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lady donli | Zikoko!
  • Lady Donli: The Pan-African Rockstar Era Begins

    After dropping Hello Lady and My Ability earlier in the year, Abuja-born singer-songwriter, Lady Donli, has taken to her socials to announce a studio album release date. As always, we’ve broken down the gist of it.

    Her first album in four years

    Lady Donli made the very first announcement on June 14, 2023, after a four-year break since releasing her debut album, Enjoy Your Life (2019).

    Pan-African Rockstar

    The album title, Pan-African Rockstar, seems worlds apart from Enjoy Your Life, but they’re actually quite similar. She’s been pushing the narrative since 2019 when she dropped EYL.

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    It’s her seventh project

    In 2014, she debuted with a 12-track EP Love or War on SoundCloud. We witnessed her bedroom pop, neo-soul and R&B era as she strummed her guitar with a mixture of singing, rap and spoken word. She continued with What Is Perfect? EP (2015) and Wallflower EP (2016). 

    Letters to Her EP (2018) was her departure from the sound, and in 2019, Enjoy Your Life ushered us into an experimental and African side of Donli. EYL was such an era, from the retro aesthetics to her outfits to the album marketing. And two years after the iconic EYL, she put out a six-track response to those asking Where Is Lady Donli? (WILD), on which she took us back to her smooth vulnerable music days mixed with more afropop and dancehall than before.

    She’s back now with her Pan-African Rockstar and we look forward to what the era will bring.

    September release date 

    Just like her first album came out in the second-half of 2019, Pan-African Rockstar will be out on September 22, 2023.

    A new fan club 

    Donli put out a link for those willing to become members of her Pan-African Rockstar club. Reminds us of the Enjoy Your Life era when we all became ministers of enjoyment.

    The rollout is rolling

    She started with short teasers before putting out a video with her Pan-African Rockstar album release date announcement. Using comments about her fall-off since her debut work, the promo has been gripping enough to guilt-trip even an uninterested listener to look out for her new project.

    Merch!

    You’ll have to join the fanclub for access to tote bags, cassettes, CDs and one of 100 limited vinyls with special edition tracks.

  • “I Made Enjoy Your Life Because I Wasn’t Happy”- Lady Donli

    Lady Donli became popular in Nigeria after releasing her debut album, Enjoy Your Life in 2019. Two years later, she’s ready to drop another project. This time, it’s an EP called WILD. Last week, she talked to us about loving music since she was little, making music before she was Lady Donli, why she doesn’t mind being labelled alté and the influences for her new EP.

    When did you start making music?

    I started making music as early as I can remember. As a kid, I did poetry, I sang nursery rhymes. It came naturally to me. It was easier than riding a bike. I didn’t start putting out music though, until 2012 when I finished secondary school.

    Where can I find those songs?

    Nowhere. I took it all down. Before I was Lady Donli, I was two other totally different artists and my transition to Lady Donli meant I had to “kill” those other artists.

    Can I at least know their names?

    Haha..nope. I’m not saying a word. 

    LMAO. Did your parents support your music career? 

    They were fearful, but they did because it felt right. My dad would tell me about how when I was a baby, they would play music for me and I would dance. Me deciding to become a musician wasn’t unexpected. 

    Cliche question: which musicians inspire you?

    Because I make many different types of music, different people inspire me. If I was a jazz artist, I would say Nina Simone was my greatest inspiration. If I was an RnB artist, it would be Beyonce — I’m a Beyonce stan. But there’s a wide range of people that have inspired me; Brenda Fassie, Asa, Angélique Kidjo, Fela, Erykah Badu and many others. Right now, I inspire myself. 

    When did Lady Donli come into existence?

    2014. Right before I got into university to study law. 

    What was that like?

    It was hard. I didn’t actually want to study law, but I knew it would make my parents happy, so why not? Music was my only escape from all the seriousness. 

    My first song was “Nothing on me”, and then I put out “Mr Creeper” which did super well in Abuja. As time went on, I put out EPs with music I was working on, and then in 2019, I dropped Enjoy Your Life (EYL).  

    How do you navigate your growing popularity?

    I never really notice when I become more popular. I still get surprised when someone runs into me and is excited because they know me as Lady Donli. Someone heard me on a live radio show recently and showed up at the station, waited for me to finish just so we could take a photo. That genuinely shocked me. It hasn’t hit me that I have fans like that. 

    Lady Donli wants you to live your best life | The FADER
    Source: Fader

    Is that modesty I hear?

    Haha… I wasn’t in Nigeria when EYL dropped. By the time I got back and realised that people were actually actively listening to it, I was super surprised. Happy, but surprised. 

    Let’s talk about EYL. What jazz did you put in that album?

    I didn’t set out planning to make an album. Musicians are always scared of dropping projects and calling them albums. The concept of an album is just so final. We prefer to release EPs and mixtapes. 

    But in that period, I  was making music that sounded really good and decided to turn it into an album. By the time I made “Cash”, I knew it had to be in an album. 

    In truth, EYL was some type of escapism. I made EYL to escape the fact that I wasn’t actually enjoying my life. Life was very stressful in that period and I wasn’t happy, so I made music that made me want to be happy. 

    Because I’m my own biggest critic, I don’t think the album did as good as I thought it could. I saw its success and thought, “What’s next?” Maybe the best thing that came out of the album was that Davido reached out to do a Cash remix. 

    What did that feel like? 

    It was exciting. I was doing a show in Seattle on my birthday, and I got a DM from him saying he wanted to do a collab. Imagine Davido texting you on your birthday while you’re on tour saying he wanted to make music with you.

    Omo. People generally classify you as an alté artist. What’s that like?

    I’m fine with people regarding me as an alté artist. I don’t run away from it. It helps me embrace who I am better. The alté scene embraced me and connected me with people who changed my life and have helped me beyond music. For many people the alté space is not just about music. The people here are the family you wish you had. Many people have gotten kicked out of their homes because they’re creatives, and they’ve found people to house and take care of them just because we’re all making this music together. Being in the alté space is also what would make you feel like you’re a celebrity for the first time. So yeah, I love being a part of it. 

    Let’s talk about your upcoming EP, WILD. What does it sound like?

    It sounds like me having fun, but it doesn’t sound anything like EYL. I don’t want people to expect EYL-type music from WILD.

    I thought my album was going to drop this year, but I realised it wasn’t ready, so I decided to give my fans something else. The EP contains songs that I wrote and wanted other artists to sing. I picked a few of them and sang them myself.  It doesn’t sound like anything I’ve ever made. 

    Lady Donli – WILD EP

    How did 2020 affect your music?

    2020 was a bad year for me. It was the year I was meant to maximise EYL, go on tours and all that, but then I got stuck in Toronto for eight months. I wish I was in Nigeria because I would still have been able to do shows, but the lockdown was much stricter in Canada. I just stayed there, doing nothing other than making music. I made like 90 songs last year. 

    90 songs?

    I’ve never made that much music in my life. What that does is that it gives me so many options to work with in the future because now I have a ton of unreleased music.

    That’s WILD. What Nigerian artists do you want to work with in the future?

    Right now, the only Nigerian artist I really want to work with is my favourite Nigerian artist — Rema. Other collaborations might come spontaneously. 

    What would success feel like for you?

    I have no idea. I could have the number 1 song on the Billboard Hot 100 and not feel like I’m successful. I don’t like to measure success. I just want to make music. 


    QUIZ: Only Alcoholics Will Get More Than 7/12 On This Quiz

  • #BumpThis: Lady Donli’s “Wonda Wonda” & Jinmi Abduls’ “Aya”

    There’s so much new music being released that it’s hard for even the most loyal fans to wade through the trash to find the gems. That’s why we’ve created #BumpThis – a Friday series that features new songs, by and featuring Nigerians, that you absolutely need to hear.


    Lady Donli — “Wonda Wonda” ft. DarkoVibes

    Last year, Lady Donli dropped Enjoy Your Life — one of the most accomplished Nigerian debuts of the past decade — and now she’s back with her first single of 2020, “Wonda Wonda”.

    On the impressive track, Lady Donli’s hypnotic voice glides effortlessly over Kuvie’s exceptional production work. She’s joined by skilled Ghanaian star, DarkoVibes, who delivers an expectedly stellar verse.

    Jinmi Abduls — “Aya” ft. TMXO

    With every new release, Jinmi Abduls reintroduces himself as one of the most dynamic (and criminally underrated) Nigerian artists working today, and his latest effort, “Aya”, is no different.

    Brilliantly produced by TMXO — one of 2020’s hardest-working beatsmiths — “Aya” finds Jinmi singing about how much he wants to show off his lover. It’s easily one of the year’s sweetest love songs.

  • 10 Of Our Favourite Non-Singles From 2019’s Best Nigerian Albums

    2019 had a ton of great Nigerian albums, courtesy of big-name stars like Burna Boy and rising phenoms like Lady Donli. While all of these releases came with solid singles, all of them still have non-singles that are worthy of our attention as well.

    Burna Boy’s “Wetin Man Go Do” (African Giant)

    Burna Boy’s Grammy-nominated magnum opus, African Giant is overflowing with excellent deep cuts, but a clear standout is the hustler’s anthem, “Wetin Man Go Do”. Even Kel-P, the album’s primary producer, declared it his favourite track.

    Lady Donli’s “Take Me Home” (Enjoy Your Life)

    Lady Donli’s debut album, Enjoy Your Life was easily one of the best releases of 2019. While a lot of tracks on the LP could have made this list, the strongest has to be the BenjiFlow-assisted “Take Me Home”, an immensely sensual song about the allure of the chase.

    Santi’s “RX-64” (Mandy & The Jungle)

    On Santi’s transportive, genre-defying debut album, Mandy & Jungle, the singer invites us into his vivid universe, and the sun at its centre is the KrisIrie-aided “RX-64 (The Jungle)”. Excellently produced by Odunsi, the hypnotic deep cut shows Santi at his magnetic best.

    Asa’s “Stay Tonight” (Lucid)

    With Lucid, Asa’s masterful fourth album, the singer-songwriter brilliantly explored the messiness of love and heartbreak. On “Stay Tonight”, the LP’s dreamiest deep cut, she looks to heal from the hurt, bravely putting herself back out there in search of the one.

    Simi’s “Immortal” (Omo Charlie Champagne Vol. 1)

    On Omo Charlie Champagne Vol. 1, Simi tackles a host of different themes — from loss to fame — but it’s on “Immortal”, her sexiest song to date, that she truly shines. With a fantastic assist from Maleek Berry, “Immortal” is further proof of Simi’s dynamic range.

    Falz’s “Follow Follow” (Moral Instruction)

    Thanks to Sess’ faultless production work, Falz’s Moral Instruction emerged as one of the most technically impressive albums of 2019. The track that most perfectly encapsulates the album’s sonic mastery is “Follow Follow”, a Fela-inspired gem that calls out posers.

    Davido’s “Get To You” (A Good Time)

    The most cohesive project of Davido’s career, A Good Time finds the afropop juggernaut celebrating happiness and love. For the latter theme, the song that does the best job of capturing that is “Get To You” — a delightfully toned down and deeply romantic effort.

    Tay Iwar’s “DON’T KNOW” (Gemini)

    Tay Iwar is one of our most gifted musical minds, and he proved that on his astonishing debut, Gemini. Every song on the LP is a testament to his genius, but “DON’T KNOW”, which features his equally brilliant brother, Suté Iwar, shines just a little bit brighter.

    Fireboy DML’s “Like I Do” (Laughter, Tears & Goosebumps)

    With Laughter, Tears & Goosebumps, Fireboy DML delivered one of the strongest afropop debut albums we’ve had in years. While littered with beautifully written and performed songs, a clear standout on the project is “Like I Do” — a truly heartwarming love song.

    YCee’s “Dada” (YCee Vs Zaheer)

    YCee’s debut album, YCee Vs Zaheer, served as an infallible reminder of his range — both as a singer and a rapper — but it was on the Dapo Turbuna-assisted “Dada”, easily the project’s most infectious deep cut, that he reminded us just how much fun he could be as well.

  • #BumpThis: Lady Donli’s “Suffer Suffer”

    There’s so much music out there that it’s hard for even the most loyal fans to stay up with their favourite artists or what’s new and hot right now. That’s why we’ve created #BumpThis – a daily series that features the one song you need to listen to, every day. Don’t say we never did anything for you.


    Since she first grabbed attention for 2017’s “Ice Cream”, Nigerian singer Lady Donli has gradually grown into her taste for the eclectic. If songs like “Cash” evince her love of Igbo highlife, her earlier releases are steeped in the soul of an Erykah Badu acolyte.

    Her newest release, “Suffer Suffer” sits somewhere in the middle. It’s the newest single off her soon-to-be-released debut album, the playfully-titled “Enjoy Your Life”.

    The song starts emphatically, followed by backup vocals that immediately inspires a wave of afrobeat nostalgia. But where the music of Fela Kuti was militant, Lady Donli makes her point by breezing off a backdrop of Nigerian pop culture staples, literally.

    The chorus gives way to a stripped-down highlife-inspired beat that Lady Donli almost totally surrenders herself too. This willingness to not take herself too seriously is brought to life in humorous detail in the official lyric video.

    It depicts Donli as the star of her own movie – a take on the low-budget Nollywood home videos of the 1990s and early noughties. At different points, she appears super-imposed over iconic scenes from that era, sometimes with a bottle in her hand.

    Donli’s writing is one of her biggest strengths. Her contributions to projects by Show Dem Camp, M.I Abaga and Mr Eazi in the last one year are proof. On “Suffer Suffer”, she’s understated and hides her message in plain sight.

    The diversion of a breezy, yet groovy beat lets her leave cues to her belief in the divine feminine “I pray to God and she get my back“. She talks her decision to leave home for music, a course that has taken her farther than Lagos, the only city she mentions. And of course, she refuses the suffering that troubadours like herself are told to expect.

    “Suffer Suffer” is refreshing in how it fuses familiar tidbits of Nigerian pop culture across different eras to give you cue for what Lady Donli wants you to expect on “Enjoy Your Life”. She tweeted today that there’s soul on the album too. We’re ready.

    Listen to Lady Donli’s “Suffer Suffer” here.

  • No matter how much the highs of a good year take the most avid fan, January inevitably brings with it one question; What next?

    2018 was, in ways, a watershed moment in Nigerian music. A new king took the throne, a new queen sent out her statement of intent, and on the international stage, we won big.

    The question will now be asked of the people who dominated the conversation in 2018, like Burna, and those who, like Peruzzi, have everything to prove.

    These artists may still be reeling from the hangover of a very detty December but it’s never too early for new music.

    Some of my faves have already announced they’ll be dropping new music this year. Others are, well, toying with our emotions.

    But that never stopped anyone from expecting what we deserve. Definitely not me.

     

    Davido – TBA

    Davido

    It seems like a century ago that Davido dropped that debut album.

    Ice Prince was the superstar. Reminisce was finally breaking out. And Davido’s music seemed, to most casual fans, like a labour of love.

    Now, he’s the big dog–record label chairman, international hitmaker and father of two daughters. He’s entering this year at the peak of his powers, with two of the best songwriters on his team and an expectant audience.

    David’s mentions of the project have hardly gone past references to “My album…” but it’s almost certain OBO’s sophomore drops this year. The timing couldn’t be better. God safe us when it happens.

     

    Maleek Berry – TBD

    maleek berry

    I can imagine a future where a white-haired former journalist explains to a room full of kids how a record producer reinvented himself as a pop star over the course of two brief, delicious EPs.

    After learning the ropes as part of Wizkid and Wande Coal’s teams, Maleek is now a verified heavyweight on his own.

    Now established on two continents, and already shaking the right hands in the US, Mr Berry’s debut is due, and he knows it.

    Melodies abound for this man, and Maleek on his day can take you from Ikoyi to Rio in the same song.

    That and his Afropop leanings have reflected on two stellar EPs–now it’s time for the coup de grace and the final chapter of a transition made in Gbedu Zion.

    Santi – TBA

    santino

    “Santino has this city in a headlock”–a tweet read after Santi, the mysterious, dreadlocked rager who makes anthems for a generation rocked a crowd of his peers to a sweat-soaked frenzy at a concert last December.

    Over several years, Santi has built the cosigns, the records, the loyal cult following for the moments that are bound to come.

    He may be little more than the face of the alternative music scene in Lagos now but almost everyone who’s a fan of the kid swears he’s the one.

    After ending the year on a high with “Rapid Fire”, it’s a good thing that Santi began the year by announcing an album for January. We’ve been waiting for a while.

    Wizkid – Made In Lagos

    Wizkid - Made In Lagos

    If you listen to the people who treat music as a lifeforce, the face of Afropop’s tour of the UK and the US is on his way back home.

    Few pop stars can spend a decade topping charts while carrying a genre’s finest elements to new ears around the world.

    But it would be unwise to count Wizkid out.

    His fourth studio album has been touted as a return to the source – to Lagos and the overcrowded studios where it all began.

    It may be where Wizkid finds the sauce to blow our minds again.

     

    Burna Boy – TBA

    Burna Boy

    Burna Boy’s 2018 was written in the stars–a beautiful story of overcoming one’s predilections that you could adapt into 30 languages.

    But it’s over now. And no-one will know more than Burna that you’re only as good as the people’s last memory of you.

    There’s word that last year’s “Outside” is the prelude to something else; a mixtape that took on bigger importance with an international record deal and a few collaborations.

    Now Burna’s settled into big boy mode. Let’s see him swing for the stars.

     

    Falz – TBA

    falz

    Steady, consistent, calculated. Falz is a marketing course waiting to be studied. First introduced to us as a quirky, funny gimmick, Falz now comes up in conversations about new Felas and the best Nigerian rappers.

    All of this while taking statues at award shows and offering poignant commentary.

    He is in the big league now, which is why he must punch at even higher weights. Can Falz take Nigerian hip-hop to a new place? Can he take a very vacant throne even? What happens when he stops trying to be funny?

    This could be the album that answers all those questions.

     

    Tiwa Savage – TBA

    Tiwa Savage

    The only woman in the game who can touch Tiwa lives in France.

    Mummy Jam-Jam is proof that angels never die or get old.

    Just when we thought we’d seen the best, Tiwa underwent a reinvention in 2018 helped undoubtedly by rumours of a fling with a certain Starboy.

    Never mind that while all that was festering, she dropped one of the biggest songs of the year in “Ma Lo” and took a ride on the Duncan Mighty train with one of the better collaborations, “Lova Lova”.

    The Tiwa who made R.E.D seems so far away now. Which is why this one has to drop that album so we can get to know her better.

     

    Reminisce – TBA

    reminisce

    Reminisce’s nickname literally translates to Chairman. Chairman in the sense of a gang leader who tries to usurp a king of boys, or an indigenous rapper who will hold his own in Queen’s English with the finest of the bunch.

    Staying in the conversation in 2018 would have been enough for Reminisce, but the man’s role in one of 2018’s best movies reminded us of all the things we love about Baba Hafusa – grit, ambition and versatility.

    2019 is the year where Alaga reminds us what he can do behind the mic.

     

    Lady Donli – TBA

    lady don

    To some, she’s the female face of the Alte community. To others, she’s the unknown young singer who made a criminally brief festival on the intro to Mr Eazi’s 2018 album, “London To Lagos”.

    Either way, Lady Donli is coming for your necks in a flowing dress, with cowries in her locks and the sensation of an old soul.

    After a year spent in bars and arenas in Europe and North America, she’s back at home.

    Her tweets suggest she’s in the studio, and with the experiences she’s gathered on the road for inspiration, we won’t be against Lady Donli striking gold on her debut.

     

    Runtown – TBA

    rundown

    Runtown is like the uncle from Texas who we hardly hear from, until he calls on a Friday afternoon and the entire family gathers around the phone like loyal fans. Label battles have played their part in keeping him away for stints at a time but the singer says the worst is in the past now. If songs like “Oh Oh Oh (Lucie)” and “No Permission” are anything to go by, Runtown has finally found his aesthetic.

    It may seem obvious that we’ll get the laid-back, dreamy Afropop he silenced doubters with in 2016, but that’s fine because it’s just what we want.

    Teni – TBA

    ten the entertainer

    Love abounds for Teni. Unknown to most at the start of the year, she ended 2018 as the year’s biggest revelation, a viral sensation that is fiercely loved by her fans. Teni ticks all the boxes that should matter–she has the range, she writes like a ghetto poet and her talent for making songs is freakish–as evidenced in those Instagram videos where she makes demos out of unsuspecting friends.

    She’s begun the year with a headstart–the absolutely uplifting “Uyo Meyo” and if we can rely on her record, another single should be in the offing.

    Few Nigerian prodigies have ignored such raw desire for their music over time.

    In Teni’s case, it would be almost criminal, because we know Makanaki can pull off something beautiful.

    Tekno – TBA

    tekno

    As with most nascent spaces, Nigerian music has regularly churned out a new successor (or pretender to the throne) each year–one artist who changes the texture of the popular sound, puts out the year’s biggest single or just shows an astounding level of promise.

    In 2017, that person was Tekno. Yet, despite heavy demand for a full body of work, Tekno chose to ride out on the strength of singles.

    There is little doubt that the man knows his stuff–melody and an innate sense of rhythm drive his music and has also provided hits for peers like Davido.

    Sadly, illness ultimately slowed down his pace as 2018 wound down.

    With all the big dogs dropping this year, it might be time for Tekno to put his hat in the race and finally claim his place.