and intimate parties like aprtment life where she previewed the song in April.

    The already-released Commas sports an upbeat composition, interestingly just a tone and pitch away from Tekno’s Peace of Mind. Exchange ataraxis for financial merit, and you have a testament to Ayra’s increasing multiple-stream incomes and quality mindset. Commas has joyful production and melodies, though those overshadow its simplistic message that charges listeners to fight dirty for their dreams if they have to. All there is to know about the commitment to excellence is in her lines: “Dreams come true, if na fight / Fight the fight, make you no go tire / Fire dey go.” Perhaps it’s why it took fifteen versions and three producers (Ragee, London and AOD) to get the officially released Commas, according to her revelation during a recent sit-down with Billboard.

    “Commitment to excellence” is a watchword she carries to her interviews these days. An evidence of that is her passage into the global music scene that fully unlocked after her appearance at the 66th Grammy Awards, where she was an inaugural nominee for the Best African Music Performance category. Put that moment into a lyrics generator, and Drake’s “Started from the bottom, now here we here” will pop up. She was excited to be there. So were the Western press and industry players warmed up to the new African music star girl. But frankly, her trajectory to own a seat among existing envelope-pushers like Tiwa Savage, Yemi Alade, and Simi has taken shape since her savvy, critically acclaimed 2022 “19 & Dangerous” debut album. It has a few national hits that pushed her over to international eyesight.

    In Woman Commando, featuring Anitta (Brazil) and Coco Jones (U.S.), Ayra brags about flexing her squad and carrying everyone along, sounding confident and pleased as the production reverberates Ragee’s bass-heavy house instrumental. It’s a straight jam.

    The album’s upbeat energy descends as Ayra segues into a lover’s mood. She flirts in Control, which interpolates Shakira’s Hips Don’t Lie, and she’s tipsy and ebullient on a potential one-night stand. She opens herself up to emotional attachment, but it soon gets tiring on the Lagos Love Story that sounds like a love song that’s trying too hard. It’s mechanical and an unnecessary segue into the lively Rhythm & Blues (produced by Sparrq). [ad][/ad]

    On 21, the album’s theme song, the weight of emotional distress, adulthood, self-reliance, boundaries and (it goes without saying) enjoying the fruits of her hard work weighs on her. It’s a niggle of new baggage, not a pity cry. When Ayra’s on an R&B production, her command of her emotions grip. It’s no surprise she’s convinced she writes better sad songs. This production by Fwdslxsh, KillSept and Mike Hector is a convincing ambience. Hopefully, an R&B album is in her future.

    It gets fragile on Last Heartbreak Song. Ayra throws away a one-sided love while American brittle-baritone vocalist Giveon chides himself for letting a real love slip away. This song dates back to the “19 & Dangerous” recording session with Loudaa, but is there a heartbreak song that retains the prospect of intimacy? It’s the Last Heartbeat Song.

    Still laid-back, Mystro takes on the next production. Bad Vibez featuring Seyi Vibez slides us back to Afropop. It’s bouncing over a plush R&B ballad to ward off negative energy, likely the internet moralists that police her short skirts and experimental fashion. It’s an exciting collaboration that elitist listeners would enjoy if they were open-minded to the magic of street-pop. To close out the song, she rhymes that she’s still eating off her last hit. It makes an arguable case for the boldest line in Afrobeats in recent times since Asake’s “I know I just blow, but I know my set.”

    The songs hop from youthful exuberance to love matters and mental well-being. As Ayra presents herself as a success model, she also grounds herself in her reality as a curious adolescent who knows she has time to learn from more mistakes and has her whole life ahead of her. 

    Orun is a cry to the heavens. It’s as evocative about personal longings and celebrity pressure as it’s declarative about forging ahead, past mistakes, and regrets. It’s a confessional, mezzo-forte track that draws hips into a slow whine. 

    Jazzy’s Song (cooked by PPriime) comes next, and it’s a turn-up song that unexpectedly samples Wande Coal’s You Bad and alludes to it as Don Jazzy’s likely favourite song rather than a tribute to her jolly label boss and influential music producer. Indeed, it’s a hit but feels out of place between two mid-tempo, emotionally charged tracks. This arrangement hardly lets listeners fully unpack and tie up emotions. It throws the listener in the middle of mood swings.

    She trusts Johnny Drill to soundtrack the following 1942. It’s a delicate cut that expresses Ayra’s and her brother Milar’s fear of losing everything they’ve worked hard for. Their duality picks up here: the despair of loss drowns them in a pool of liquor, but they still hold to their faith like an anchor.

    The closing track is a letter to her late dad, hoping she’s making him proud. Ayra’s mum’s voice starts the song by encouraging Ayra to live a full life. Her siblings also recount their ages and strides. One can hear the pain and pride in their voices, the kind that desperately hopes that their departed one sees what they’re making out of themselves. The song, produced by Remdolla, echoes out with a proud statement from Ayra’s mum that translates to the track’s title: The Kids Are Alright

    Conclusion

    The bonus song, Santa, thematically has no place on this album. It’s just an expansion and numbers strategy that’ll drive up streams and cement Ayra as the first female Nigerian artist to hit 20 million monthly listeners on Spotify. Get your money, girl!

    Looking outside in, being young and successful is one of the coolest things one can be, but it can also be an overwhelming position. Aside from squaring with life and the natural struggle to maintain success, being a female recording and performing artist means working multiple times harder and smarter than the other gender. If this is the evolution of the girl superstar who was once 19 and dangerous, it’s partially true. Most of her story thrives in gaiety, youthful innocence, vulnerability and self-affirmation.

    With 15 songs, “TYIT21” arrives as a lengthy, nuanced moment Ayra’s having with herself. Rather than a conceptual and narrative album, it’s a string of songs linked by recurring themes: heartbreak and love, happiness and melancholy, openness and boundaries, self-promise and tributes. This is the music you get when endeavouring to memento vivere because personal moments are fleeting, fond memories become distant, and emotions get unhealthily managed. This is the music that makes Ayra feel 21. It’s tough to say the same for the listeners, though.

    Compared with her coming-of-age “19 and Dangerous”, “The Year I Turned 21” is her most poignant and impressive work — an album of the year contender. Throughout the album, Ayra stays the dominant voice, in control. Its writing is sustainable, production is high-value, and there’s no Americanisation of the features. It’s just real and bad Afrobeats music. Although the arrangement could have been smoother, not moving tempo to tempo without consistently keeping the listener grounded.

    “TYIT21” would garner facile praise and embrace, considering its Zeitgeist hype, convincing rollout, major anticipation, and the currently uninspiring music year. But it’d need time to find its place as that crowning sophomore. This is subjectively a premature evaluation anyway.

    According to Polish poet Stanislaw Jerzy Lec, youth is the gift of nature; age is a work of art. Hopefully, Ayra Starr continues to stay alive to her feelings, with more virtuosos to craft them into songs at every juncture of her life.

    If You’re Trying to Get Into Arya’s Music, We Asked Chat GPT to Rank Some of Her Biggest Songs For You

  • We Asked Chat GPT to Rank Some of Ayra Starr’s Biggest Songs

    No one is serving bops like Ayra Starr right now. Our sabi girl has been steady giving us back-to-back hits since 2021, and now, she drops her sophomore album, The Year I Turned 21, in less than 24 hours.

    Since AI likes to prove it knows shit, we decided to put it to the test and asked it to rank Ayra’s biggest songs since her debut single, Away

    Diamond in The Rough (DITR)

    AI decided to start with the most soul-searching number on this list. Released in 2021 as one of the singles off her self-titled EP, Ayra described this song as “An Ode to Gen Z”. It’s the kind of vulnerable track you’ll put on if you’ve exhausted your “God abeg” bundle as a young person living in Nigeria.

    Sare

    If you ever loved Orere Elejigbo by the Lijadu sisters, then you’d have been among those who were stunned into wonderment when Ayra sampled the song and put her spin to it in Sare, another song off her debut EP. This song is so fire, and it gave us a taste of what Sabi Girl had planned for the future. In almighty 2024, we can’t complain that it has a spot on this list. 

    Fashion Killer

    Have you ever seen a bad bitch who doesn’t burn you because of how dangerously hot she is? This bad bitch can’t relate, and this was exactly Ayra Starr’s message to the girlies in Fashion Killer. Off her debut EP, it remains an anthem in fashion shows across Africa. Ayra did that, and it appears AI realises the real by placing this song on this spot. 

    Beggie Beggie

    Ayra has had many successful collabos since she blew up, but who can ever forget her insane run with C-Kay on Beggie Beggie? If Away was the “Men are trash” anthem, this track off Ayra’s 19 and Dangerous debut album was the reminder that women can in fact be desperate lovers who want all the TLC from a man. With over 10m YouTube views today, it definitely deserves to be on this list. 

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    Away

    Is it us or is artificial intelligence actually doing a thing with this ranking? Away had a mad grip on the girlies in 2021, and was the sickest “Men are trash” anthem at the time. With rebellious lyrics like “You can never be the man I stan, You can never be the one for me. Take away your troubles. And leave me be,” Ayra ate so bad.

    Away made Ayra one of the resident “landlords” of the Apple Music chart in Nigeria, butting heads with the big three. The song’s official music video currently has over 11 million YouTube views.

    Rush

    If there’s any Ayra Starr song that bangs with the same level of infectiousness when it dropped and now, it’ll have to be Rush. In arguably her biggest hit to date, Ayra reminds us that we should focus our energy on chasing that paper and forget the haters, with lines like “Me no getty time for the hate and the bad energy. Got my mind on my money” And boy, did we listen? Rush had such a successful run that it made history as the first solo song by a Nigerian female artist to hit 300 million views on YouTube. 

    Bloody Samaritan

    We’ve all been waiting to see how Chat GPT will move for this spot, and it looks like it understood the assignment. Three years after Ayra blessed us with this, if Bloody Samaritan comes on right now, no one can look you in the eyes to yarn nonsense. With lines like “I’m a ticking dynamite” and “Them no fit kill my vibe”, it’s the self-empowerment anthem we didn’t know we needed. 

    The lead single off her 2021 debut album, 19 & Dangerous, shot Ayra into the global music space, with the iconic Kelly Rowland hopping on a remix. AI knows you can’t make a list of Ayra’s iconic songs and not include this one. 

    If we task Chat GPT in another year or two, Commas, Rhythm and Blues, and Sability all 2022 to 2024 songs, should better make the list.

    Take this quiz: Only True Starrs Can Match 8/10 Ayra Starr Lyrics To The Song

  • QUIZ: We Know the Song You Need to Address Your Haters

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  • 8 Times Don Jazzy Influenced Nigerian Contemporary Music

    Nobody should get carried away by Don Jazzy’s chronically-online, playful social media influencer personality. That’s all recent development.

    This isn’t an attempt at inducing nostalgia. But when Don Baba J returned to Nigeria from London two decades ago, it was the beginning of a journey to becoming one of Nigerian contemporary pop’s greatest contributors, and he changed the soundscape forever. 

    Don Jazzy seems to have taken a break from actively producing music, but not before making multiple impacts on Nigerian pop music. These eight songs Jazzy produced across music eras prove this.

    Tongolo – D’Banj

    At a time Don Jazzy and his previous business associate and artist D’Banj were still testing Naija music waters, the latter’s debut album came out with Tongolo as its lead and biggest single. Not only did this song introduce D’Banj’s arrival to Nigerian listeners, it birthed his “Koko Master” persona. 

    Ijoya – Weird MC

    Two years after stepping into the motherland, Don Jazzy produced Weird MC’s Ijoya alongside JJC. This song was Weird MC’s reintroduction to the Nigerian audience in 2006. Till date, Ijoya remains the biggest single from a Nigerian female rapper.

    Why Me — D’Banj

    Why Me transformed D’Banj from potential entertainer into a national hitmaker. Don Jazzy’s production did that.

    Jebele — Kween

    Kween had lovers in chokehold with this 2007 jam. Its music video won the Soundcity Music Video Award for Best Female Video and Best Highlife Music Video at the Nigerian Music Video Awards in 2008.

    “Mushin 2 Mo’ Hits”

    In 2009, Wande Coal released his debut “Mushin 2 Mo’ Hits”, creating a template for how a Nigerian pop album is made. This album has popular hits like Move Your Body, Bumper2Bumper, You Bad, Taboo, Private Trips, Ten Ten, etc. Wande Coal did his thing on this album, but we have Don Jazzy to praise for its stellar production work.

    Wind Am Well – Ikechukwu

    This song is one of the singles that secured Ikechukwu’s spot in the mainstream. Guess who produced it? It’s Don Jazzy again.

    Oliver Twist – D’Banj

    Before Don Jazzy and D’Banj parted ways in 2012, they made their last collaboration titled Oliver Twist count. This song climbed charts and did wonders for Afrobeats appeal, even pushing its potential into global space.

    Godwin – Korede Bello

    It took Godwin three days post-release to become an anthem among Nigerians in 2015. Due to Korede’s resonating lyrics and Jazzy’s production, Godwin is a party jam to some listeners and a testimony song to others. 

    Also Read About the 14 Times Don Jazzy Proved He’s the Master of Hooks & Choruses

  • What’s On Our Radar: Afrofusion, the Greatest Producer and “Love Me Jeje”

    It’s been an interesting week for Afrobeats. Fireboy takes off his Afrobeats ID card, Tems’ Love Me Jeje samples Seyi Sodimu’s 1997 song of the same title, and Afrobeats can’t agree on its most significant music producer.

    This piece reviews these news with broad nuances and disparate perspectives.

    This is Afro-confusion

    One day at a time, Nigerian artists reject the Afrobeats tag, dumping it for their coinages. Burna Boy, Wizkid, Fireboy DML and Davido have all ditched it for tags like Afrofusion, Afro-Life, etc.

    On the surface, the artists are trying to break away from a general tag that doesn’t adequately represent their art. Critically, it’s an identity crisis to some listeners. 

    To me, though, this denouncement of Afrobeats is a new tool the artists use to capture the public’s anticipation and attention for upcoming projects. Burna Boy dismissed Afrobeats during the media promo run for his “I Told Them…” album. Wizkid took to his Instagram stories to clamp down on the genre while he teased the new album title, “Morayo”. Conveniently for Fireboy DML, in the middle of his latest single release, he proclaims he doesn’t make Afrobeats records. It’s just his Yoruba H-factor and Nigerian roots that classify him as one. His older albums don’t align with his new stance, but hopefully, the forthcoming body of work will offer something relatively new we haven’t heard before.

    These new fusions are easy to whip up and claim, but everyone forgets that “Afrobeats” is a fusion. Its music blended in Afrobeat, Hip-Hop, R&B, Dancehall and other African traditional rhythms. You can’t make a fusion of a fusion.

    Also, artists calling their sound one thing or the other isn’t new in Nigerian music. Sir Shina Peters distinguished his brand of Juju music as “Afro-juju”. Late Fuji maestro Ayinde Barrister once labelled his sound “Fuji Garbage”. Haruna Ishola made Apala music but he made “Soyoyo” — a style his son Musiliu Haruna Ishola inherited and panned into a titular album.

    If tomorrow comes and another Nigerian music star drops Afrobeats for another Afro-buzzword, be assured the rollout machines are rolling again. Though the damage from this misrepresentation is a conversation for another day, these personal claims over music sound tags aren’t charming. If Afrobeats enthusiasts and listeners want a topic to have a village-square discussion about, it should be how the overstretched loop of Amapiano is turning into a curse and why the mainstream hasn’t delivered any music that knocks the shit out of the water this year.

    All power to Don Jazzy.

    It’s also clear that we need to restart and conclude the conversation about the greatest Afrobeats producer.

    No disrespect to the names that have come up in this conversation; only one person really qualifies. He is Don Jazzy. Hits, commercial success, cultural impact, longevity and catalogue have comfortably placed Don Jazzy higher. Before the emergence of “Afrobeats”, Don Jazzy had already made hits for JJC and his defunct 419 Squad in the U.K.

    When he stepped into Nigeria to pursue music two decades ago, it marked the start of a new era in the Nigerian contemporary music landscape —the revolutionary 12-year run of Mo’Hits Records that gave us D’Banj’s first three albums, Wande Coal’s iconic “Mushin 2 MoHit” and successful debuts from D’Prince, Dr Sid, Tiwa Savage and Reekado Banks.

    Aside from competing with some of the hottest music producers, Don Jazzy’s CV includes Oliver Twist, one of the most essential songs in Afrobeats’ exportation. He built Mavin Records and created new global stars like Rema and Arya Starr. Although Jazzy has become less active in the production scene, and his music executive and social media influencer brand might have overshadowed his Afrobeats’ presence, he’s still the greatest since 2000.

    Tems, Seyi Sodimu and “Love Me Jeje”

    Seyi Sodimu’s hit Love Me Jeje (1997) isn’t recognised as the start of Afrobeats. However, there can be an argument that it’s more original than Shakomo, which borrowed the instrumental of MC Lyte’s Keep On Keeping On. 27 years later, Love Me Jeje, a nice gift from a cool, distant Uncle Seyi staying abroad, is reimagined by 28-year-old Grammy-winning Tems on a song of the same name. This Seyi Sodimu’s classic has just given birth to a modern love record for Gen-Z romantics.

    The reaction trailing the song since Tems first performed it on Coachella’s stage last week and its actual release is an all-pointer to the fact that Tems has another charts-climber on her hand. Seyi Sodimu’s version leans on Juju elements, while Tems’ has Highlife influences. I wonder how trippy it must be for millennials who have witnessed these two eras.

  • Maybe these Naija Artists Use ChatGPT Too

    You might be wrong if you think the tone, wordy, complex sentences and repetitive structure of ChatGPT text flourish only in research papers and formal documents.

    Have you heard ambiguous Nigerian song lyrics or the ones that read straight out of an AI generator? Let’s delve into it.

    Boy Spyce

    Despite getting curved by “Folake”, Boy Spyce still made a song titled after his crush to express his feelings to her. The song takes a turn when he starts to flatter the babe. Instead of calling her his dream babe, Boy Spyce goes “Automatic, aromatic, acrobatic, diplomatic, cinematic” We may have a new son of Afrobeats won our hand, and its name shall be Afro-Grammar. 

    Anendlessocean

    Anendlessocean’s love for words is as endless as the ocean in his name. Every album, the good brother let us know he’s a word freak without saying he’s a word freak. Even when he says seemingly simple things like “Infinity ” and a “ten-side polygon”, he uses a plethora of wonderful words to express them. E.g “Apeirogon” and “Decagon”. 

    M.I Abaga

    Let’s put concept albums aside, nothing screams “I hired ChatGPT for my album, look at my titles now” than M.I’s “A Study On Self Worth: Yxng Dxnzl”. The song titles also read like daily motivational messages. E.g “I Believe In You, You Too, Should Believe In You.”

    Vector

    I love VEC, but when he starts getting “deep” on songs, the listener can get lost in the sauce. Exhibit A: “If I fail because you fail to see / Then it’s very clear that one of us failed, it’s you or me”?

    He said if we don’t understand, that’s our problem.

    Wizkid

    If Wizkid and ChatGPT have one thing in common, it’s repetition. Wiz has said “She tell me say” on songs multiple times that, I’m wondering when GPTZero —  the AI writing detector — will finally have his time and say “song already exists.”

    These Are the Greatest Afrobeats Albums According to ChatGPT

  • QUIZ: Match the “Shakespopi” Bars to the Shallipopi Song
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    This is from which song?

  • Lucid Isn’t Making Afro-depression, Listen Carefully

    To the average Nigerian music listener in Nigeria, shedding an emotional burden on wax is synonymous with making music for those who are losing it. The younger audience, especially, gives the music a distinctive, morose name like Afro-depression quicker than the artist can say what actually inspires their tracks. Before they know it, they’ve become a spokesperson for the listener’s existential crises. 

    This is the box Lucid, a 22-year-old singer from Abuja born Victor Barnabas Nanribetmun, has found himself in, even though he doesn’t fit into it. Let’s examine Lucid’s inspiration and what it means to be a young artist in 2024, stripping down the stereotypes about his music to decipher the context of his two popular “Afro-depression” songs, Hooligan and Therapy.

    Lucid

    Since Omah Lay’s 2020 “Get Layd” release that drowned him purple in vulnerability and confessions, there’s been a sudden buzz use of the word “depression” in connection with Nigerian music. No doubt, mental health deserves more awareness, and Omah’s music has a melancholy to it. His soft Afropop, soulful falsetto and emo-focused phrasings have inspired more artists. 

    Lucid is one of them, but only on a sonic level.

    Lucid caught my attention with Hooligan, a track that came out alongside Why in a two-song single package on February 7, 2024. He opened the song with “Righteous boy I am, but this life turn me to sinner man / And each time I do the best I can, something go turn me to hooligan”, a confession about taking unexpected turns when life doesn’t pan out how he wants. Scratching off the surface of the lyrics that painted him a depressed kid with little affinity for inside life, Hooligan expresses that extreme instincts take charge when faith is tested. [ad][/ad]

    Although Lucid sings with an understanding of the duality of life, he maintains enough consciousness to stay in the right lane. “I’m lucky to come from a good background. My family are good folks. My dad is a pastor. But I understand that sometimes hands get dirty because it’s the only way to make something work out. That was how I felt when I wrote Hooligan, guided by the things I’ve heard and seen too,” the young singer said when I asked him about this.

    Lucid

    “This life turn me to sinner man” from his Hooligan chorus brings to mind the “I’m a born sinner” line on J. Cole’s Born Sinner. In Christianity, every human is born a sinner, but we can get better through repentance. Although J. Cole swore he’d die better than a born sinner, Lucid is yet to find that clarity. Speaking of his hooliganism in the context of the song, he’s a young adult who finds himself drowning in liquor or in bed with a partner faster than he could finish his vow to abstain from both.

    Lucid

    Therapy is a song off his seven-track “Hi I’m Lulu” EP that came out in May 2023 — the only song in his discography that actually hits on mental health. The lyrics express the feeling of speaking to no one, being alone, an undiagnosed mental health issue and his need for therapy. This song calls for concern for his health and not a satirical categorisation that sets artists up for uninformed comparisons and stan wars.

    When I asked Lucid about the story behind Therapy, he said, “People around me might perceive me to be quiet and anti-social. This song tells them what I might not be able to tell them in actual conversations. It’s titled Therapy because I try to distract myself with anything I find therapeutic, which is mostly music. I know there are many people out there who can relate perfectly to this song, and my advice is to always try to be more positive, and whatever it is that takes you out of that dark space, use it as therapy.”

    Lucid

    “Afro-depression” is considered a playful tag as a subgenre for Nigerian dysphoric contemporary music. This is the wave Lucid has decided to latch on to as long as the listener keeps his name and music in conversation. This became clear after I asked him why he hasn’t shut down the “Afro-depression” label. “Most Nigerians consider a jam that isn’t upbeat an Afro-depression song.” Naive, but he knows where his art belongs. “I get sad like every human, but I’m not a sad artist,” he stated. 

    Lucid is as poignant in some of his songs as he is fun and explores light topics in others. He’s a versatile artist who engages his Afropop heritage and sometimes channels his inner Travis Scott. 

    “I understand being a young artist in 2024 means being different and outstanding every day. Many young cats are working as hard as I am. We’re at a time when one needs to maximise whatever he has. I can’t relent.” Lucid sees the saturated industry’s competition as motivation and charges it to continue to improve.

    His music isn’t Afro-depression, neither is it a musical offspring of Omah Lay’s. If anyone is carefully listening, Lucid’s music mirrors his experiences with matters of the heart, like love, intimacy and heartbreak. He wants to make evergreen music like his top influences, Fela Kuti and Asa.

  • QUIZ: Let’s Recommend What You Should Listen to this Easter Holiday
    The biggest women-only festival in Lagos is BACK.
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  • Celebrating Nigerian Cinema And Music: “Sounds of Nollywood” Documentary Series Set to Launch in March

    WeTalkSound and Inside Nollywood are thrilled to announce the upcoming launch of “Sounds of Nollywood,” a groundbreaking documentary series that shines a spotlight on the unsung heroes of the Nigerian film industry – the sound designers and composers who bring cinematic experiences to life.

    Set to premiere on March 13, this series takes audiences behind the scenes of the sound compositions for some of Nollywood’s biggest projects including Anikulapo, The Black Book, Jagun Jagun, Collision Course and Battle on Buka’s Street.

    The documentary is an immersive journey through the artistry and innovation of leading professionals in the field. The documentary is presented by WeTalkSound in collaboration with In Nollywood. Kindly find links to preview and all other needed information about the project here.


    The series features:

    • Ava Momoh – Composer for Collision Course, Over the Bridge, Cake.
    • Anu Afolayan – Composer for Aníkúlápó, Swallow, Citation.
    • Kulanen Ikyo – Composer for The Black Book, Blood Sisters, Lionheart, Okafor’s Law, October 1.
    • Tolu Obanro – Composer for Jagun Jagun, Gangs of Lagos, Battle on Buka Street, Brotherhood, King of Thieves.
    • Clement ‘DJ Klem’ Kponu – Composer for Aníkúlápó: Rise of the Spectre, Halima’s Choice, Lady Buckit & The Motley Mopsters, Fishbone.


    According to Dolapo Amusat, the CEO of WeTalkSound, “Sounds of Nollywood” is more than just a documentary series; it’s a celebration of creativity, passion, and innovation. Through intimate interviews and captivating behind-the-scenes footage, viewers will gain a deeper understanding of the vital role that sound design plays in shaping the emotional impact of films. “From pulse-pounding action sequences to poignant dramatic moments, our series highlights the incredible talent and dedication of the individuals who make it all possible.”

    With “Sounds of Nollywood,” we invite audiences to explore the intricate art of sound design and music composition in Nigerian cinema. From traditional rhythms to contemporary beats, our series delves into the diverse sonic landscape of Nollywood, showcasing the unique blend of cultural influences and artistic expressions that define the sounds in the industry’s most pivotal projects.

    Anita Eboigbe, co-founder of In Nollywood notes that “by showcasing the work of talented sound designers and composers from across Nigeria, we aim to spotlight an underexplored part of Nollywood’s character – the music of its films – and hope that this inspires others. Through our series, we hope to foster a greater appreciation for the art of sound and its transformative power in cinema, especially in Nollywood.”

    “Sounds of Nollywood” will be available on the WeTalkSound YouTube page. All five
    episodes of the documentary will be available to view on March 13, 2024.

  • Pheelz Speaks On Growth, Working With Usher and Dream Collaborations

    Source: Pheelz

    When Pheelz worked as an in-house producer at Hit Factory, a studio in Ajao Estate, Lagos, all he had was the self-belief that he’d one day have big hits. About 10 years later, his 2022 single Finesse became the most Shazamed song of the year, he’s since performed at venues like the O2 and met legends like Dr. Dre.

    His most recent stride is his collaboration with US music royalty Usher — a process that birthed “Coming Home” and “Ruin”; two songs on Usher’s latest album. “Coming Home”, produced and co-written by Pheelz, is the album opener and a fresher take on the pop-R&B sound that has kept Usher relevant for three decades. “Ruin” leans on amapiano and Pheelz delivers a moving second verse.

    In this conversation, Pheelz recounts his electrifying synergy with Usher and the magic of making music together in the same space.

    How did the linkup with Usher happen?

    In 2023, my A&R, Marc Byers took me to a studio owned by L.A Reid — Usher’s longtime friend, producer and business partner — to work on “Coming Home”, the title track of Usher’s new album. L.A Reid heard it when he walked into the studio. He lost his mind and thought it’d be great for Usher’s album, so he set the meeting up. Everything happened quickly from there. Next thing, I was in the studio with Usher.

    Can you describe what it was like being in the studio with Usher?

    An out-of-body experience. When Usher and I recorded the songs, they sounded just as incredible as we wanted them. It was wild to imagine I went from creating music in Gbagada to recording Usher and directing his vocals.

    After L.A Reid heard “Coming Home”, how did you also get “Ruin” in the mix?

    On the day we recorded “Coming Home”, I also played him and his team “Ruin”, which was a song I made with my South African artist-friend Manana while I was in South Africa in 2022. It was one of those moments in the studio where the energy in the air was just crazy. And then yeah, they said it needed to be on the album.

    I’m asking for a friend. How did Warner Music become home?

    Finesse blowing up attracted many record labels including Warner Music. They all brought their numbers and highlighted their achievements. But only Warner Music resonates with me.

    Aside from Warner’s reputation as a giant music company, I chose to work with them because it’s a joint effort with them. We both want to figure things out and reach a goal. They’re not a label trying to boss over an artist. I have my artistic freedom and that gives me comfort. 

    When you think of your trajectory, what are key moments you recognise and can say led you to where you are now?

    Watching the choir’s performances in my dad’s church laid the foundation for my musical interests when I was around four years old. At 12, I taught myself how to play the keyboard and use production software like FruityLoops to make beats. Then, I gave my 20-track demo CD to Mayo Hunta, a veteran artist and producer and an acquaintance of my dad, to play for ID Cabasa. Cabasa liked it and asked if I’d be open to an internship at his label, Coded Tunes in Bariga.

    I met Olamide at Coded Tunes — we were the studio rats. When we first worked together, it was for a song titled Owó (money). I had stolen Cabasa’s computer password and told Olamide we could work on our own when no one was around. We contributed money, bought fuel, worked overnight and deleted the files before Cabasa came in the morning. Subsequently, we made lots of songs and applied our knowledge and got better in the process. We had seen Banky W, 9ice and many big artists at that time record at Coded Tunes. We had tasted and felt greatness. We poured all we learned into ourselves.

    After Coded Tunes, I worked as an in-house producer for 2204, a studio in Ajao Estate. I left Bariga, and Olamide and I only texted each other. By then, I had gotten my first official placement on his I’m Going In song, off the Rapsodi album.

    One time after his exit from Coded Tunes, we chatted about working together again. By then, I had already moved from 2204 studio to Hit Factory, another studio in the estate. Olamide and I linked up again and made First of All. I remember Olamide’s call the day after he released the song. He said, “I told you we got this shit.”

    Did you ever see yourself making music at this global level?

    I’ve always believed since I was young that music would take me to high places.

    Back in Hit Factory, where I met Young Jonn in 2011, it was the same energy. Jonn and I always told each other at that time that we would sing, not only produce, and hit it big. It’s why our song Jelo means so much to us. We call each other sometimes and just geek about the song and its success. It’s a full-circle moment because that belief has always been there.

    Read About Pheelz, Young Jonn and the Rise of the Producer-to-Singer Phenomenon

    Who are your favourite collaborators?

    Olamide.  After Finesse, I constantly travelled and we didn’t catch up for a year and half — Baddo was also busy running YBNL. We finally linked up in 2023 and made music from scratch like we did in the old days at Coded Tunes. Joy is the result of that process. I love working with Young Jonn, too. 

    Who are your dream collaborators?

    At home, I want to work with 2Baba and Burna Boy. I think Burna and I can hack a new level of sound. Internationally, I’m heavy on Beyoncé and Billie Eilish. I’d like to collaborate with Drake and Future as well. But if Jay-Z or Ed Sheeran sef come, no dulling. These collabs would be dreams come true.

    Source: Pheelz

    What upcoming artist excites you?

    There’s a lady called Yimeeka. We’ve worked together on songs and her EP is coming out soon. I’m excited about her future.

    What do you do when you aren’t on stage, in the studio or writing songs?

    I’m writing or painting. I have six art collections that are currently for my eyes only. I like expressing myself through painting as much as I do with music. I’m into 3D animation and design as well— I produce my lyric videos myself. 

    I’m also building a creative company called Rii Collective which I have now put Mr. Producer Inc, my event management company under. 

    You previewed a song for the AFCON final in case Nigeria won. Unfortunately, we lost. What will happen to it now?

    Omo, the second verse of that song is bad. I might drop it on Twitter one of these days.

    What are you looking forward to?

    I’m looking forward to my new single and tours this year. I’m also excited to reach out to the needy back home in Lagos through Pheelz Giving (my charity organisation). It’s my way of giving back to society and putting smiles on people’s faces with the provision of their needs, not just music. You know, Nigerians are going through hardship right now and we have to look out for each other.


    Hey! The third episode of our Valentine Special out. We brought back two best friends to share how their relationship has evolved in the last five years. Watch below:


  • 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:


  • QUIZ: Look At These Album Arts and Guess the Year They Came Out

    Knowing only songs isn’t enough. Can you glance at these album arts and guess the year they were released?


    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:

  • Bump This: What the Afrobeats Guys Are Saying This Week

    For those who favour full projects over singles, for “hot off the studio” music with moods that range from party time and romance to relationship woes and melancholy, these are the best EPs that dropped during the week.

    LOVRBOY — Praiz

    Just in time for the Valentine season, Nigerian singer-songwriter, Praiz, rolled out an EP titled LOVRBOY. A collection of four songs that dig into love, longing, intimacy and the romantic notions he holds about his lover, LOVRBOY is a short and fresh project to play on repeat with your own lover.

    OLORI (The EP) — Logos Olori

    Logos Olori introduces his music in an expansive way: a seven-track project. Pop-ready and prepared for the mainstream, Logos sings about love and enjoyment with guest appearances from his label boss, Davido, on Easy On Me, and Hmm Hmm with South Africa’s Musa Keys. It may be a regurgitation of generic Afropop topics, but the production holds the music together. Logos’ melodies and tranquil delivery make his music worthy to listen to. 

    PRISMATIC BLVCK — Blvck Topia

    Blvck Topia is a digital artist and creative director with a music career spanning over three years. His latest EP, PRISMATIC BLVCK, paints visuals of sonder, love and the beauty within. He shares a peek into his escapism habits on Beautiful mind and Ah Ah, his romantic life on Bad and compares himself to Ota Benga on Blvck Boy. The production offers a potent psychedelic mood, and Topia’s vocals offer some shade from the depth of emotions. PRISMATIC BLVCK is calmness in stormy weather.

    MUIS EP — Muis

    This titular five-song EP leads with SAATI RAMONI, a sleeper Afropop bop that Muis released as a single in 2023. The song may be Afro-Adura — one of the many new sons of Afrobeats — but the EP offers more. It showcases Muis’ vocal and songwriting skills, revealing that he can hold the ears of the streets and the ladies. OMALICHA and OH MY GYAL (KUMBAYA) with producer, Ozedikus, introduced his bad-boy-next-door side in Afropop touched with dancehall. He found love he wants to keep on WAYO, and the amapiano-powered closing track, MY BABY, pulls him and this new love to the dance floor. 

    H.A.R.D — YDEE YDEE

    H.A.R.D is an acronym for Hip-Hop Across Rhythmic Dimensions. From the feel-good songs like GOOD TIME, afro-swing jam, I LIKE IT, and Afropop-edgy JEJE to the rap cuts that close out the project, H.A.R.D shows us Hip-Hop from an experimental perspective. It’s applaudable how the music producer, artist and collaborators all poured Afropop-edge into making something so thematically cohesive and representative of its title.

    It’s About A Girl — Kinj K.A.D.E 

    Dramatic and toxic relationships take centre stage on Kinj K.A.D.E’s EP It’s About A Girl. The singer displays a calm but firm grip on R&B smoothly blended with Trap Soul and Afro elements to express his versatility and aid connection with the local environment. If you’re still sentimental about an ex, or tired of relationships and thinking of entering the streets, firstly, get lost in Kinj K.A.D.E’s story about a girl and imagine it as yours.


    Our Valentine Special is here. 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 first episode below:


    Ritmo Mafiaso — Idowest

    Nigerian rapper, Idowest, just stacked his discography with a new EP, Ritmo Mafioso, meaning “mafia rhythm”. It’s a skein of street catchphrases, religious innuendos, and party and money yarnings across seven songs weaved on majorly Amapiano production. Idowest wants you on your feet, grooving.

    Hooligan / Why — Lucid

    Burgeoning Afropop singer, Lucid, starts his 2024 with a two-pack single Hooligan and Why after his introductory Hi I’m Lulu EP of 2023. In deep reflection, the first song expresses his debaucherous vices as symptomatic of his environment. Lucid hangs to the belief that if he doesn’t find time to curb these vices, he might be headed down a lost road. The song smoothly segues into his lover-boy moment on Why. Two vulnerable emotions in one pack, for the lost kids and lovebirds.

    Listen here:

  • Tyla: The Jo’Burg to Grammys Timeline

    South African-born Tyla Laura Seethal became the first-ever winner of the Best African Music Performance Grammys Award on February 4th, 2024. Since her hit song Water took the international stage by storm in 2023, she’s been one of the most promising global stars rising from Africa. 

    We made a timeline of her journey from Jo’burg to the Grammys.

    2019 — Tyla, Garth von Glehn and Getting Late

    Tyla had just graduated from high school and started posting singing and dancing covers on social media when a photographer named Garth von Glehn discovered one of her Instagram videos. She mistook him for an online scammer until he met her parents to discuss managing her in 2019. 

    Throughout that year, she and her bestie and stylist, Thato Nzimande, spent weekends writing and recording songs at von Glehn’s studio until she met South African DJ and music producer, Kooldrink, and recorded her eventual debut single, Getting Late. This was when she picked up her Popiano sound, a fusion of amapiano and afrobeats with R&B and pop music.

    2021 — Epic Records deal and Blood & Water series

    After a quiet COVID year, writing and recording, Tyla signed to Epic Records — home to Mariah Carey, Travis Scott, DJ Khaled, the late Michael Jackson, among other icons. This happened in a joint venture with the Jo’burg/New York-based music company, Fax Records, in 2021. Soon after, she dropped her next song, Overdue, a collaboration between Tyla and DJ Lag, a South African DJ, producer and pioneer of the gqom genre (a style of electronic dance music). The song was featured in the season two trailer of Netflix’s South African hit series, Blood and Water

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

    2022 — Nomination at SAMA

    Getting Late music video was nominated for “Best Video of the Year” at the 28th edition of the South African Music Awards (SAMA). At this point, it had amassed several million views on YouTube. She didn’t win, but the nod was a big deal for such a new artist on the scene. In November, Tyla released To Last and made a remix with DJ Maphorisa and Young Stunna.

    Source: Ubetoo

    2023 — Tour with Chris Brown and breakout hit

    In January, Tyla released the dancefloor jam, Been Thinking. At Tricky Stewart’s Grammy party later that month, the head of Epic Records, Sylvia Rhone, asked Tyla if she’d like to open Chris Brown’s “Under the Influence” Europe and UK tour. She joined the tour on February 14th, solidifying her audience base, especially in the U.S.

    Source: Tenor

    For the first episode of our Valentine Special, 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 below:


    During the tour, she attended Dolce & Gabbana’s Fall/Winter 2023 runway show, where she was seen with Kim Kardashian and performed at the after-party. She also featured Ayra Starr on her next promotional single, Girl Next Door, in May, and dropped what would be a life-changing global hit — Water — in August, the same month during which her iconic choreo went viral. Water debuted at number 67 on the US Billboard Hot 100, the only South African song to do this in 56 years, since Hugh Maskela’s Grazing in the Grass (1968).

    Source: Jacaranda FM

    In October, Tyla made her U.S. TV debut on The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon, performing Water. The same month, Water was considered for nomination for the Best African Music Performance at the 2024 Grammys Awards. In December, Tyla released her self-titled introductory EP. The project opened with Water and ended with its remix, but has now been extended to a full album coming on March 22, 2024.

    2024 — First platinum, Grammy nomination and win

    In January, Water was certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America. On February 5, Tyla won the first Grammy Award for Best African Music Performance with Water, among nominees like Nigeria’s Davido, Burna Boy, Asake and Olamide.

    Source: Yahoo

    The year is still young; who knows what more it’ll bring the aspiring global African popstar.

    Check Out the Complete List of Grammy Awards 2024 Winners

  • Grammy Awards 2024: A Breakdown of Nigeria’s Nominated Artists and Winners Since 2017

    In 1983, legendary musician, King Sunny Ade, made history as the first Nigerian artist to receive a Grammy Award nomination. Fast forward to 2008, recording artist, Sikiru Adepoju, topped KSA’s record by clinching the coveted award. 

    Not much happened for a while, but in the last eight years, some of Nigeria’s finest talents have managed over 20 nominations across categories. Here’s a breakdown of wins and nominations since 2017.

    2017 Grammy Awards

    Grammy Awards 2024: A Breakdown of Nigeria’s Nominated Artists and Winners Since 2017

    The 2017 Grammy Awards ceremony was held on February 12, 2017, at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. Two Nigerians were nominated in two different categories.

    Best Dance Recording

    Kah-lo snagged a nomination for her efforts as a featured artist on Riton’s Rinse & Repeat.

    Best Album

    Wizkid was nominated as a featured artist on Drake’s album, Views.

    Best Musical Theater Album

    The British actress and singer, Cynthia Erivo, won the Grammy Award category alongside cast members who worked on the soundtrack album for The Color Purple movie.

    2018 Grammy Awards

    Grammy Awards 2024: A Breakdown of Nigeria’s Nominated Artists and Winners Since 2017

    The 2018 Grammy Awards ceremony was on January 28 at the Madison Square Garden in New York City. Two Nigerians were nominated in two categories for their efforts as featured artists.

    Best R&B Award

    American artist, Tunji Ige, was nominated as a producer on Location, a record by Khalid.

    Best Reggae Album

    Timaya was nominated for his feature on Morgan Heritage’s Avrekedabra album.

    2019 Grammy Awards

    Grammy Awards 2024: A Breakdown of Nigeria’s Nominated Artists and Winners Since 2017

    The 61st Grammy Awards ceremony was held on February 10 at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. Only one Nigerian artist made it to the nomination list.

    Best World Music Album

    Seun Kuti and his band, Egypt 80, were nominated for their album, Black Times.

    2020 Grammy Awards

    The 62nd Grammy Awards ceremony was held on January 26 at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. Burna Boy was the only Nigerian artist who made the nomination list that year, marking the beginning of his impressive run with the Recording Academy.

    Best Global Music Album

    Burna Boy was nominated as a standalone act for his album, African Giant. However, he lost the award to Angelique Kidjo.

     [ad]

    2021 Grammy Awards

    The 63rd Grammy Awards went down on March 14 at the Los Angeles Convention Center in Los Angeles. There was no live audience due to social distancing amid the coronavirus pandemic. Two Nigerian artists were nominated across two categories.

    World Music Album

    Burna Boy’s Twice As Tall bagged a nomination, making him the first Nigerian artist to be nominated twice in a row. The nomination also marked his first Grammy win.

    Best Music Video

    Wizkid was nominated in the category for his efforts on Beyonce’s song, Brown Skin Girl. The nomination marked Wizkid’s first Grammy win by association.

    2022 Grammy Awards

    Grammy Awards 2024: A Breakdown of Nigeria’s Nominated Artists and Winners Since 2017

    The 64th Grammy Awards ceremony was on April 3, 2022, at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas. It was an exciting year for Nigerians as four artists were nominated across categories, with Wizkid and Femi Kuti bagging two nominations each. Neither of them won.

    Best Global Music Performance

    Wizkid ft. Tems — Essence

    Femi Kuti — Pà Pá Pà

    Best Global Music Album

    Wizkid — Made in Lagos

    Femi & Made Kuti — Legacy +

    2023 Grammy Awards

    The Grammys returned for its 65th edition on February 5 at the Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles. Two Nigerian artists bagged nominations. Tems won her first Grammy by association for her work on Wait For U.

    Best Global Music Performance

    Burna Boy — Last Last

    Best Global Music Album

    Burna Boy  — Love, Damini

    Best Melodic Rap Performance

    Future ft. Drake and Tems — Wait For U

    Best Rap Song

    Future ft. Drake and Tems — Wait For U

    2024 Grammy Awards

    Grammy Awards 2024: A Breakdown of Nigeria’s Nominated Artists and Winners Since 2017

    The Grammy Awards 2024 edition will be held on Sunday, February 4, at the Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles. This time around, a newly announced Best African Music category by the Recording Academy gave room for more Nigerian artists to be nominated.

    Best Melodic Rap Performance

    Burna Boy — Sittin’ On Top Of The World

    Best Global Music Album

    Davido — Timeless

    Burna Boy — I Told Them

    Best Global Music Performance

    Burna Boy — Alone

    Davido — Feel

    Best African Music Performance

    Burna Boy — City Boys

    Davido — Unavailable

    Asake, Olamide — Amapiano

    Ayra Starr — Rush

    Fireboy DML and CKay earned a nomination each in the Album of the Year category for their efforts on Jon Batiste’s World Music Radio and Janelle Monáe’s The Age of Pleasure respectively.

    Tems’ bagged a nomination in the Best Song Written for Visual Media category for her contribution to Rihanna’s Lift Me Up.

    While we anticipate the Grammy Awards 2024 winners’ announcement, you should read this: Do Nigeria’s Biggest Artists Really Need the Grammys?

  • The 8 Verses That Put Zlatan on the Afrobeats Map

    In 2017, when Nigerian street music switched from the fast-paced, dance-ready “Shaku Shaku”, the “Zanku” sound was introduced, and Zlatan spear-headed the movement. 

    Since then, he’s released at least two songs and several guest features that’ve kept him relevant. Fast forward to 2024, and Zlatan’s career has climbed up the ranks to place as one of Nigeria’s best.

    These eight songs in particular are what got him there.

    My Body — Zlatan ft. Olamide

    Zlatan was a seasoned underground artist way before he bagged his first hit with My Body in 2017 — an upbeat street banger about clubbing and debauchery. Between the first and third verse, he hops from party silliness, to being so drunk he can’t feel his face, to trying to leave an impression on women with his money. Olamide took the chorus, effectively directing mainstream attention to an interesting new act. 

    Killin Dem — Zlatan and Burna Boy 

    In a move that had his Zanku sound dominating Shaku Shaku — the preceding street sound — Zlatan joined forces with Burna Boy on this 2019 hit track. With his memorable verse, he declared it was his time, and it was indeed. From its infectious beat and melody to its jerky moonwalk and kung-fu kick dance, Killin Dem wasn’t just on repeat across clubs and parties, it propelled Zlatan to a large international audience. The song later appeared on Burna’s Grammy-nominated African Giant album (2019).

    Gelato — DJ Cuppy ft. Zlatan

    No one could hide the radiance of Zanku in 2019. Even the bubbly, ultra-rich Afropop of DJ Cuppy flirted with it that year. And who did she call on to make the fusion work? 

    It was a surprise collaboration that didn’t seem possible at the time because no one thought the streets and the 1% could mix, but Zlatan carried Gelato from what could’ve been whining about ice-cream to a universal metaphor for enjoyment. A memorable part of the song is the “Who’s your daddy?” call-and-response that had Zlatan and Cuppy proudly claiming their family names.

    Cash App — Bella Shmurda ft. Zlatan & Lincoln

    Shortly before #EndSARS happened in 2020, Cash App came out and went viral, sealing Bella Shmurda’s break into the music industry. He had Zlatan on the hit song that referenced a money transaction app that’s commonly used for cybercrime. It gained so much attention that a section of the internet petitioned the Nigerian Broadcasting Commission (NBC) to take down the song for its yahoo-yahoo promotion.

    Hallelu — Masterkraft ft. Zlatan & Bella Shmurda

    Zlatan and Bella Shmurda teamed up again on a Masterkraft song titled Hallelu. Zlatan delivered his motivational, grass-to-grace and braggadocious style of rap on the first and second verses. This jam owned all the December raves in 2020.

    Money — Zlatan ft. Davido

    One thing Zlatan will always sing about is cash and the importance of its abundance. Whether it rolls off his tongue like broken-shaming or motivational yarns, his gospel to trenches kids will always revolve around money. The song features Davido, who added his hitmaker flavour, but Zlatan’s solid chorus and melodic verse carried the jam.

    Elon Musk Remix — Shallipopi ft. Zlatan & Fireboy DML

    Although Elon Musk was already a hit, 2023’s breakout star, Shallipopi, employed Zlatan’s assistance as a street-pop general to take the music to the grassroots with this remix. 

    IDK — Wizkid ft. Zlatan

    Zlatan still has an amazing run as one of the sought-after collaborators in Nigerian music. His latest feature was Wizkid’s IDK off of his S2 EP that dropped in December 2023. The rapper used the second verse of the song to reiterate the importance of money, especially the role it plays in modern relationships. Zlatan’s bars reinforce the famous saying that “Love is sweet when there’s money.”

    Zlatan has come a long way since the viral Am I A Yahoo Boy and Eye Boyfriend era of 2019, to supporting new acts like Shallipopi and Ayox, to featuring with the Big Three — Wizkid, Davido and Burna. Nothing screams “king of the streets” more than this.

    Hear The Young Voices of the Trenches

  • 5 Industry Players On Their Expectations for Afrobeats in 2024 

    January is usually a slow month for music releases. Artists are planning calendars and directions for their music. As the first month of 2024 ends, more artists are back in the field. So what can we expect in 2024?

    We asked some industry players to share their views on Afrobeats’ growth last year and what they’ll like to see in the industry this year.

    Adeayo Akinbiyi, music writer and journalist (PulseNg)

    My favourite thing about the industry last year was its continuous growth. We’ve always wanted to see Afrobeats grow and propel universally, and we sustained that through the works of  our artists on the global front. Asake and Rema come to mind here. 

    The breakout of new stars like Shallipopi is also a sign of the industry’s sustainability, especially during this period when many, including the U.S. market, are finding it hard to break out artists.

    In 2024, I predict continuous growth for the Afrobeats movement; more artists on international stages, new breakout stars, and street-pop music will keep expanding and influencing the soundscape.

    I also hope to see more street artists operating on the same level as other pop stars. There’s a strong street marker underlying our music, and I want it to manifest in 2024. I hope for more female stars because we didn’t see any last year.

    We’ve always discussed structure as part of Afrobeats’ lack. In 2024, I hope more attention will be on how we build and operate locally. Labels, stars and stakeholders should leverage their powers and funding to build locally. They should collaborate with the government and private sector to build entertainment infrastructures and ecosystems. 

    Of course, more funding and grants must come into the system and impact burgeoning creators and media guys who are amplifying the music, documenting the culture and taking it to the consumers. We need to empower people who’ll document the sonics of our country, those making them and how they’re impacting people and the nation as a whole.

    Tope Agbeyo, Comms. & PR expert (Mavin)

    Subgenres like emo-afrobeats and afro-rave got more expansive last year. The successes of Omah Lay, Shallipopi and Odumodublvck will incentivise people with niché sounds to go for originality —no need to try to be like anyone. In 2023, I observed that people willingly listened to what they liked without minding the sonic leanings. I believe that the capacity of the average Nigerian listener to have a palate for different sounds is one of our most significant assets. The streaming audience is not large enough to support niche listenership. We thrive because we don’t have just one artist we like. I’m glad last year proved that again. 

    The live shows were mostly a mess, though. We must work on that in 2024 — from the infrastructure to promoters to organisers to artists to engineers, event planners and designers. Everything needs so much work. Live concert-goers deserve so much more. I mean, Afronation even had to dip. That’s a bad look. 

    No music market is genuinely sustainable without a healthy live scene, so I expect that the stakeholders involved will do better this year. We can’t afford to disappoint so many people year after year.

    Dami Ajayi, Culture/music writer

    The Elele single, a minor resurgence of Oritsefemi featuring Qdot, was my favourite thing in Afrobeats last year. Street music generally, I want folks to pay more attention to the audience of street pop; they need pampering.

    I also want respect for journalists, and for journalists to pay more attention to the music and less to the lifestyle and grimy gossip. I’d like to see producers get their day in the sun with publishing rights and cheques because expectations are sandcastles and a step beyond dreaming.

    Lola Oyedele, Entertainment & IP lawyer 

    I love that many women —  Qing Madi, Bloody Civilian, SGawd, and so on — blew up in the music industry last year. We also had so much music to listen to across different genres, and many Afrobeats artists sold out venues in different countries. The globalisation of Afrobeats is exciting. The things that we used to dream about are happening very regularly.

    This year, I’m rooting for professionals. We’ve always been behind the scenes working tirelessly to make the stars shine.

    I’m rooting primarily for women because we need to change the 7:1 ratio of women to men in the entertainment industry, and I can tell you the girlies are on fire.

    2024 is also the year we need to get some things right: build at home and from home. Be a global sensation and develop a sustainable industry accommodating all creators and professionals. I expect that the government will also take the creative industry seriously and make stringent laws to protect intellectual property.

    We need more spaces for shows — not just in Lagos, but other parts of Nigeria. I don’t want it to be a story of reggae and different genres that the West listens to and drops after they have milked the value out of them. Afrobeats should continue to grow. It’s a marathon, not a sprint.

    Chike San — Indie music producer, singer

    In 2023, our pop music enjoyed acceptance worldwide. In 2024, I’d like to see more innovation, creativity and experimentation because it’s clear the audience is open to hearing new sounds due to the range of music Nigerians gravitated towards. 

    That said, another thing is I think we need to chill on seeking external validation and chasing acceptance from the West. I understand it’s what’s best for business, but we can do that without soiling ourselves.

    Anyways Some Things Have Been Set in Stone for the Nigerian Entertainment Industry in 2024

  • Everything We Can Expect From the Nigerian Entertainment Industry in 2024

    With all the Grammy nominations, new Federal Ministry of Art, Culture and the Creative Economy appointments and the promise of a Afrobeats Museum we’ve gotten so far, things are looking promising for the industry this year. Here’s everything we expect to happen.

    Afrobeats gets a seat at the Grammy table

    If you missed it, “Best African Music” has been added to the Grammy list of categories, and Nigerians dominated the nominations last year. Burna Boy’s Alone and Davido’s FEEL were also nominated for “Best Global Music Performance”. Blessing Offor, a Nigerian gospel singer, got two nominations. Rema, Bloody Civilian and Tems were on the Grammy-nominated Black Panther: Wakanda Forever album, Fireboy DML on Jon Baptiste’s nominated album, World Music Radio, and Janelle Monae’s nominated Age of Pleasure album brought in CKay and Seun Kuti.

    Who said it’s not plenty for Nigerian music?

    The new federal directors show themselves

    January 12, 2024, came with the appointment of Nigerian creative industry figures like Obi Asika (Storm Records), Tola Akerele (Bogobiri House) and Ali Nuhu (Nollywood) into the Federal Ministry of Art, Culture and the Creative Economy. We can’t wait to see what they do first.

    An Afrobeats museum

    On January 13, 2024, we published a two-part story about why we need an Afrobeats museum, and what it would look like, which motivated pop culture journalist, Jide Taiwo, to announce the launch of his museum. We can’t wait to see this brilliant idea come to life.

    Next Afrobeats Star

    Ultima Studio, the makers of the now cancelled hit music talent show, Project Fame, are back with a replacement: Next Afrobeats Star. They haven’t revealed a launch date yet, but it’ll air for ten weeks, and the four judges are music producers, Sarz, Puffy-T, Andre Vibez and P.Priime — a huge win and recognition for our producers.

    X.com: @joeyakan

    AMVCA re-evaluation

    MultiChoice’s Head of Content and Channels, West Africa, Dr Busola Tejumola, announced on January 15, that the categories of the famous Africa Magic Viewers Choice Awards (AMVCA) have been reduced from 33 to 27, to “meet global trends and standards”. Also, the Best Actor and Best Actress in Leading/Supporting Role will now be decided solely by a jury. These changes mark the tenth edition of the award show this year.

    Source: BellaNaija

    Another Big Brother Naija?

    The reality TV show, Big Brother Naija, just announced the coming of Season 9 audition dates. Nigerians are about to obsess over strangers and make them celebrities once again. 

    More industry drama

    The new year is just 18 days old, and we’ve already seen enough online gbas gbos to last the year. From Stefflon Don and Jada Kingdom fighting over Burna Boy to Prettyboy D-O calling out NATIVE Records’ president, TeezeeDRB, for owing his videographer-friend $500 and Tiwa Savage petitioning Davido over his threat to her life, it looks like a “No gree for anybody” year for the industry too.

    Hehe, iskelebetiolebe

    Get familiar with the New Directors of the Federal Ministry of Art, Culture and the Creative Economy

  • 8 Songs the Super Eagles Should Have on their Playlist

    As the Super Eagles continue their 2024 African’s Cup of Nations campaign, we send them our best wishes.

    What better way to do this than create a playlist that solidifies our mission in Côte d’Ivoire. These songs have all the motivation, ginger and fire our boys need to clinch the top prize.

    Play:

    Africa — Yemi Alade ft. Sauti Sol

    It doesn’t matter if it’s the Super Eagles or Black Stars, we are Africans first. This song by Mama Africa, featuring Kenya’s Sauti Sol, tops this playlist for good reason.  It constantly reminds us of our roots and how we’re better united as one.

    Want It All — Burna Boy ft. Polo G

    Burna opened this song with “Remember when dem no believe me no more?” 

    Well, that’s the case of the Super Eagles; last time we won the AFCON was 2013. A decade later, we’re back to take our chances at winning. As a serious team in this to win every goddamn prize, there’s no better motivating song.

    23 — Burna Boy

    Though 23 is a reference to basketballer Michael Jordan, this song can makes you feel like Messi or Ronaldo. This song doesn’t only pump confidence, it makes you feel invincible.The Super Eagles need this.

    Oya Come Make We Go — 2Baba ft. Sauti Sol

    Watch the room luminate when our boys play ‘Oya Come Make We Go’ as they leave the dressing room for the pitch. This is essentially saying “let’s go there and have a blast.”

    Overkilling — Djinee

    Fifteen years later, Djinee’s Overkilling is still the anthem for the people chasing excellence, AKA overkilling, in their fields. This isn’t to exaggerate Super Eagles’ capability, but we can fake it till everyone believes it.

    Champion — General Pype

    “This is the sound of the champion,” like General Pype said in this song. In fact, it must blast in the stadium when we finally win the 2024 AFCON IJN.

    Undisputed Champion — M.I Abaga

    M.I’s Undisputed Champion emphasizes the need to build a winning mentality. It’s the anthem that rouses you from sleep.

    Stand Strong — Davido ft. Sunday Service Choir

    After our draw against Equatorial Guinea on January 14, 2024, our boys clearly need to hold onto this confidence-boost song. Whether the Super Eagles “minus” before the 2024 AFCON final or not, it should keep playing. Recommended it in the morning, afternoon and night.

    Yo, Take This Quiz to Prove How Well You Know Nigeria’s National Football Team

  • Obi Asika, Ali Nuhu Among New Directors of the Federal Ministry of Art, Culture and the Creative Economy

    On January 12, 2023, Ajuri Ngalale, Tinubu’s Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, announced the appointment of 11 new directors for the Federal Ministry of Art, Culture and the Creative Economy (FMACCE). These are their names and new roles.

    Tola Akerele — Director-General, National Theatre

    Tola Akerele has built successful businesses that have contributed to contemporary African art. She founded Bogobiri House, an Afrocentric and artistic hotel with an art gallery, restaurant and bar. Alongside being the curator at Soto Gallery, Tola also owns an interior design studio called iDesign by Tola Akelere. With a solid resume in arts, culture and creativity, it’s not hard to see why the direction of the national theatre has been entrusted with her.

    Image source: Businessday NG

    Husseini Shaibu — Director-General, National Films and Censors Board

    The new director of the National Films and Censors Board is Husseini Shaibu, the deputy national director of the National Troupe of Nigeria, an editor at The Guardian newspaper and a film critic. He’s also been a member of the jury board of the Africa Movie Academy Awards (AMAA) and the Nigerian Oscar Selection Committee. 

    Image source: Starconnect Media

    Obi Asika — Director-General, National Council for Arts and Culture

    Anyone who’s familiar with the Nigerian music industry must know Obi Asika is a major contributor to the sector. Not only did his Storm Records platform OG Afrobeats artists like Sasha P, Naeto C, Jazzman Olofin and Yung 6ix, becoming one of Nigeria’s biggest labels to date, but Obi’s ten-episode Afrobeats documentary, Journey of the Beats (2022) on Showmax, also visualised the genre’s history and global movement. He served as a Senior Special Assistant to former President Goodluck Jonathan and was once part of the African Advisory Committee of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African Art in the U.S.

    Image source: TheWill Downtown

    Aisha Adamu Augie — Director-General, Centre for Black and African Arts and Culture

    Aisha Adamu Augie is an Abuja-based award-winning photographer, filmmaker and mixed media artist. She won the Sisterhood Award for Photographer of the Year and the British Council’s “Through My Eyes” competition in 2014. The same year, Aisha hosted “Alternative Evil”, her first solo photography exhibition. When she’s not hosting the podcast, “I Love Your Work with Aisha Augie”, she’s performing governmental roles. She was a Special Adviser to Zainab Shamsuna Ahmed, the former Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, from 2019 to 2023. 

    Instagram: @aishaak49

    Ekpolador-Ebi Koinyan — Chief Conservator, National War Museum

    The National War Museum is the only museum that showcases military history in West Africa, and Ekpolador-Ebi Koinyan is its new chief conservator. Before his appointment, he headed the Bayelsa State Government’s e-Governance Project, and he’s a senior partner at Smart Alliance Consulting, examining the operations of professional service firms in emerging markets.

    X.com: @ekpolador_ebi

    Ahmed Sodangi — Director-General, National Gallery of Art

    Ahmed Sodangi is an experienced expert in the import and export industry, and a project officer at the Bank of Industry Ltd. Although he’s an unfamiliar name, we’re investing a little faith in this president’s appointee.

    Image source: LinkedIn

    Chaliya Shagaya — Director-General, National Institute of Archeology and Museum Studies

    Chaliya Shagaya is an entrepreneur, fashion consultant and ex-mode who’s consulted for respected designers like Deola Sagoe and Korto Momolu. Ms Shayaga served as the former head of new media at Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) and head of government relations at the Nigerian Exchange Ltd. (NGX). We look forward to her contribution to preserving our artefacts and museums — and possibly, giving us our Afrobeats Museum?

    Image source: THISDAYLIVE

    Khaltume Bulama Gana — Artistic Director, National Troupe of Nigeria

    Kaltume Bulama Gana is the curator of the National Gallery of Art, an artist who’s showcased her work at more than 45 group and solo exhibitions. She was an assistant director in the History and Culture Bureau in 1987, and before that, she was a TV presenter at Kano State Television from 1985 to 1986. She runs Herwa Heart of Art Initiative, an NGO focused on educating children, including young girls and women affected by Boko Haram’s insurgency. We hope she excels in her new role.

    Image source: OpenBU

    Biodun Ajiboye — Director-General, National Institute for Cultural Orientation

    Biodun Ajiboye has worked in media, publicity and campaigns for the All Progressive Congress (APC) political party and in the Nigerian telecommunication industry. He owned the now defunct Nigerian Telecoms News and the Nigerian Telecoms Awards. 

    Image source: The Guardian Nigeria

    Ali Nuhu — Managing Director, Nigerian Film Corporation

    Ali Nuhu is among the most decorated actors in the Hausa film industry. With over 22 years in the film industry, he’s not a new face to lovers of Kannywood and Nollywood. If you want a problem solved, call on those with firsthand experience in it. We guess that’s what President Tinubu did with this appointment. 

    Image source: Daily Trust

    Ramatu Abonbo Mohammed — Director-General, National Commission for Museums and Monuments

    Ramatu Mohammed Abonbo was Niger State’s former commissioner of commerce, industry and investment. Before her involvement in politics, Ramatu was Chief Marketing Executive at MicroAccess Ltd., a pioneer information and communication firm through which Nigeria’s first national website and the National Hospital’s first website were built. She was also the director of Hamble Group, London. Although her CV isn’t related, we look forward to see how her past successes in executive leadership transfers to her new role.

    Facebook: Haj. Rahmatu Mohammed Yar’adua

    UP NEXT: Dear Minister, Nigeria Already Has Theme Songs to Choose From

  • These 7 Artists Must Drop Albums in 2024

    2023 came with numerous album releases, from heavy hitters to upcoming acts. We expected some of our biggest stars to join the wagon, but instead, they gave us dust. Here’s a short list of artists who owe us a feast in 2024.

    2Baba

    It’s been four years since Warrior. But on January 3, the veteran singer took to Instagram to announce his 2024 plan to release a new album. Motivated by the vim and excellence of new-gen artists, 2Baba said, “Na so we no dey gree for anybody this year o.”

    Tems

    She dropped two singles towards the end of 2023, and it’s been over a month since she teased her album on X. Let’s have it, please.

    Image source: Premium Times

    Victony

    This guy made noise in 2023 with bangers like My Darling, Angelus and Ohema. We heard him. Now, he needs to put his artistry into a full-length body of work. We’re ready for Victony.

    Image source: BellaNaija

    Tiwa Savage

    Tiwa Savage may be killing features up and down, but she needs to drop a new album. Water & Garri, an EP, came out in 2021. That’s a long time to be stuck with only groceries. Maybe banga soup and starch-type albums this year?

    Image source: Premium Times

    Odunsi (the Engine)

    The three-track SPORT EP he dropped in December 2023 was just a tease. We see he’s come out of ghost mode and has been appearing on his socials lately. He also produced Jazz Up off Pan African Rockstar (Lady Donli’s latest album) back in September 2023. We hope he’s back to feed us with another innovative album like rare. (2018).

    Image source: GQ Middle East

    Peruzzi

    Peruzzi has shown himself to be a brilliant singer-songwriter and composer. With three albums in his catalogue and over 252 songwriter credits on hits like Nwa Baby, Risky and Unavailable, he’s defining himself as one of Afrobeats’ top writers. But it’s been over three years since Rum & Boogie, or is he not doing singing again?

    Image source: Viberate

    Ayra Starr

    Sabi Girl had a successful 2023 taking her music around Africa, Australia and North America, and featuring on everything from Girl Next Door with Tyla to Big FU with David Guetta. We love these records, but a new album will bang differently.

    Image source: www.ayrastarr.com

    READ NEXT: New Cats We’d Have Loved Albums From In 2023

  • The Best Afrobeats Songs of 2024’s First Weekend

    As work resumed this new year, so did the music industry. The music release window has opened, and artists are back, pushing out fresh content. These songs are some of the best Afrobeats jams the first week of 2024 has to offer.

    Bump this:

    Better — Jaido P

    Jaido P’s latest song, Better, went live as we crossed into 2024. No saviour is coming for him, Jaido commits to making his life his full responsibility. Regardless of his background, he’s motivated because he’s alive. There’s hope to do and become better. This is positive energy to start the year.

    Look My Opps — Laxy-BBK

    Abuja artist, Laxy-BBK, started the year with a drill tune and visuals titled Look My Opps. His energy is competitive but still sounds feel-good, keeping the bars loose enough to get the chicks jamming, party vibing and provide enough pump for the hustlers.  

    DON’T KNOW — Eniola Havoc

    With a knack for clever punchlines and a combination of Yorùbá and English, Eniola Havoc takes strides in his music journey, not greeing for unbelievers and competition. DON’T KNOW is the most introspective and second track off his three-pack single, WITH LOVE, FROM BANDO.

    James Bond — Jujuboy, Banx & Ranx and Harley

    Aristokrat Records signee, Jujuboy, finds chemistry with Canadian production duo, Banx & Ranx, and Villeneuve-Saint-Georges-based artist, Harley, to flaunt their coolness and charisma. The sound on this track flirts with Afrobeats and rap — a fun anthem for fly guys.

    Hustle — Sola

    Patience drives Sola, but her eyes are glued on hustle — there’s money to get. Yet Hustle is a serenading Afrobeats jam about praying for grace, reminding us that cash rules everything.

    EL Chapo — Reechdee ft. Ice Prince

    Although El Chapo is a convicted criminal, his glorified, white-washed name pops up in too many lyrics and references. Burgeoning artist, Reechdee links with veteran rapper, Ice Prince, to floss about luxury and the rich guy lifestyle, drawing comparisons with Chapo. Hearing Ice Prince spit on this Afro-swing jam after he dropped his latest solo release, Woke, in December 2023, it seems he’s gearing up to become active in music again.

    I Go Dey — Lyta ft. Moyo Payne

    After dropping Correct, in December 2023, Lyta has put out another serenading love song that promises availability and commitment. It features fellow street-pop act, Moyo Payne, who closes the song.

    CHECK THIS: 2023 In Music: The Hardest Nigerian Drill Songs of the Year

  • The Year in Review: 2023 in Nigerian Women’s Achievements

    Regardless of the industry and challenges they face, one thing remains clear: Nigerian women will show up and show out. From sports to politics to the arts, Nigerian women have put in the work, braved all the hurdles and taken their flowers this year. Here are all the things Nigerian women achieved in 2023.

    Hilda Baci’s record-breaking cook-a-thon 

    Image credit: Premium Times

    This achievement has made two of our impact report lists already, and well-deserved too. When the year started, Guinness World Records would’ve never guessed a Nigerian chef would shake their world. After six years of preparing for this feat, Hilda Baci took to Amore Gardens on May 11, 2023, to begin her record-breaking cook-a-thon, which lasted four days and saw a roaring crowd of Nigerians pool in to support. Not only did Hilda break the record for the longest cooking marathon by an individual, but she also inspired thousands of other Nigerians to begin their record-breaking journeys.

    THE STORY: 100 Hours Completed: Hilda Baci on the Journey to Breaking a Culinary World Record

    Jade Osiberu’s big trifecta bang

    Image credit: Bellanaija

    One thing about the women of Nollywood is they’ll give us the best movies and have us talking about it for days on end. This year, Jade Osiberu gave us an award-winning trifecta with a big bang: Gangs of Lagos, The Trade and Brotherhood. We knew she was IT when she dropped Isoken which still has us scrambling six years later, but with the Prime Video release of these three crime thrillers, she’s cemented her place as Nollywood royalty.

    THE STORY: Everything You Need to Know About Jade Osiberu’s “Gangs of Lagos”

    Tems’ Grammy win and Oscar nomination 

    Image credit: Dailypost

    It’s Tems’ world, and we’re just living in it. From her epic 2020 run with Essence to a feature on Beyonce’s Renaissance and co-writing and lending her vocals to Rihanna’s Lift Me Up, both in 2022, Tems has proven she’s here to stay. But if all of the above isn’t enough proof for you, her Grammy Award for “Best Melodic Rap Performance” and Oscar nomination for “Best Original Song” in 2023 should do the trick.

    THE STORY: How to Collect the Soap Tems Is Using

    The Super Falcons’ World Cup run

    Image credit: Dailypost

    For the first time in a while, the Super Falcons gave Nigerians some hope. They made it past the FIFA Women’s World Cup group stage unbeaten and only got kicked out by England through penalty shoot-outs in August. They might not have made it to the finals, but they made it to the FIFA Top 10 rankings as the tenth-best team at the 2023 Women’s World Cup.

    THE STORY: It’s the Super Falcons’ World And We’re Just Living In It

    D’Tigress’s fourth consecutive Afrobasket championship win 

    Image credit: Guardian

    After a 12-year-long drought with no wins to their name, Nigeria’s basketball team was crowned the FIBA women’s Afrobasket champions in 2017. Just in case everyone thought it was a fluke, they did it again in 2019, then 2021, and in August 2023, for the fourth time in a row, they won the championship. Please, put some respect on their name.

    Tobi Amusan’s Laureus Award nomination

    Image credit: Premium Times

    She made the world stop in 2022 setting a 12.12 seconds record to win the 100m Hurdle semi-final race at the World Championships in Oregon, U.S., becoming Nigeria’s first World Record (WR) holder in any track and field event. In February 2023, Tobi also became the first Nigerian to be nominated for the prestigious Laureus World Sports Award in the Breakthrough of the Year category.

    Rukayat Shittu’s political win on the first try

    Image credit: Premium Times

    Nothing’s ever as easy as it should be in Nigeria, but as a woman, it’s a million times harder. This is why we were all elated when Rukayat became the youngest woman to win a seat in the Kwara State House of Assembly after the last national elections in February, and on her very first try.

    Helen Williams’ record-breaking wig

    Image credit: Sahara Reporters

    After Hilda Baci’s record-breaking cook-a-thon, Nigerians made a beeline to the digital gates of the Guinness Book of World Records. They made several attempts at numerous a-thons, but of all the people who’ve tried their hands at breaking a record this year, Helen Williams was one of the successful few, setting the record for the longest handmade wig at 351.28 metres (1,152 ft 5 in). It took her 11 days and ₦200k.

    The first African CEO of CIF

    Image credit: LinkedIn

    Nigerian women are breaking the rules, paving the way and making strides in diverse fields both at home and abroad, and Tariye Gbadegisan is a prime example of that. For now, she’s the chief executive officer of ARM Harith Infrastructure Investments, but from March 2024, she’ll resume her role as the CEO of Climate Investment Funds where she’ll lead sustainable energy transitions, solutions based on nature and resilience in more than 70 developing nations, drawing on her 20 years of expertise investing in developing economies.

    CAF Player of the Year (Women) award

    Image credit: Vanguardngr

    After their run at the 2023 Women’s World Cup, it’s no shocker that Super Falcons’ players Asisat Oshoala, Chiamaka Nnadozie, Christy Ucheibe, Osinachi Ohale, Rasheedat Ajibade, Toni Payne and Uchenna Kanu made it to the shortlist for the CAF Player of the Year award. On December 11, Asisat Oshoala won the prestigious award in Marrakech, Morocco.

    THE STORY: CAF Awards 2023: The Top Highlights as Victor Osimhen, Asisat Oshoala Win Big

    Ayra Starr, Grammy nominee 

    Image credit: Bellanaija

    When Ayra Starr sang Sability and proclaimed herself a “sabi girl”, she knew what she was saying. Two years into the game, Ayra has become the first and youngest Nigerian female artist to bag a Grammy nomination. In November, she was nominated for Best African Music Performance thanks to her 2022 global hit single, Rush.

    THE STORY: Grammy 2024: Davido Bags First Nomination, Major Categories List

    Bola Abioye’s Women in Music Special Recognition Award

    Image credit: X.com

    In November, the Women in Music Awards, sponsored by YouTube and dedicated to honoring the most inspirational and influential female execs in the music business, presented “the ultimate problem solver” with their very first Special Recognition Award. Bola Abioye has worked for the last 31 years at Universal Music Group and is the inaugural winner of the award.

    Oge Obasi’s big wins with “Mami Wata”

    Image credit: Opencountrymag

    The movie Oge Obasi co-directed and produced has swept awards left and right since its major release in September. From the 2023 Sundance Film Festival’s World Cinema Dramatic Special Jury Award for Cinematography to Best Achievement in Cinematography at the AMAA awards, three awards at FESPACO, and now, an Oscar 2024 nomination for Best International Feature Film, it’s been a great year for Nollywood, thanks to Oge and the rest of the crew.

    THE STORY: AMAA 2023: “Anikulapo”, “Mami Wata” Win Big, Complete List of Winners

    Women at AMVCA 2023

    Image credit: Nollywood life

    It was a great year for women at this year’s Africa Magic Viewer’s Choice Awards (AMVCA) in May. It’s been years of Bimbo Ademoye delivering hilarious characters and lines, and after breaking the internet as Selina in the rom-com, Selina, she bagged her very first AMVCA. Osas Ighodaro won best actress in a drama for the second time in a row, for her performance as Teju Williams in Man of God. Patience “Mama G” Ozokwor joined the likes of Taiwo Ajayi Lycett and Amaka Igwe, to receive the prestigious AMVCA Industry Merit award 24 years after rising to fame and with over 100 movies under her belt. 

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    Nora Awolowo’s Nigeria: The Debut and Baby Blues scored the filmmaker her first two AMVCA nominations this year for the Best Documentary award. She won for Nigeria: The Debut, while ex-BBN star, Diane Russet’s Ricordi won Best Original Drama Series. Diane has been on her Nollywood grind for a while now, executive producing and starring in impressive short films like The Therapist and There’s Something Wrong with the Bamideles.

    THE STORY: AMVCA 2023: The Big Winners and the People Who Should’ve Won 

    “I Do Not Come To You By Chance” at AFRIFF

    Image credit: Naija247news

    “I Do Not Come To You By Chance” was adapted from Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani’s award-winning book (2009) to screen by Chika Anadu, co-executive produced by Genevieve Nnaji. Since its release in September, it has garnered rave reviews and was a befitting winner of the Audience Choice Award at the Africa International Film Festival in November.

    THE STORY: “I Do Not Come To You By Chance” Is Adapted Into Film

    AFRIFF 2023’s Best Feature Film

    Image credit: IMDb

    Every year, AFRIFF premieres and screens a ton of movies, but only one can walk away with the coveted Best Feature Film award. This year, not only did “Fumilayo Ransome-Kuti” a movie about the iconic Nigerian woman’s life directed by Bolanle Austen-Peters win it, but it also left with the Best Screenplay award.

    THE STORY: Now in Cinema: the Life and Legend of Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti

    Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala’s National Diaspora Merit Award

    Image credit: Arise News

    The Director-General of the World Trade Organization might be Nigeria’s greatest export yet. From being Nigeria’s finance minister to the Minister of Foreign Affairs, it is clear Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala has the interests of the Nigerian community at heart, so it made sense when the Nigerians in Diaspora Commission presented the Diaspora Icon award to her in August.

    NEXT READ: The Year in Review: Nigerian Pop Events That Went Viral in 2023

  • “S2” Review: Inside Wizkid’s Sound-bending Sandwich of Fun and Introspection

    On the morning of December 22, 2023, Wizkid released a short EP titled S2 (Soundman Vol. 2), a follow-up to Soundman Vol. 1. Two days earlier, on Instagram, he posted an album artwork out of the blues, with the caption “See you on Friday”, throwing fans into a frenzy. 

    S2 is his first release since More Love, Less Ego in 2022. Coming in the Christmas season, just like Soundman Vol. 1 which dropped suddenly on December 6, 2019, Big Wiz has given us four new songs to rinse and repeat as we face a new year head on.

    S2 takes on Amapiano while flexing Wizzy’s usual Afrobeats and Dancehall sound, achieving a balance between the low and mid tempo Made In Lagos and the thematic cohesion of More Love, Less Ego.

    On the rhythmic rush of slapping log drums and meshed shakers of Ololufe, Wizkid confesses love to his interest. What’s spellbinding is the gentle delivery and verse exchange between Wiz and Wande Coal, which we haven’t got enough of since their collab on For You off Superstar (2010). The P.Priime-produced jam is a modern love story that somehow emphasises on sexual pleasure. It has all the recipes to be great but sounds more in-the-moment than intentional.

    Diamond is an assortment of self-reflection, hedonism, smug brags and luxury that rubs in the face. Wizkid likens his tribulations and ensuing superstar lifestyle to his diamond accessories and the pressure they undergo. Life can be fleeting, but Wizkid has seen better days, and he remarks about that with, “Diamond no dey force himself to shine.” 

    All in all, Diamond takes a familiar Wizzy approach with a relatable story and production handled by P.Priime and Bigfish. It calls for slow dancing and glasses of wine.

    Energy plays next. Wizkid, in a superchilled mood, throws woman-worship into his verses, recognising in the hook that he has good and bad days like everyone else. But he keeps himself together with his vices: smoke and sexcapades. He runs through the song smoothly like a butter knife. Wizkid’s romance, soft-life formula and sexy melody never fail — they yield a bop in this song.

    S2 closes out with its best track, IDK, featuring Zlatan. TheElements’ production is lush, gets the head nodding and creates an aura of celebration. Big Wiz calls for a good time as a choir subtly backs him up. 

    Zlatan performs the second verse, the highlight of the EP. Zlatan raps about the luxury lifestyle, fair-weathered women and hustle, with a sprinkle of his animated ad lib and choral backup too. Afrobeats’ poster boy for hustle culture is a worthy guest artist. Wizkid’s writing on the other hand isn’t remarkable, but he continues to prove himself a melody molder.

    S2 is experimental and feels like a prelude to what Wizkid has cued up for his next project. He’s featured on Rexxie’s Abracadabra, Metro Boomin’s SPIDERMAN: ACROSS THE SPIDER-VERSE, Wande Coal’s Ebelebe and Don Toliver’s Slow Motion all year without a solo release.

    Wiz has also been on the road for most of the year. He took his music across international stages like Afronation Miami (May), The Other Stage at Glastonbury (June) and Rolling Loud Germany in July — the same month he filled the Tottenham Hotspur stadium in England. 

    Meanwhile, it’s been a bittersweet year for Wizkid. His mum passed away in August 2023. And his “More Love, Less Ego” Europe tour which was scheduled for October has been postponed till further notice.

    Despite that, on December 11, Wizkid posted about a ₦100 million giveaway on his IG story. Later that day, he appeared in Surulere, Lagos, and gave back to children in his community. 

    The same giving spirit has brought us S2. In 12 minutes, the four songs on the extended play cater to the majority of Wizkid’s fanbase. Diamonds is for dancehall lovers. Energy and IDK are for OG Afrobeats fans, and his Amapiano fans have a winner in Ololufe

    Overall, S2 is a decent project that offers a good time. Wizkid likes music, and he’s having fun with it.

  • The Very Best Afrobeats Music Videos of 2023

    It pays to have global recognition because Afrobeats has stepped up in the “compelling visuals” department this year. These were the best of the best music videos of the year.

    Yoga — Asake

    In January 2023, Asake released Yoga with a music video ahead of his second album drop. The TG Omori-directed visual captured Asake and his cast members by the seaside and in the tropical city of Dakar, Senegal. As Asake roamed the streets, looking like he was in the middle of an epiphany, he still found the time to fish, perform ceremonial rites and practise yoga.

    FEEL — Davido

    Davido bragged that the music video cost him ₦100 million to shoot. When it came out in October, we all saw why. What we got was more “movie” than “music video”. Top choice director of the stars, TG Omori, was to blame for this war flick, featuring displaced citizens, flying aircraft and explosions. Meanwhile, Davido played strategist in a library with a globe and sketching paper. Plot twist: he’s plotting to rescue his love interest from the war zone. While it would’ve fit better with a politically charged song, the shot was a cinematic gem.

    Korokoro — Prettyboy D-O

    The first minute of this video released in May, dramatised two friends in a herbalist’s house impatient to get rich by any means necessary. Pan to Prettyboy D-O hanging with individuals brandishing shiny machetes like playthings. D-O worked alongside BadFlicks to direct this very Nigerian video that showcases a high energy characteristic of us and the rampant gangsterism that’s overtaken our society.

    Obapluto — Shallipopi feat. Pa Monday-Edo

    October came with a Shallipopi’s Obapluto video. In this homage to the great Benin kingdom and his Edo roots, the artist landed in a spaceship to celebrate the ascension of his Plutomania era. The cast were adorned with mud-red beads from head to chest, neck and shoulder, and strapped in white robes. It’s beautiful to see Pa Monday-Edo Igbinidu who initially sued Shallipopi for illegally sampling his song, Iyovbere. Lagos-based KEMZ (SkiiBii’s Baddest Boy, King Perry’s YKTV) directed the video.

    Money & Love — Wizkid

    Seated on an open rooftop with a paint palette and brush in hand, Wizkid channelled his inner Picasso in this March-released video. Next, we saw an outdoor garage of classic Ferraris and a house party. Director K made it simple but portrayed the elegance expected of a man surrounded by money and love.

    All Eyes On Me — Niniola

    This Pink-directed music video came out in June, and it’s a “rich aunty” masterclass. It starts with a stress-free preparation at the make-up desk and a night-out look that turns heads with envy and side gossip. In another scene, Niniola lays out her gold jewellery and shoes, native lace dress and satellite gele. It’s no shock when she owns the Owambe gathering on arrival, bringing all attention to herself as the song demands. 

    Charm — Rema

    Self-directed alongside Perliks and Folarin Oludare, Rema went from expressing himself through dance to being mesmerised by a woman’s seductive moves in the first 30 seconds. He was so mesmerised that he flew out of an explosion like an action star just to get a closer view of her fire dance. This video premiered in May and subtly introduced us to Rema’s current era, with the colour red and “raver” aesthetic. Five months later, he launched his RAVAGE project. 

    Dejavu — Seyi Vibez

    Before the baddies make an appearance and cash starts to flow, Seyi Vibez and the video cast glow in white robes that look like martial arts attire, for a funeral procession-like scene. Seyi is shedding his old skin and transitioning into a new being. TG Omori and Seyi Vibez delivered yet another exhilarating video at the tail-end of September.

    Still Sober — Aguero Banks feat. Phyno

    In November, Oluthewave dropped this Hip-Hop music video focused on cliche street activities like rolling dice, outdoor workouts and run-ins with the police. As day morphs into night, the street hustle and exchanges carry on. Its cinematography applies a creative style of side shots that make the video a unique watch.

    AGBALAGBI — OluwaMillar

    On December 14, 2023, OluwaMillar released his very first music video. In it, he recreates Baba Suwe’s classic “Agbalagbi” scene before hanging with cameos on yellow buses in a Dashiki and cap, borrowing from Yorùbá Nollywood to offer a relatability that hits home. This music video complements the theme of the song well, judiciously managing an apparently limited budget. Emsi Lucky is a video director to watch out for.

  • The Year in Review: Nigerian Pop Events That Went Viral in 2023

    The Nigerian pop scene has had many newsworthy moments in 2023. Most were even globally relevant — for good, this time — while some others left us sad or upset. We compiled a list just to refresh your memory and give Nigerians everywhere a reason to be proud as the year comes to a close.

    Afrobeats

    NBA half-time show

    Tems, Burna Boy and Rema took Afrobeats to the 79th NBA half-time show in Utah, U.S., in February 2023. From Burna’s live performance of Anybody and It’s Plenty, to Tems’ Crazy Things and Rema’s Calm Down, it was a night to celebrate African rhythm on an important foreign stage. Next up? NFL Super Bowl halftime.

    THE STORY: Nigerian Musicians Aren’t Playing; They’re on the Biggest Sports Stages Now

    The year of Davido

    After months of silence due to his three-year-old son’s demise, Davido returned to social media to announce a new album, two new signings to his label and a rebranded Davido Music Worldwide (DMW) on March 29, 2023. He dropped the album, his fourth full-length project, Timeless, the next day. The lead single, Unavailable, was a standout hit, toeing the line of his previous successes: Dami Duro, Aye and If

    Beyond that, the consensus is Timeless is Davido’s best work so far, and the Afrobeats album of 2023. Perhaps to solidify this claim, the album made the Grammy 2024 nomination list for Best Global Music Album.

    In October, he and his wife, Chioma, welcomed a set of twins, a year after the loss of their son. 

    X.com: @albumtalkHQ

    THE STORY: The Real 30BG Know These Are the 15 Greatest Davido Songs of ALL Time 

    Debut at the MET Gala

    In May, Burna Boy and Tems made their debut at the 2023 MET Gala, an iconic fashion and fundraising event in New York, U.S. As first-timers — only the second and third Nigerians to attend after author, Tomi Adeyemi, in 2021 — both artists showcased outfits people couldn’t stop talking about for days. Burna pulled up in a blue and black Burberry suit, while Tems wore a black and white dress styled by Dunsin Wright.

    Image source: Punch

    THE STORY: 20 of the Best, Mid and Worst Looks From the 2023 MET Gala 

    The Grammy’s new Best African Music category

    The American Recording Academy announced the new category on June 13, 2023. This is a welcome development to the “Afrobeats to the world” cause as our sound leaves the over-generalised canopy of “world music” in the academy’s eyes.

    Image Source: The American Recording Academy

    THE STORY: Grammy 2024: Davido Bags First Nomination, Major Categories List

    O2 Arena domination

    In August, after Asake released his sophomore album, Work of Art, and peaked at number 66 on the US Billboard 200 Albums chart, he sold out the O2 Arena and Barclays Centre in the United Kingdom. 

    Two years after Burna Boy brought Rema out on the O2 Arena stage in 2021, the Edo-state-born artist held his own show at the same 20,000-capacity London event centre, on November 14, 2023. 

    THE STORY: All the Best Moments From Asake’s O2 Show

    Mohbad’s widely-discussed death

    Singer and rapper, Mohbad, passed away on September 12, 2023. His demise generated public sympathy and divided commentary. Outraged fans and sympathisers took to the streets to protest his death and celebrate his call to glory. It’s the largest protest Lagos has witnessed since #EndSARS in 2020.

    X.com: @instablog

    THE STORY: 14 Verifiable Events Surrounding Mohbad’s Death

    Rema joins Spotify’s Billion Club

    In the same month of September, Rema’s Calm Down remix with Selena Gomez became the first African song to garner a billion streams on Spotify. Rema now sits at the table with global acts like Taylor Swift, Drake, Rihanna and Justin Bieber.

    Image Source: Spotify

    THE STORY: How Rema and Selena Gomez Bagged A Billion Streams

    Wizkid’s mum’s burial

    Wizkid buried his mum in October, and people on social media turned the sad event into a circus. The general public got to see a vulnerable Big Wiz for the first time when he shed tears at the funeral.

    OlaDips’ death and resurrection

    The latest artist to pull a fake-death PR stunt since Skiibii, OlaDips was reported dead on November 15, 2023, just a day before his album, Superhero Adugbo, came out. On November 25th, the rapper posted a proof of life on his socials. Although he denied the PR stunt allegations, the public rained insults on him for making them mourn in vain.

    THE STORY: The Most Controversial Celebrities of 2023, Ranked

    Pop culture

    Hilda Baci’s cook-a-thon

    Although Nigerians have broken Guinness World Records many times before, the buzz Hilda Baci received for her attempt is the largest so far. On May 11, she kicked off her cook-a-thon, which ended on May 15 after a 100-hour cooking session. They delivered her certificate for “the longest cooking marathon” at 93 hours, on June 13, 2023.

    Image source: The ICIR

    THE STORY: Hilda Baci Is Officially a World Record Holder: 7 Takeaways From GWR’s Confirmation Video

    Davido vs Anita Brown

    In June 2023, a U.S. entrepreneur and model named Anita Brown claimed she was pregnant for Davido. She went viral on social media for her hateful comments against Chioma, Davido’s wife. But later in October, she tendered an apology to the artist and his wife, and we haven’t heard from her since.

    THE STORY: Should We Suspect These Other Lady-Names in Davido’s Songs?

    Naira Marley’s NDLEA ambassadorship

    Naira Marley visited the National Drugs Law and Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) headquarters in Abuja on August 17 to give an anti-drug talk. The next thing we heard, the agency had made him their ambassador. Following public backlash, they denied this ever happened two days later. 

    Image source: NDLEA

    THE STORY: Weekly Roundup: UNICAL Suspends Professor Cyril Ndifon

    Osimhen’s Ballon d’Or

    On October 30, Napoli striker, Victor Osimhen, became the first born and bred Nigerian footballer to be on the top ten list of the Ballon d’Or award. He was the highest-ranked African footballer at the awards with 26 goals in the last season. On the night of December 11, he also won African Men’s Player of the Year at the 2023 Confederation of African Football Awards.

    Image source: Sports Brief

    THE STORY: Napoli Sparks Outrage After Trolling Victor Osimhen on TikTok Over Missed Penalty

    Oshoala’s win at the CAF Awards

    On the same night Victor Osimhen got the CAF award for African Men’s Player of the Year, Barcelona striker, Asisat Oshoala, was crowned the African Women’s Player of the Year 2023. Nigerian players currently rule the African football world.

    Image source: CAF Online

    THE STORY: CAF Awards 2023: The Top Highlights as Victor Osimhen, Asisat Oshoala Win Big

    Made Kuti’s high school love story

    In November, social media was on fire when Made Kuti, Fela’s grandson, got married to Inedoye Onyeso. Inedoye was his school daughter back in secondary school. Their wedding story went viral as people gushed over their Bridgerton-like love story.

    Image source: Linda Ikeji Blog

    Nollywood

    Queen of Nollywood films

    2023 started on a shaky foot for the Nigerian creative industry. Peace Anyiam-Osigwe, the filmmaker who founded the Africa Movie Academy Awards (AMAA) and Africa Film Academy, died on January 9 after a brief illness. Known as the “queen of Nollywood films”, she allegedly pioneered the screening of Nollywood films at international film festivals. Her family promised to carry on her legacy.

    Image Source: The Culture Newspaper

    Chidi Mokeme’s return

    The return of veteran Nollywood actor, Chidi Mokeme, to our screens after a long hiatus was a triumph with his portrayal of Scar, a thug leader, on the hit Netflix mini-series, Shanty Town, in January 2023. Chidi owned his character so well that one would think he had once been an underworld boss. Something we rarely see with the newer Nollywood cats.

    Image source: Netflix

    THE STORY: Chidi Mokeme Was Fire: Let’s Try These OG Nollywood Actors Next

    Saint Obi’s demise

    In May, another OG Nollywood actor, Obinna Nwafor AKA Saint Obi, passed away at age 57 in Jos, after battling an undisclosed illness. Obi was known for his bad-boy characters in almost every action and romance Nollywood movie of the 1990s to early 2000s. News of his death sent shock waves everywhere, particularly because of his sudden disappearance from the limelight for the last two decades and the rumours surrounding his death.

    Image source: MyNigeria

    THE STORY: Action Star, Lover Boy and Legend: A Breakdown of Saint Obi’s Most Iconic Roles

    Mami Wata at the Oscars

    Before CJ “Fiery” Obasi’s Mami Wata even entered Nigerian cinemas in September 2023, the film had trended for its appearance at the Sundance Film Festival in June. In October, it was selected by the Nigerian Official Section Committee for the International Feature Film category ahead of the 2024 Academy Awards.

    Image source: Lilis Soares

    THE STORY: “Mami Wata” Is Taking Nollywood Around the Globe

    Nollywood’s John Wick

    You might’ve heard people call The Black Book Nollywood’s version of John Wick. The emotional thriller is one of the industry’s best releases of 2023, and the most expensive at $1 million. An immediate hit, the movie garnered 5.6 million viewers just two days after its Netflix premiere on September 22.

    Image source: Premium Times Nigeria

    THE STORY: Everything We Know About Editi Effiong’s “The Black Book”

    Mr. Ibu’s battle for life

    In October 2023, veteran comedic actor, John Okafor AKA Mr. Ibu, put out a video on his official Instagram page, soliciting prayers and financial support to treat his diabetes. Celebrities like Davido, Tunde Ednut, Paul Okoye and Kanayo O. Kanayo gathered support for him and promised to do what they could. 

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    As of November 5th, the actor had had seven surgeries. Despite the public’s donation, one of his legs was amputated. Amid the health struggle, his wife and daughter fought over the donated funds, accusing each other of hijacking the rumoured ₦300 million.

    Image source: Nairaland

    THE STORY: What We Know About Mr Ibu’s Health and How You Can Help

  • “‘Carry Me Go’ Was One of the Most Straightforward Jams I’ve Ever Made” — Signal on His Breakout Hit

    Signal is a new producer on the Afrobeats block, who got his big break working on Khaid’s Carry Me Go in March 2023. Since then, he’s worked with Joeboy, DJ Neptune and other household names. Signal took time out from putting his personal project together to share the process behind these hits, the pressure he’s faced since and what the music production game needs.

    Tell us about yourself

    Signal: I’m Signal, the Plug. I’m a music producer originally from Ekiti State, but born and bred in Ibadan. IB City is a massive part of my musical influences. 

    How so?

    Signal: I grew up listening to Yoruba music. I still listen to a lot of Tungba, Fuji and Juju music, and it’s reflected in the drums aspects of my production.

    How did you get into music production?

    Signal: My interest developed in National Open University (Ekiti Chapter) in 2018. My mum noticed I liked computers, so she gave me her laptop. I got a production software my brother had told me about and messed around with it, and watched YouTube tutorials, for nothing less than a year. Then I started to recreate top-charting tracks.

    Our local music and electronic dance music (EDM) influenced my early production. I’d constantly listen to music and blend different sounds based on how I felt about it. That was my start. In 2020, I jumped in and out of Lagos many times, going from studio to studio, linking up with artists that people recommended and those that I met online to create. From going studio to studio; producing and recording, I have since met more artists and music business people.

    Describe your signature sound

    Signal: I call it a “happy sound” because 99% of the time, my sound will put you in a happy mood. My catalogue is proof of that.

    What’s your creative process like now?

    Signal: I produced Carry Me Go in January 2023, and it was one of the most straightforward jams I’ve ever made. I was in the studio with Khaid and Boy Spyce, and we decided to work on something. I had the drums down, we figured out the melody on it, we vibed for a bit, and when it got to the “Carry me go” part, we were sure the jam was done. We left it, returned to the studio later, trimmed it and moved to the mixing session. 

    For Mumu, I recorded it with Joeboy on my birthday — February 23. I went to his side, and he asked if I had beats to play for him. At first, I said no because I didn’t have any beat I’d made for him in particular, but I eventually played him a random beat. He was like, “But you said you didn’t have any”. He got to writing, and we finalised on the song that night. Months later, he connected me with DJ Neptune to release it.

    Has anything changed for you since you made these hits?

    Signal: Yes. How people view me. More people are willing to work with me. They feel like since I have hit songs under my belt, I can replicate it for them. If people insist they want me to recreate something I’ve done before, I will. But I don’t miss the chance to convince them that we should work on something new. If I’d stayed recreating stuff I’d made before, I probably wouldn’t have any of the popular jams I’ve made now. 

    I’m a beat selector now; people seek for my special sound. I have to stay innovative. Music production began as fun for me. It’s more work now, but I can’t afford to lose the fun part.

    How hard has it been to keep the fun part?

    Signal: Quite hard.

    My experience so far has changed my idea of what it’s like to be a musician. Beyond making beats, I’ve had to learn to be strategic. 

    My experience with creators outside Nigeria has changed how I create too. Now, I know music is more than just recording a song. I also have to constantly adapt to new technology.

    What are your thoughts on the current Nigerian music industry?

    Signal: We need more transparency. The industry can be more open about information musicians need to navigate the business. People who contribute to songs should be credited appropriately. There should be an official platform where listeners can read the lists of people who worked on their favourite songs. We need more recognition for the people on the backend.

    The situation is getting better though. And that’s exciting.

    What’s next for Signal?

    Signal: I’m working on my own project. Most of the tracks are ready, but getting clearances from different artists and their managements takes a while. I might make an instrumental project too, but we’ll see. Signal isn’t going anywhere anytime soon.

  • Vasa: The New 18-year-old Afrobeats Kid on the Block

    One morning, toward the end of November, rising Nigerian artist, Vasa, woke up to find he was trending on TikTok. A video in which he performed his latest song, Treasure, had garnered over 300k likes on the popular platform.

    Vasa — coined out of “versatility” — dropped the emotive song, Treasure, on November 10, 2023, in an attempt to stretch his bright beginning. Just four months before that, he’d dropped his two-single coming-of-age debut, which showed us a glimpse of his storytelling skills. 

    We look into his budding music career, how it all started, the viral TikTok moment and his upcoming EP.

    Vasa

    18-year-old Vasa, born Freedom Alli, was born in Benue State and raised in Lagos. Since age nine, he has gravitated toward the arts and creativity. He first expressed himself as a sketch artist then a creative writer whose friends paid him to tell them stories.

    By age 14, he’d directed most of his creative energy into songwriting and music. In 2020, when Vasa turned 15, he started posting freestyles and covers on his Instagram page. His consistency positioned him in many people’s feeds and faces, including his dancer-friends, one of whom forwarded the posts to Ize Records in 2023. The label signed Vasa soon after.

    In August, Vasa put out his official debut. The first, Bolanle, talked about young lovers who couldn’t let go of each other. The second, Teriza, had Vasa serenading listeners with an upbeat Afropop tune about his romantic desires and moments with his love interest. Next, he released a sped-up version of each song to optimise for TikTok.

    Then came Treasure, a follow-up to Bolanle. Blending heartwarming vocals with moody mid-tempo R&B, Vasa’s writing abilities soar. Professing his steadfast desire for his love interest, his persona on the song showcases the sheer significance of vulnerability as a bonding tool in relationships. As he echoes her identity as his “treasure”, his gentle vocals soothe the listener’s tension and the percussion glides the song to a crescendo.

    In November, Vasa gained much-needed visibility. More people are tuned into his music than ever, with his songs and music videos gaining traction on TV and radio. Treasure is currently on Apple Music’s East Africa Risers Shazam Top 200 and Viral Top 50 on Spotify.

    Vasa

    As he progresses, Vasa maintains an unwavering commitment to his love for music, focusing on recording his first full-length project. “It’s an EP I’ve been preparing for next year (2024). I can’t wait for people to hear that I’m versatile and good”. 

    The release could be a significant milestone in his career if it captivates listeners and further showcases his growth as an artist. 

  • These 7 Things Should Be Afrobeats’ New Year Resolutions for 2024

    Afrobeats remains a global top boy with the closing of 2023. But as we head into 2024, it should take some things much more seriously if it wants to stay ahead. 

    Giving full credit

    Nobody will go hungry if everyone involved in creating a song is fully credited for their contribution. In fact, everyone eats — from producer to songwriter to graphic designer. Let’s take metadata seriously from now on, please.

    Owning our narrative

    Nigerians may love grass-to-grace stories, but for how long will afrobeats musicians from privileged backgrounds keep up that facade? There’s no shame in having a billionaire dad or respected family name, beloved, nor is there shame in being a trust fund kid. So own it.

    Leaving Amapiano for the owners

    Shout out to Nigerians for borrowing the beautiful South African sound and making memorable, chart-climbing hits out of it. But it’s time to focus on our many sons of Afrobeats. Because TBH, we’re tired of log drums.

    More unique looks

    Not everytime locs. Sometimes, Tuface or Portable style.

    Clear samples

    There’s no gain in waiting until lawyers write you, or your song is taken down from streaming platforms, to pay up for illegal sampling. Get permission and clear samples before using copyrighted material in your music.

    No to fake PR

    People need to stop fake dying or pulling other unnecessary promotional stunts. Maybe get a creative director to do organic, professional work with you instead.

    No more comparison

    Pitting artists against each other will never be cool, nor will disrespecting your colleague’s work. Artists should just stay away from fan drama. Or address them to kill the flames of stan wars.

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