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music | Zikoko!
  • QUIZ: Which Artist Will Perform at Your Wedding?

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  • 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

  • QUIZ: Which Nigerian Political Songs Are You?

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  • 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

  • Everything to Know About Davido’s New Music Label, “Nine+ Records”

    On April 18, 2024, news broke that Nigerian singer Davido launched Nine+ Records, his new music label called in partnership with UnitedMasters. This news comes as a surprise as the Afrobeats star announced a restructured version of his Davido Music Worldwide label (AKA DWM 2.0) in March, 2023.

    But new label operations have kicked off, and this is everything you should know about it.

    What’s Nine+?

    As it has been established, Nine+ is Davido’s new music label. According to David Adeyemi, a member of Davido’s PR team, the name was culled from the lyrics of Davido’s 2022 song Stand Strong: “OBO elemi nine plus,” meaning “OBO has more than nine lives.” If not for its idiomatic interpretation and mystique, the name possibly alludes to being an “old cat” or part of the “Big 3” in the industry.

    Why is UnitedMaster in this?

    UnitedMasters, an American music distribution company, expanded its operations into Nigeria in December 2023. Its founder, American music executive Steve Stoute said he met Davido while in Nigeria last year and they talked about the possibilities of working together. It sounded like a great idea to the business-minded Davido. So, here we are.

    OBO is now a music executive

    Davido’s role at Nine+ starts his career as a music executive. He’ll take on many of the same responsibilities he held at DMW, but with a key difference: shared leadership. 

    According to his manager and lawyer Bobo F. Ajuda, “Davido will collaborate with Steve Stoute to identify and develop talent. Their respective teams from Nine+ Records and UnitedMasters will work together to support these artists. This includes everything from artist development and branding to securing market opportunities.”

    Why now?

    This is the right time to expand, considering his superstar status at home and abroad. His music and relationships with global brands like Puma, Martell and now UnitedMasters are easy keys to open doors worldwide for the youngins in the industry back home. 

    Nine+ will absorb DWM

    If you’re wondering if the birth of Nine+ means the end of DMW, you may be up to something. Although Bobo confirmed earlier that DWM will continue its independent operations and maintain its roster as a record label and Nine+ will focus on its global journey, Davido tweeted last night that he’s moving all his DMW artists to Nine+ Records. In a press release signed by UnitedMasters, the new label will announce more artists and partners in the future.

    Nine+ is more than Afrobeats 

    The mission of this new music company is to sign and work with global talents. Nine+ will not only work with Afrobeats, but also with Hip-Hop, R&B, Latino sounds, etc. It’s OBO for all.

    What this venture means for him and Afrobeats

    Think of this as a career upgrade and portfolio diversification. Stepping into a new position as a label executive comes with responsibilities and an additional stream of income. It was stated that Nine+ Record Ventures is an additional channel and opportunity for the local industry to connect with the global audience and market.

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

  • Why Cowboy Carter Is the Queen of Albums

    There are icons in every field. For football, we have Lionel Messi. When we speak of meals, nothing is touching yam. When it comes to music, there is no other diva as iconic as Madame Beyoncé Giselle Knowles-Carter. This woman has consistently put out amazing music for over two decades, and the best of her work yet is Act II: Cowboy Carter.

    Highly controversial, heavily resisted, constantly understated yet undeniably innovative is who Beyoncé is. And if you’re not tuned in to Cowboy Carter yet, here are five reasons you should rinse your ears and get into the album.

    Cowboy Carter saved country music

    Your faves can attest to this. For such a long time, although the CMA and the larger part of White America disagree, country music has been gated. Artists of colour were rarely given the spotlight and had to settle for being sidelined. This racial bias was very evident at the CMAs where Beyoncé and Dixie Chicks had an unwelcoming experience during and after their performance of Daddy Lessons. The crowd visibly did not approve of Beyoncé singing country and although the performance was the most watched that year, the CMA took it off their platforms. While this moment birthed Cowboy Carter and we are grateful, it also means hundreds of black artists get this treatment regularly. The bias was very evident upon the release of Texas Hold’em and 16 Carriages which features a heavy country production, yodelling and an undeniable country twang. For such releases that were pure country, a lot of negative uproar still surfaced.

    However, since the release of the full-length album, the whole world is now listening to a new side of country music and black artists are basking in the spotlight. Black country artists like Linda Martell, Shaboozey, Willie Jones, Tanner Adell, Brittney Spencer, Rhiannon Giddens and Willie Nelson got to be a part of such a revolutionary move. That’s icon shit!

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    Cowboy Carter made an artistic statement

    You can find country pop, bluegrass, country RnB, Country Hip/Hop, Opera, Latin and Flamenco all in one album. If that isn’t peak artistry, then I don’t know what is. We know Beyoncé already said it was going to be a “Beyoncé” album and not just country, but no one was ready for that. She managed to blend so many genres, techniques and layers of history and yet it is undeniably country. From Blackbird, Jolene, Spaghetti, Tyrant, Daughter, Just For Fun down to Riverdance. The whole album is just full of wonderful twists and turns.

    Cowboy Carter changed history

    If I asked you how it feels to be the first black woman to top the country charts, you would have no idea, but Beyoncé does. Not only has Cowboy Carter charted in countries across the world, but it also helped the featured artists secure their first chartings and massive increases in their streaming. We call it the Yonce effect. The album also became the most streamed album on Spotify within just a day of its release. Who runs the world? Beyoncé does. 

    The Production is tea

    The way Amen and American Requiem flow into each other is just ridiculous. Then let’s talk about the harmonies, cadences and adlibs. Beyoncé pulled out her full range. The vocals are so tightly locked and on point. You get to feel everything in it. Especially on Spaghetti where Shaboozey sang like it was his last song. Somehow the artist collaborations, writers, producers and even the horse used in her cover art were intentional and purposeful. All to showcase country music’s black roots. 

    Cowboy Carter saved Fashion 

    Let’s be for real: Beyoncé ate with the cowboy looks. She served cunt. From the hats to the jeans, to the platinum hair, down to the leather and iron buckle. Every look was giving slayonce. No other artist could eat like that. With Renaissance, it was a silver/chrome movement, and with cowboy Carter, everyone is getting their hats and boots ready. Who knows? Maybe the tour will be held in the stables? We can’t put anything past Beyoncé.

    Cowboy Carter is a wormhole

    The album is woven in such a way that each song tells a story that leads into the other, and you won’t want to miss out on one part of the story. It has 27 tracks, and if you start at the top, somehow, you’ll end up at the bottom. Cowboy Carter truly is Beyoncé’s best work, and that’s a lot considering she has Renaissance, Lemonade, 4, Beyoncé and Dangerously in Love as parts of her catalogue. With Cowboy Carter, Beyoncé has shown us once again, what it means to reinvent oneself and remain Queen of Music. 

    To catch up with other artists like Zoro, click here.

  • How Making His Debut Album 10 Years After Signing His First Record Deal Taught Zoro Patience

    Zoro’s 042 music video was playing on Soundcity. I watched him rap across Coal City, recreating rapper gestures to match his rhymes. It wasn’t the most captivating music video, but I admired his swag. It was 2014, and I was an SS3 student trying to rap and look fly like Zoro appeared back then.

    Zoro’s entry into the popular Nigerian music scene was promising. Not only did I find his music accessible, but I also believed he was primed to be South East’s next rap superstar after N.I.G.G.A. Raw, ILLBliss, Phyno. He dropped a series of notable singles, like Ogene featuring Flavour (2016), and received a Next Rated nomination at the 2018 Headies Awards. A debut album seemed the natural progression. But we got more singles instead.

    I talked to Zoro, born Owoh Chimaobi Chrismathner, about getting into music as a teenager, his admiration for local culture and all the hard lessons his experience in the music industry has taught him.

    First, I have to ask. Why “Zoro”?

    Around 2007, I rapped for vibes and went by Zoro Machine Gun Perenre. I got Zoro from the popular “Zorro” movie franchise. The “Machine Gun” part was me just being quirky. I wasn’t sure music would be a full-blown thing for me, but my friends encouraged me to write more rhymes. 

    When did it become a full-blown thing for you?

    The first time I recorded a rap. I went from Onitsha to Enugu to record two verses, one in Igbo, the other in English. My friends liked both, but particularly the Igbo version.

    Three months later, the late DJ Real, the engineer who recorded that studio session, told me he played the song for Wizboyy, and the man wanted to work with me. His song was supposed to feature N.I.G.G.A. Raw, but he wasn’t around, and Wizboyy needed to submit it to his management ASAP. I wasted no time and travelled to Enugu to record a feature on Owu Sa Gi off his 2008 “New Face of My Story” album. 

    I was 16 years old, and that was my second time in a recording studio. It’s a special moment I look back on whenever I second guess whether I’m in the right profession.

    What was it like in the studio with Wizboyy?

    I was nervous, but he acknowledged my recording was nice and kept it moving. He already had hits like Screensaver, but our jam did better and sealed his street credibility. After that, I became his backup artist and hype man. 

    Owu Sa Gi gave me a soft landing in the music industry. Without it, it’d have been more challenging.

    How soft?

    Well, I moved to Lagos in 2014 to live with Wizboyy and get closer to the music industry. Then a guy signed me on a five-year record deal, and I moved in with him. My focus shifted from balancing music with everything from marketing to content creation to fully recording music. He and the rest of the team handled the business side.

    My name and music entered the mainstream through cosigns from Flavour and Phyno. That would’ve been the best time to make a debut album. But I parted ways with the label after a year and went back to dropping songs on my own.  

    What happened?

    Some people wanted to invest in my music, but the founder/CEO who signed me didn’t like the deal. I didn’t present us as a team to the investors. Later, I realised I should’ve made it clear I was already signed. But I was young, impatient and carried away by the sway of the investors.

    The problem I had with the label guy was he never shared his plans with me. I couldn’t sign with the investors because the label’s lawyers were after me. For the next three years, I fought the situation with the Holy Spirit, fasting and prayers, while my manager handled all future contracts. The whole thing gave me anxiety and PTSD.

    What did you do after?

    I dropped Ogene featuring Flavour (2016), and it became my first big song. Then I contacted the former label to see if we could take it from where we left off, but that conversation didn’t go far. He wanted a cut of my royalties for the rest of my career. I got the vibe that working with him again would be stressful, so I let it go. 

    Photo by @samuelnnaji_ (IG)

    Did you consider making an album after the success of “Ogene”?

    No. I focused on putting out more singles to keep up the momentum. The second time I tried to make an album was in 2019, but I had another blocker. I started smoking, and it affected my vocals. When it was time to record, I had to do multiple takes. I went to an ENT (Ears, Nose & Throat) hospital, but the doctor said nothing was wrong. I went to see another health professional and paid for treatment but didn’t get better.

    Ahh. What did you do in the end?

    I had to be patient with my voice. I’d take a verse a couple of times, and if it wasn’t giving me what I wanted, I left it and did something else.

    I’m curious how you became a smoker

    One of my friends always wanted me to smoke with him, but I declined until one day in 2018. I had a flight to catch and needed to quickly figure out the intro for Stainless before heading to the airport. Nothing hit. The friend was there, and he persuaded me to smoke first. I took two puffs and recorded the thing sharply. It became a thing I did whenever I wanted to record. 

    But now, it’s a once-in-a-while recreational thing.

    When were you able to get back on track?

    By 2022, it hit me that I still didn’t have an album. I looked back at all my years in the game. No body of work, just singles. 

    I had to make an album, and it had to be something different. Most of my early songs are up-tempo and fast-paced. I decided to make calmer songs to show another part of myself, and the producers were in sync. Features from Mayorkun, Chike and Mohbad came easily, so it took two months to get the album ready. 

    My first album, Sound Check, dropped in 2023, 17 years after I entered the music scene. But I’m proud I could finally pull it off.

    Photo: @waleadebisiphotography

    Then you dropped an EP right after

    A few weeks after the album came out in 2023, someone heard Medicine After Death, which featured Mohbad, and commented that it was the last time we’d hear Mohbad. It was a sad and painful comment that hit me hard. So I announced a challenge to get music producers to drop their remixes. We compiled the best entries into an EP and released it in December.

    A new listener may find the title intriguing, but it’s a love song. I wrote and recorded the hook first but didn’t like how it sounded, so I sent it to Mohbad. We’d been talking about creating together for a while. He liked it, and we recorded the song the same way I wrote it.

    What’s happening in Ibadan? You’ve shot a lot of content there recently

    Ibadan is one of the most respected cities in the Southwest. But I hadn’t been there before. I visited to connect with its people and get familiar with the city. And I realised I could be myself there the same way I’d be in the East. I was able to make content for a song called Gangan, a fusion of talking drum beats and amapiano. It’s coming soon.

    You have an open closeness with fellow artists — Falz, Mayorkun — that’s rare among Nigerian musicians

    I pay attention to personality. It’s easier to connect with genuine people that way. Getting close to Mayorkun took a while. He’s the type to take his time, but once he connects with you, he’s your guy 100%. I like Falz because he tries to be on the side of what’s right. Ephemerals like money and clout don’t have a hold on him. That’s a great thing.

    When should we expect the next album?

    My sophomore album is ready. I have three projects coming out this year: Pressure, Black Pink and Six Pack

    After that, I want to work on something more detailed and personal: a story about my origin and journey. I want to channel the same energy into my stagecraft. I want it to be as great as my songs, powerfully capturing their essence. I also plan to explore my fashion side with some merch in the works.

    Which artists are you feeling right now?

    Ratty, Kolaboy, Laxxy, Hugo P, Ugoccie, Paragon Qtm, BeePee and Bkay! I like Jeriq too. He makes himself available for meaningful collaborations and is always on the move. I respect that. 

    These guys have enjoyable flow and delivery. These are qualities those on the come-up can emulate. Not every listener understands your language, but they’ll connect to it based on how you present it. You have to be intentional.

    Read Next: “People Still Like Me This Much?” — Reminisce Celebrates Fan Response to “Alaye Toh Se Gogo”

  • QUIZ: Are You a True Music Enthusiast? Prove It!

    Before you find out just how much you love Nigerian music, get the OneBank app by Sterling Bank for free tickets to Strings Attached. We’ll have Dwin the Stoic and Qing Madi there, you don’t want to miss it.

  • QUIZ: Take this Quiz, and We’ll Give You an Empowerment Anthem for the Year
    Yo, the biggest all-women party in Lagos is BACK.
    Get your girls, get your tickets here and let’s make Lagos hotter than the heat wave in April.
  • 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.

  • Celebrate Your Mum With These 10 Iconic Songs 

    We made a list of Nigerian songs that recognise, celebrate and honour the spirit of motherhood.

    “Iya Ni Wura” — Dele Ojo

    Dele Ojo and his Star Brothers Band released this Mother’s Day celebration staple 74 years ago. Iya Ni Wura (meaning “mother is gold”) talks about the strenuous nine months of pregnancy mothers endure, describing them as jewels of inestimable value.

    “Sweet Mother” — Prince Nico Mbarga

    The lyrics, “Sweet mother, I no go forget you” quickly rings a bell in the minds of most Nigerians. In this evergreen song, Prince Nico vows to always remember his mum’s sacrifices for him.

    “Mummy” — Jesse King

    Jesse King, AKA Buga, made one of his biggest hits with Mummy in 2006. The contemporary highlife song prays that mothers enjoy long life without discomfort. Any hater can take it up with God.

    “Unconditional Love” — 2Baba

    2Baba appreciates his mum in Unconditional Love in 2017, attributing his calm and collected demeanour to her. 2Baba expresses unconditional love at home, and he has his mum to thank for it.

    “So Beautiful” — Asa 

    Off Asa’s debut titular album, she dedicates a five-minute track to her mother. Asa sings of her beauty, strength and love. If we all agree mothers are goddesses, this is one of their worship songs.

    “Mama” — Flavour feat. Chidinma

    Over warm, serenading piano riffs, Flavour and Chidinma praise their mothers in English, Igbo and Yoruba. They remember her sleepless nights during sick days and pray for blessings for her. The 2016 song appreciates motherhood and promises mothers that they can have anything in life. 

    “Mummy Mi” — Wizkid

    Mummy Mi is the fourth track on Wizkid’s 2014 album, “Ayo”. Even if you don’t have life’s finest things to give your mum like Wiz promised his on this song, you can sing along and count it as speaking them into existence.

    “Ochie Dike (Mama)” — Phyno feat. Onyeka Onwenu

    In 2016, Phyno honoured his mother with this emotive song in undiluted Igbo. He partnered with the legendary Onyeka Onwenu to deliver one of his best songs ever.

    “Mama” — Adekunle Gold

    “This is not a regular song, oh mama”; in Yorùbá, AG Baby hails mothers as superheroes and intermediaries between heaven and earth. The refreshing sounds of Gangan drums, guitar and other highlife elements will keep any mum dancing. 

    “Iya Mi (My Mother)” — Lanre Teriba 

    On this song, Nigerian Gospel artist, Lanre Teriba, feels he’s running out of time and asks for God’s blessings to come quickly. His mum is getting older, and he needs to spoil her with life’s best things. If you’re looking for a song with a twist of gospel to honour your mum, this is it.


    These Are 6 Other Special Ways to Celebrate Your Mother

  • 5 Nigerian Songs that Birthed Myths

    Growing up, you may have heard the story of a Nigerian artist who made rain fall with a song. Or the one whose song was inspired by a mermaid. 

    We can’t confirm if these are true or not, but we can research other songs which also had myths attached to them.

    Guitar Boy — Sir Victor Uwaifo

    Sir Victor Uwaifo made ‘Guitar Boy’ in 1966. The late artist stated in an interview that he once had an encounter with a mermaid at the Bar Beach on Victoria Island, Lagos. True or not, the story has gone far, and many people think the song title is “Mami Water” instead of Guitar Song.

    Send Down the Rain — Majek Fashek

    The legend of Majek Fashek is hugely attached to his 1987 hit ‘Send Down the Rain.’ A year after the song’s release, Nigeria recorded an average annual precipitation of 121.6cm, making it the second rainiest year in the 1980s. The heavy rainfall came at that time the song was at its peak, so many people considered the song prophetic.

    Esubiribiri Ebomi — King Sunny Ade

    This song was King Sunny Ade’s protest anthem when he had label issues with Bolarinwa Abioro in 1974. The legend says that each time King Sunny Ade touched the guitar, he was “struck by madness.” And then on the record, he chanted incantations that hinted at defiance.

    If I Die — Da Grin

    After the success of Da Grin’s first album CEO (2009), the rapper went mainstream. While preparing to release his sophomore album, he put out ‘If I Die’ —  a song about death.

    A few months after the song’s release, the rapper passed away in a car crash. His death made the public believe ‘If I Die’ was Da Grin’s premonition of his own demise.

    Osondi Owendi Remake — MC Loph

    In 2011, rapper MC Loph did a contemporary remake of ‘Osondi Owendi,’ originally made by highlife music legend Osita Osadebe. There was a rumour that Osita’s family forbade MC Loph from using the song, but he did anyway. Although the song shot the rapper into the limelight, it wasn’t for long. He died in a car accident later in 2011, and many remarked it was a consequence of going against the Osadebe family.

    If You Are Old Enough to Remember These Popular Hearsays About Nigerian Songs, Take This Quiz

  • 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:


  • Budget-Proof Date Ideas for Friends or Couples Who Love Music

    It makes total sense to date or befriend people with similar interests, but what’s a relationship without dates that open y’all to new experiences and shared memories to geek out about? Given the current economic situation in the country, it might be a reach to jet off to watch Beyonce on tour. But what if we told you there are ways to enjoy music with loved ones without breaking the bank?

    DIY karaoke bar

    Budget-Proof Date Ideas for Friends or Couples Who Love Music

    Singing your heart out to your favourite songs can be a super fun way to connect with your date. Why carry your coins to an actual karaoke bar when you can freely hit embarrassing notes without shame at home? 

    Go dancing

    Budget-Proof Date Ideas for Friends or Couples Who Love Music

    If you both love music, chances are you love to dance too. And the good thing about dancing? It’s free and a great way to release endorphins. 

    A music-themed movie night

    Budget-Proof Date Ideas for Friends or Couples Who Love Music

    Are you even a true music fan if you don’t love musicals or documentaries about your favourite stars? From Obara’M and Finding Fela to The Sound of Music and The Greatest Showman just make sure you stock up on junk and dim the lights for that cinema effect.

    Learn how to play an instrument

    Budget-Proof Date Ideas for Friends or Couples Who Love Music

    Take online classes, and on your next date, get the actual instrument to put your knowledge to use together. 

    A DIY music video

    Every music lover has fantasised about being in a music video. So, what’s stopping you from cosplaying with your phone? It doesn’t have to be a TG Omori or Dammy Twitch production for you to create mushy memories with your bestie.

    Create a special playlist

    A thoughtful playlist with all the songs that say the things you don’t know how to say to each other? Yes, please. After the back and forth of making selections, y’all can put a spin on the playlist over store-bought drinks and a good conversation. 

    Attend Strings Attached

    Budget-Proof Date Ideas for Friends or Couples Who Love Music

    Imagine a community festival where you and your friend, frenemy or the LOYL get to enjoy free live music performances, games and meet cool people with similar interests. Actually, stop imagining because it’s happening on May 11, 2024.

    Zikoko and OneBank are bringing all the party people and lovers of a good time together for Strings Attached, and it is completely FREE OF CHARGE. You only need to download the OneBank by Sterling app and your ticket will be reserved. The free tickets will be given on a first-come, first-served basis, so you better hit the app store ASAP. 

    TAKE THIS QUIZ: Only True Music Lovers Can Decode these Song Titles


    Seen our Valentine’s Special yet? We brought back three couples we interviewed in 2019 – one now with kids, one now married and the last, still best friends – to share how their relationships have evolved over the previous five years. Watch the second episode 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:


  • Tyla: The New Grammy Winner’s Discography of 7 Key Songs

    On February 4, 2024, Tyla won the first major award of her career, a Grammy for the just inaugurated Best African Music Performance category at the 66th edition of music’s most prestigious night. “I never thought I’d say I’ve won a Grammy at 22 years old,” she said as she accepted the plaque amid a rousing ovation.

    The South African artiste was in stiff competition in a category that had Nigeria’s Burna Boy, Davido, Ayra Starr, Asake and Olamide as co-nominees. But her hugely successful 2023 single, Water, proved just enough to secure the win. SA’s pop princess has been at it for all of five years. While her meteoric rise to the top can be credited to the massive success of the sexy, orgasm-charged single off her upcoming self-titled debut album, Tyla, here’s a rundown of her seven other songs that should be on your radar.

    Getting Late

    Tyla released her debut single Getting Late, featuring South African record producer, Kooldrink, in 2019. With a catchy chorus — “Baby, I know it’s getting late” — Tyla tells her love interest she’s not one to waste time. It was her official introduction to the world and music lovers’ first taste of her velvety vocals, and perhaps, her general sense of urgency.

    If you’ve ever wondered what Ariana Grande sounds like on an amapiano beat, this song is your answer.

    Been Thinking

    Tyla is trying to make sense of the all-consuming nature of love. She expresses infatuation and longing for a lover in the uptempo, rhythmic, two-minute track. You should put a spin on this if you love Tiwa Savage’s Pick Up.

    Truth or Dare

    This song is one of three released tracks off her self-titled upcoming album set for release on March 1, 2024. Tyla opens the three-minute-long track with a triple barrel question to a seemingly unserious love interest: “ Did you say you’re on your way? Why now? When you just went MIA?” By the time she gets to the chorus, all she wants to know is where her partner’s head is at and the sincerity of their intentions to her. This one is perfect for relationship people with partners who are moving funny.

     [ad]

    Butterflies

    The intro treats listeners to a satisfying cocktail of Tyla’s velvety vocals backed by a piano. She sings about a love interest who sends her stomach fluttering with butterflies. “You give me butterflies, got me falling in the deep end of your disguise.” But she very quickly smacks her listeners out of fairytale la la land when she calls the lover out with, “So I fear this might be goodbye. I don’t need reparations, boy, bye.” If you’ve got a “Bye bye to fuckboys” playlist, this song should be on it.

    Girls Need Love remix

    Released in late 2023, Girls Need Love is that one song where Tyla states categorically that “I’m that GIRL”. She pulled in as a featured artist on yet another remixed version of the 2019 hit track by R&B sensation, Summer Walker. Tyla sings her heart out about how girls need intimacy and physical connection too, and should be able to communicate these desires without caving under societal expectations. When Summer Walker closes off her verse with “Girls can’t never say, Now, oh now, babe,” Tyla reinforces her message with the line: “If I come off as thirsty, know I’m just that.”

    Water

    The three-minute track leaves no room for guesses about its intention as it opens up with the intensely vivid chorus: “Make me sweat, makeake me hotter, make me lose my breath, make me water.” And then, it follows up with more orgasm-charged verses that make for a completely satisfying experience for listeners. The global standout hit, Water, takes a deep dive into the depths of romance, sex and orgasm. It’s the one track off Tyla’s discography that screams “horny” the most, earning Tyla her first Grammy nomination, and win. It also earned her her first Billboard Hot 100 feature, debuting at 67, and making her the highest-charting African female solo artist of all time. The hit single peaked at number 7 and has spent over 16 weeks on the chart — a huge achievement for a solo non-American singer with no features. 

    To Last

    Released in late 2022, the verses of To Last carry a heaviness that drives Tyla’s not so subtle message of disappointment and betrayal by her first love. “Can’t beg for love to stay. Never thought you’d be my first heartbreak. Don’t know what more to say,” she sings. However, the sober and heartbreaking mood of the song is delivered with the chorus where she comes out with it and says her love interest never gave their relationship a chance, and in fact, didn’t want it to last. The melody is everything on this song, and anyone nursing a heartbreak will find comfort in this one.

  • 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

  • 7 Surefire Ways to Make Your Parents Stan Your Music

    If you make music and it’s hard to get your Nigerian parents to become your fan or dance to your tune, it’s either your work isn’t impressive or you haven’t consulted us yet. Everyone knows we have the best solution to all problems.

    Make a song for them

    If you’re serious about converting your parents into your music stans, make a song for them. It may be about their love life, how they make sacrifices for the family, how you want to be like them when you grow up or just a song hailing them from top to bottom. Their heads will swell, and they’ll throw all their weight behind you instantly.

    Host “throwback music” sessions 

    Make it your job to host these sessions every weekend. Play them their favourite childhood songs then throw your music in the mix to gradually indoctrinate them. This can be a slow process, but you’ll laugh last.

    Promise eternal youth

    Let your folks know that listening and dancing to young people’s music is the secret to staying forever young. Then convince them your music is most potent for them because you’re their blood.

    Coolest parents award

    One major prerequisite to becoming cool parents is to be your kids’ number one fan. Convince them not to miss this prestigious award this year.

    Sing and cry

    When you shed a few crocodile tears while performing a song, they’ll think music has possessed you and you’re actually made for it. You might even get them teary too. A little in-house emotional performance may be all you need to make them your music stans.

    Impress them with stats

    Tell them your music travels without a visa. Imagine the curiosity on your parents’ faces when you tell them you have hundreds of streams from listeners in different parts of the world.

    Play your music around them non-stop

    Always keep your music playing around them. They’ll eventually love it or they’ll send you out of their house. Anyways, no gree for anybody.


    We Also Have Tips On How to Support Your Friend When They Make Trash Music

  • Forget Diss Tracks, Artists Should Settle Beef These 8 Ways

    The next time artists have a score to settle with each other, instead of posting long, subliminal insults on social media or making diss tracks, they should try these more interesting, quicker methods.

    Call first

    Consider a call to iron things out in-house before doing your dirty laundry outside.

    Pray like a warrior

    Pray for the heart of your opp to be softened. Or copy Elijah and invite your opp to an open space then loudly pray, “Send down fire!” For this to work, you must be a child of God. If you’re not, see the next option.

    Impersonate each other

    If like Prettyboy D-O and OdumoduBlvck, comparison is the reason for your beef, this is for you. Swap lives for a day or two and adopt each other’s style. Go to each other’s studio sessions, attend each other’s shows and interviews. The best impersonator is the fraud because why can you impersonate your opp so effortlessly if you weren’t trying to be like them already?

    Go on an ultimate search 

    The beefing artists should just embark on a treasure hunt to confirm who’s the winner of the beef.

    “Verzuz”

    Get fans from both sides in a large space, perform your best music and see who reigns supreme.

    Mouth wash

    Has it occured to you that the reason one person moves like they’ll punch their opp in the mouth is because someone’s talking actual shit? To settle scores, do an oral test. The person with the worst mouth odour loses the beef.

    A dambe match

    Fix a boxing match to knock out your beef in the Hausa martial art style. The man standing over the knocked-out guy wins the beef. We recommend the hard ground under Ojuelegba bridge as a suitable venue.

    Source: Leadership News

    “Old West” style

    Invite your opp to the outskirts of town, then attach a revolver and holster to your waists. Play a song like Davido’s Fem, and as soon as it ends, whoever draws their gun quicker lives wins.

    Regarding the Stan Culture in Nigeria, How Far Would You Go for Your Fave?

  • 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

  • QUIZ: 10 Questions Only Pop Culture Lovers Will Know the Answer To

    If you’re a pop culture consumer and you’re so sure no moment in pop eluded you, come flex your knowledge.

    Take the quiz:

    Beyoncé’s latest album is spelt ___?

  • 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

  • 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

  • A Sneak Peek Into Our Hypothetical Afrobeats Museum

    It’s a travesty that Afrobeats doesn’t have a museum yet, but that’s where Zikoko comes in — to help us collectively fake it till we make it. To do this, we curated an Afrobeats museum with memorabilia of the music creators and executives who took Afrobeat and experimented with other African rhythms and Western sounds to form the modern Nigerian genre we know and love — Afrobeats

    Relics from the founding fathers

    Afrobeats is an offspring of Fela Anikulapo-Kuti and Tony Allen’s — the drummer who directed his band, Africa ‘70 for 11 years — 1970s Afrobeat. 

    A shrine of Fela’s favourite things

    First of all, Fela’s iconic saxophones, pants and combs have to be in our museum — it was documented in Alex Gibney’s Finding Fela that he loved to spend time in front of the mirror, just combing and admiring his hair. Also, one of Fela’s favourite books, The Autobiography of Malcolm X by Alex Haley and Malcolm X, should be on a shelf somewhere.

    Tony Allen’s drum sticks

    Specifically, the ones he used on more than 30 Fela albums.

    Afrobeats memorabilia

    What Junior and Pretty wore in their album cover

    The duo is considered one of the first to lay the foundation for an Afrobeats sound. On the artwork of the album, Tribute to Okechukwu Azike a.k.a “Junior” — which has their classic hit, Bolanle — they wore a Fulani attire that must be found and showcased in our museum. 

    Kennis Music’s Yellow Hummer

    In the early 2000s, a Hummer was the top ride, and Kennis Music had one in yellow. Talk about iconic. It went on to become a video vixen for the many artists in the label’s roster. 

    2Face’s Lincoln Navigator

    The car Kennis Music gifted 2Face after a successful debut album sale. This was also right after they bought their yellow Hummer. The Lincoln Navigator sparked controversy as many believed the artist who made the label so much money deserved his own Hummer. A Lincoln Navigator wasn’t a shit car sha.

    DIGITAL CAMERA

    Written history of Eedris Abdulkareem’s fight with 50 Cent

    In 2004, 50 Cent headlined the Star Mega Jamz in Nigeria. At the concert, Eedris Abdulkareem felt local superstars were kicked to the curb for their foreign counterparts. He went at the American rapper, his crew and the show promoters about their seating arrangements, saying that local artists deserve the same special treatment. 

    When Eedris got on stage, he said, “50 Cent na oga for America. Me, I be oga for rap for Nigeria.” His actions changed how local artists were treated from then on. In 2023, Young Buck, rapper and longtime friend of 50 Cent, said he remembered a Nigerian dude who stood against their whole crew, and how scary it was.

    Jaga Jaga music video

    Eedris Abdulkareem was in the news a lot in the early 2000s. His hit song, Jaga Jaga, criticised the Nigerian government and was banned from radio by the then-president, Olusegun Obasanjo. The clubs never stopped playing it though, and Eedris is vindicated because Nigeria is still jaga jaga. The video should be on repeat at the museum.

    The very-first Headies plaque

    The Headies Awards is widely recognised as Nigeria’s biggest music award show today. The first version of the “headie” figurine was made of wood, and it should be on display right next to the current golden one, as an apt representation of how far the industry has come. 

    Zaaki Azzay’s torchlight and cap

    The veteran rapper’s iconic silver torchlight and black and white skull cap have to make the cut. 

    DJ Jimmy Jatt’s turntable at Jimmy Jump Off

    One of the pioneer disc jockeys in Nigeria, DJ Jimmy Jatt’s Jimmy Jump Off cypher was the launchpad for many Nigerian artists like Dagrin, Olamide, Burna Boy, Boogey and Laycon.

    Image source: www.matriarca.com

    A “groups and cliques” section

    The Afrobeats museum will have to have a section just for photos and videos of our most iconic groups: Junior and Pretty, Trybesmen, The Remedies, Plantashun Bois, Styl-Plus, Kush, Port Harcourt’s Tuck Tyght and Specimen A, P-Square, the list is surprisingly endless.

    Alaba distribution

    A history lesson on how Alaba Market in Lagos State changed the Nigerian music distribution game, exploring how Eldee and 2Shotz where the first Afrobeats artists to distribute through that channel.

    Image source: Ndani.tv

    ModeNine’s first rhyme book

    ModeNine is the most decorated Headies “Lyricist on the Roll” winner so far. Flipping the pages of the super emcee’s first rhyme book to see his very first bars would be a cool-ass experience.

    NBC’s radio play law

    In 2010, the Nigerian Broadcasting Commission passed a law that made radio stations prioritise local music over the foreign ones that completely dominated the airwaves. The decision was a systemic way to prevent Nigerian music from taking a backseat in Nigeria. A physical copy of this law in a glass display case would be a great addition to the museum.

    Don Jazzy’s walking stick from his Mo’Hits Era

    He’s “Don” Jazzy for a reason. The music mogul moved like a Lagos Island mob boss with a walking stick during the Mo’Hits era. He had it with him every time. Back then, he never smiled, hardly spoke and only whispered if he had to speak. We wonder where he’s dumped that stick now.

    Terry G’s first bell

    Terry G, AKA King of Swagger, was known not only for his talent, face piercings or colourful dressing, but for ringing bells in his songs, videos and on stage. We want to see the bell that began his mission.

    Naeto C’s Hausa caps

    The rapper began a fashion trend when he arrived on the scene in t-shirts, jeans, sneakers and a Hausa cap. It was the ultimate cool swag of the late 2000s.

    Image source: BellaNaija

    Wizkid’s 2018 O2 tracksuit

    In 2018, Wizkid became the first African act to sell out the O2 Arena hall with his Afrorepublik show, his first big London show. And he effortlessly dripped in a Dolce & Gabbana tracksuit.

    Image source: PulseNg

    Tiwa Savage’s “King Charles coronation” gown 

    Call it our coloniser’s ceremony, but it’s a big deal for Afrobeats to permeate the British royal house in this way. And who best to call to give them a stunning performance of African rhythm than Tiwa Savage, the Queen of Afrobeats herself. She did it gloriously in this emerald green asooke dress that belongs in a museum. 

    Image source: AriseNews

    A collection of iconic debut albums

    The most impactful first albums that contributed to the Afrobeats movement should be on display. From 2Face’s Grass2Grace to P-Square’s Get Squared, Asa’s self-titled debut, Wande Coal’s Mushin2Mo’Hits, Wizkid’s Superstar and Rema’s Rave & Roses.

    Image source: Spotify

    Legendary studios

    Miniatures of the legendary Kennis Music studio (2Face, Eedris Abdulkareem, Tony Tetuila), ID Cabasa’s Coded Tunes studio (2Phat, 9ice, Lord of Ajasa, Olamide, Reminisce), Knighthouse, Mo Dogg’s studio and other places where the Afrobeats legends recorded their art.

    Written history of the first labels to house Afrobeats

    We broke this down in a six-minute read in 2023. An Afrobeats museum should have the history of early labels such as Storm Records, Trybe Records, Mo’Hits Records, Question Mark, Grafton Entertainment and Coded Tunes and their impact on the Nigerian music industry.

    Image source: Spotify

    Printed lyrics

    The lyrics of legendary Afrobeats songs like The Remedies’ Shakomo, 2Face’s African Queen, Wizkid’s Ojuelegba, can be printed on the walls. They’re the Afrobeats gospels.

    Books of Afrobeats history

    All the important books on the history of Afrobeats should be available in the Afrobeats museum. Everything from “E File Fun Burna” by Jide Taiwo to “Fela: This Bitch of A Life” by Carlos Moore.

    Image source: MoreBranches

    Web3 digital gallery hall

    As a movement that’s relevant in this hyper digital era, Afrobeats deserves a digital universe. Technology like this won’t only shift the paradigm for Afrobeats in the digital world, it’ll allow it to create, share and make profit.

    Next Up, Find Out Why Afrobeats Is Old Enough For a Museum

  • Afrobeats Is Old Enough For a Museum

    In the last decade, the documentation of Afrobeats has thrived on X posts and threads, Instagram reels, Prime Video and Netflix documentary series, published books, articles and podcasts. 

    Now, it’s time for our sacred genre to transcend beyond literature to a physical structure for its immortalisation. A museum people can visit to dive into Afrobeats’ historical, artistic and cultural journey.

    To any true follower of Afrobeats commentary, this won’t be the first mention of the concept of an “Afrobeats museum”. Nigerian pop conversation often tilts toward preserving the artists and music we currently feel deeply, a yearning for what the industry may not know it needs.

    Rock and Roll has its museum in Cleveland, Ohio. Hip-Hop, in the Bronx, New York. While its longevity may be called into question, in over 20 years of existence, Afrobeats has achieved global impact and maintained its deep roots in its home base. 

    Our artists perform to thousands of people from all over the world in local Nigerian languages at sold-out international venues like the O2 Arena, Barclays Center, Tottenham Stadium and Madison Square Garden. Afrobeats has bridged cultural gaps, from the U.S to the U.K, down to South Korea and India, collaborating with global superstars and mixing with foreign genres, like the Afro-swing of the U.K. 

    Afrobeats has integrated regions on our continent, from Ghana to South Africa, opened up more job opportunities for young people through the music industry. We have music pop schools like The Sarz Academy and Music Business Africa, powerhouse labels like Mavin Records, distribution companies like Dvpper Music and Notjustokdistro, and have attracted foreign music companies like Empire and UnitedMasters to establish their business in Nigeria.

    Why shouldn’t this genre have a dedicated home?

    The absence of an Afrobeats museum hits harder inside Hard Rock Café on Lagos Island, whose walls are filled with memorabilia of renowned western musicians like Madonna, John Lennon, Robert Cray and Eric Clapton. It’s inspiring, but it also puzzles the average Nigerian as to why Afrobeats legends are glaringly absent from the walls. An American franchise that’s made its name off all-American cuisine and live music — originally Rock and Roll — the café is a prime example of what successfully preserving music culture looks like on a global and diversified level. 

    X.com: @ENOCX

    In June 2023, Alara, a Nigerian contemporary retail store, showcased West African fashion, design and art at the Africa Fashion exhibition in the Brooklyn Museum. Among the displays was an image of Asake’s Native Mag cover. The singular addition offered a glimpse of how impactful it would be to have a permanent showcase of our music — the visual and written stories of its top creators — for generations of aspiring musicians, listeners and tourists to experience.

    Fuji Opera has achieved this to some extent for the iconic Nigerian genre. Dedicated to Fuji music and its history, this multidimensional platform, which includes a museum in London, celebrated the genre at The Africa Centre in August 2023, three years after its first independent exhibition in Nigeria.

    Today, Afrobeats has garnered a wider appeal than Fuji. Every December, Lagos — the centre of excellence and Afrobeats — is abuzz with Afrobeats shows and festivals; Nigerians turn up in multitudes. Outside Nigeria, foreigners love Afrobeats and are interested in where the music comes from. Recent global accomplishments at awards shows, festivals and stages, publications, charts and streaming platforms are all the evidence we need.

    Image source: Medium

    Afrobeats concerts and pop-up shows are great social tools, but the impact of a museum will be generational. Imagine Terry G’s first bell, 2Baba’s original Grass2Grace album copy and Jide Taiwo’s “Efile Fun Burna” — the lives and works of our most prominent musicians of all time — all in one place.

    This museum must come to pass for the preservation of the genre and its impact on the music industry, Nigeria itself and Nigerians everywhere. If we wait too long to immortalise Afrobeats’ history, accomplishments and memories, we may turn it into what the Yorubas call a snake that crawls on a mountain and leaves no trace.

    Take A Sneak Peek Into Our Hypothetical Afrobeats Museum

  • QUIZ: How Many Nigerian Artists Can You Recognise By Their Fashion Choices?

    You have four pictures that’ll give you a clue. If your score is less than 7, you’ll listen to only Afrobeats for the next seven years.

    Take the quiz:

  • 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

  • 12 Nigerian Gospel Songs that Shaped Our Childhood

    Growing up in a Christian Nigerian home in the 90s to early 2000s meant you listened to certain gospel songs over and over again. We all sang along to these tunes during weekend chores, and danced choreographies to them in church or at end of the year parties.

    Come, Let’s Praise the Lord — Panam Percy Paul

    Panam Percy Paul released Bring Down the Glory 2 (God of War) in 1989, and its first song, Come, Let’s Praise the Lord, instantly became the go-to for choreography presentations in schools and churches. Once upon a time, at this time of the year, kids across Nigeria would be rehearsing their synchronised moves to the gospel worship song.

    Akanchawa — Princess Njideka Okeke

    Akanchawa is an Igbo gospel song that was popular across households in the South-East and Lagos. The title means “The hands that bring good things”, a reference to God’s hands. Akanchawa is the first track on Princess Njideka Okeke’s Ministration Worship Part 1 album. Almost every Nigerian mum had the audio CD and played it on Saturday mornings.

    Apata Ayeraye — Cherubim and Seraphim Movement Church (Surulere District)

    The Cherubim and Seraphim Movement Church choir, Surulere, Lagos, released their Oke Mimo album in 1991. Apata Ayeraye which means “rock of ages” in Yoruba, was a standout hit for most families throughout the 90s. The worship song interpolates from the popular Yorùbá hymn of the same name.

    Opelope Anointing — Dunni Olanrewaju

    Every Sunday morning before rice and stew, this song was the tonic. If you grew up in a Christian Yorùbá home in the early 2000s, there’s no way you escaped this song. The titular track on Dunni Olanrewaju’s Opelope Anointing (2000) became a pop statement for gratitude and escaping adversity. The filling station closed immediately after they sold me fuel? Opelope anointing.

    Chioma Jesus — Amaka Okwuoha

    In 2003, Amaka Okwuoha released her hit song, Chioma Jesus, under New Jerusalem Music. She performed the song in Igbo with her iconic high-pitched vocals backed with heavy keyboard and drums. Chioma Jesus became such a hit that the singer is still referred to as “Chioma Jesus” today.

    Oga Eme — Rosemary Chukwu

    In 2008 and 2009, you couldn’t travel from Lagos to the South-East for Christmas and back without hearing this jam. It was a favourite for bus drivers and Igbo mothers alike. Oga Eme is fast-tempo and full of traditional Igbo music elements.

    Baba Mimo Mowa Sope — Tope Alabi

    Baba Mimo Mowa Sope (2001) is one of Tope Alabi’s classics and most diverse records. The praise song has a Makossa sound that sampled Magic System’s 1er Gaou (1999). It wasn’t just a turn-up jam in Christian circles, it was the ultimate birthday party favourite. Back then, the best dancer to this song always got sweet and biscuit. What a period.

    Igwe — Midnight Crew

    The year was 2008 when a music quartet called Midnight Crew stormed the country with Igwe, their multi-lingual gospel hit. It was recognisable instantly from its beat drop — the perfect ringtone material. If Midnight Crew, made up of Patricia Uwaje-King, Odunayo Ojo-Onasanya, Mike Abdul and Gbenga Oyebola, put this out today, it’d be a TikTok bop.

    Olori Oko — Infinity

    Infinity arrived in the era when Nigerian Gospel music was experimenting with diverse genres to bridge creativity with spirituality. Although Olori Oko came out in 2006, it’s an evergreen gospel bop today.

    Ijoba Orun — Lara George

    Lara George’s 2008 debut album, Forever In My Heart, gave us the hit single, Ijoba Orun, which has since become the Nigerian church’s call-to-action for those seeking to become “born again”. Ijoba Orun is a mellow and soulful cut, and Lara did absolute justice to it with her skilled vocals.

    Opomulero — Angel

    As a kid, Opomulero (2009) by Angel signalled gospel music’s complete shift from the stereotype to elements of secular pop instrumentals and delivery. Opomulero didn’t just eat as a party jam, it was the go-to for choreography presentations across Nigerian primary and secondary schools.

    Joy, Joy, Joy — Destined Kids

    “Joy, joy, joy in my heart is ringing” was on the lips of every kid when it came out in 2008. The Iwueze siblings (Favour, Rejoice, Joshua, Best and Caleb) had everywhere in a chokehold when they debuted with Joy Joy Joy, the first volume of their gospel music installations.

  • 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.

    READ: 7 Ways to Make Your Office Secret Santa More Interesting… For You

  • How to Deliver Street Hits Like Seyi Vibez 

    Seyi Vibez has put out three projects in 2023 alone: Vibe Till Thy Kingdom Come, Thy Kingdom Come and his latest, NAHAMciaga EP — which drops on the first anniversary of his Billion Dollar Baby 2.0 album.

    On December 1, he released his new EP on Deezer and Tidal alone. Seven days later, he finally put the project on other streaming platforms, and I got to listen. I’ve now rinsed it over ten times even though it’s eleven minutes long.

    Image source: BellaNaija

    The culmination of his back-to-back releases has solidified that Seyi Vibez holds the secrets to street hits. In this write-up, we’ve taken notes to give you the clear-cut recipe.

    Image source: BellaNaija

    Before you pick up your pen and paper (or whatever you take notes with), you should know you need significant competence in your mother tongue. To be a voice of the streets, you must be in sync with the local audience.

    Most of Seyi Vibez’s music is in Yorùbá. But don’t forget you need to spit in a few more languages. He spoke Xhulu on Hushpuppi. In Highlife Interlude featuring Phyno, he sang in Pidgin English, Yorùbá and Igbo!

    Image source: Nairaland

    Next, when you get in the booth, work with a music producer you’ve grown up as Siamese twins with. Seyi and Dibs Tunez created hits like Man of The Year, Hat-trick, Chance (Na Ham), Professor and more together. If you have their kind of synergy with your producer, nothing can box you. From Highlife to Apala, Fuji, Afropop, and Amapiano, Seyi has built a solid CV on the back of this relationship. Even Indian sounds aren’t left out; he executed them well on Psalm 23.

    If people made you lead praise and worship whether you liked it or not as a kid, send them money today. According to his lyrics on Kingdom, Seyi was once in a Quranic school for nine years and he’s better for it. His Psalm 23 covers everything from BBLs and pleasing women to his singing skills, and at the core, his quest for divine protection. Apply your Bible or Quran knowledge to your music. Asides from hacking the substantial religious demography, this is a smooth way to convince your parents about your music dreams. They love God, and you love music; everyone is happy.

    Image source: Bella Naija

    Don’t forget choral effects and sonorous background vocalists like Nelly Baradi, who harmonises on Seyi’s songs.

    Once you’ve added these ingredients, your music is set to blow and the street is yours. But if it still doesn’t work out, don’t panic. Check your swag. Fix a gold grill and add more XXL clothes to your wardrobe. 

    Image source: GistReel

    READ: How to Write a Love Song, According to Chike

  • Portable’s Evolution From Sango Ota to International Shows

    Portable, AKA Dr. Zeh, is one of the most talked about artist in the Nigerian  music scene at the moment, after he made a random appearance at the British Fashion Awards 2023 with Skepta. 

    Since he burst into the industry in December 2021, he’s kept his name in the news and on people’s lips. Born Habeeb Okikiola, Portable is a controversial figure, but that’s exactly what feeds his continued relevance. To understand how he’s captivated a mainstream audience, this is a timeline of his journey.

    December 2021: Sango Ota to Lagos

    It was a different December for Portable in 2021. A social-media personality known as Don Blu posted a video of Portable singing ZaZoo Zehh, a freestyle, on Instagram and Snapchat. Many viewers found it funny and thought he was just another local artist looking for fame. But the freestyle made the rounds on the internet and reached popular street-dancer, PocoLee, who heard a potential end-of-year jam. Upon request, Don Blu facilitated the link-up between Portable and Poco Lee. Next thing, YBNL boss, Olamide, asked Portable to pull up to Lekki, Lagos.

    On December 14, 2021, they dropped the audio (produced by P.Priime) and music video (directed by TG Omori). ZaZoo Zehh became one of the breakthrough Nigerian songs of 2021, and barely 72 hours later, Portable climbed the Livespot X stage to perform his hit with Olamide and PocoLee. Wizkid joined them on this stage to spray Portable with dollar bills. Four days after, Portable was dragging Poco Lee online for “ripping” him. He stated that he owns the song and should rightfully be credited as the primary artist instead of “PocoLee feat. Portable & Olamide”. Portable also claimed that Poco only gave him $600 out of the $3000 Wizkid sprayed.

    Image source: X.com

    Next thing, Kogbagidi (born Quadri Taored), a show promoter Portable used to call his “helper” sent him packing from his house. In the video Kogbagidi posted on his page, he called the “$3000” Poco Lee’s money and told Portable to return to his village in Sango Ota, Ogun State. As some guys packed Portable’s belongings out, Kogbagidi blamed them for not monitoring Portable in his absence.

    The drama generated online sympathy from music lovers and artists like Slimcase, who took to Instagram to plead for Portable.

    Portable apologised to Poco Lee, Kogbagidi and Olamide, asking them to forgive him for the earlier flare-up. Kogbagidi and Portable made up, but soon after, they had another clash about cars and contracts. In a video that surfaced online, Portable held a baseball bat, complaining about being cheated, while Kogbagidi begged him. They made up yet again. But on Jahbless’s “Original Intelligence” podcast in January 2022, Portable announced that the relationship ended.

    January – April 2022: Billboard charts and U.K. debut

    On January 5, 2022, ZaZoo Zehh debuted at number 14 on Billboard Top Triller Global Charts. On January 19, he released All Eyes On Me featuring Barry Jhay, and Neighbour with Small Doctor on the 29th. On February 11, Portable released his Zazuu Zeh EP and spent the next two months consistently putting out songs and features. In April, Portable performed at AY’s Easter show and went with socialite and 5-Star Records owner, E-Money, to the U.K. for shows in Peckham, Birmingham and Manchester.

    May – July 2022: Zeh Nation is born and Headies drama

    In May, Portable posted a certificate of incorporation for a new record label called Zeh Nation Limited on Instagram. The Headies 2022 nominee list came out on May 24, and Portable was in the Rookie of the Year category alongside Fave AV, Ugoccie and Magixx. He was also nominated for the Best Street-Hop category with Bella Shmurda, Mohbad, Naira Marley and Goya Menor.

    On May 25th, Portable threatened to cause harm to other nominees if he didn’t win the awards. The Headies asked him to retract his statement and tender an apology. Instead, he offered a back-handed apology, claiming they knew his attitude before they nominated him.

    On July 18, Portable called himself the founder of cult group, One Million Boys, and The Headies swiftly disqualified him from all categories.

    August 2022: Chief of Zeh Nation

    On August 22, Oba Olabode Thomas-Fagbayi (Onitigbo of Tigbo-Ilu) conferred upon Portable the chieftaincy title, Amuludun of Tigbo, Aworiland, an area in Yewa Local Government, Ogun State. He posted videos of his coronation ceremony on Instagram, and days later, he signed his first artist, Olamzzy, to Zeh Nation.

    September – December 2022: International shows, album drop and coffin entrance

    Portable went from losing a South African gig due to his social media fights in September, to performing in Germany and Italy in October, where he claimed to have faced extortion and escaped death. On November 25, he released his album, Ika of Africa, a few days after he signed Youngy Duu to Zeh Nation. And on December 28, Portable arrived in a coffin to Portable Live In Concert at Fela’s Shrine, Lagos — his debut show as the main act.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hyCvIcbhAgs\

    April 2023: A prison-inspired hit

    On March 30, police officers were at Portable’s Odogwu Bar in Sango Ota for unspecified reasons. The artist took to his IG story and claimed they came to assault him. The following day, he ended up in police custody. On April 3, the court granted bail after he met some conditions.

    Four days after his release, he put out the viral hit, Am Not a Prisoner.

    August 2023: Terry G link-up and U.S. tour

    Portable and Terry G released Ogbafia on August 16, 2023, after their viral link-up. Soon after, Portable and his wife, Omobewaji, hosted a ceremony to celebrate the first anniversary of his chieftaincy title. He later announced his United States tour to run from September 8, 2023 to March 23, 2024.

    November 2023: The sophomore album

    Portable released his second studio album, Anikuleti Street Don Jazzy (meaning the Don Jazzy of Anikuleti Street), on November 24, 2023. Although there’s no noise around it, Dr. Zeh is still on his U.S. tour as of the date of publishing.

    December 2023: Skepta link-up and Brit Fashion Award

    It came as a surprise to many when Nigerian-British artist, Skepta, asked for Portable’s whereabouts on his IG story and X. On December 5, the rapper posted a photo of Portable’s reserved seat at the 2023 British Fashion Awards before they both pulled up to the function.

    Image source: X.com

    Knowing how Skepta moves, he ended up making a record titled “Tony Montana” with Portable. The music video was released on March 1st on YouTube.

    READ: Subs, Gold Teeth & G-Wagons: Seyi Vibez vs Zino vs Portable

  • SMADA EH! vs Hamba Wena: What to Know About Copyright Infringement

    In the Nigerian music industry, most copyright infringement cases go unpunished. But on November 22, 2023, the Nigerian proverb, “Everyone is a culprit. But the one caught on the day is a thief,” latched onto former NATIVE Records artist, Smada. 

    SMADA EH! vs Hamba Wena

    In April 2023, Smada posted a video in which he was hanging with Poco Lee at Obi’s House. In October, the two made another video that went viral. In it, Poco and Smada sang along to a short but infectious “Smada eh, Smada ah” snippet.

    Soon, the X timeline was filled with requests for them to release the song. But many South African and Nigerian listeners were furious at the snippet and remarked that it was a copy of Deep London’s Hamba Wena. Unconcerned, Smada released SMADA EH! featuring Poco Lee and producer-DJs, Smeez and Dean, on October 27th. Smada performed the still trending song in public for the first time on November 4, 2023, and on November 7, he kicked off a promo challenge that helped it gain even more traction. 

    The copyright infringement and imitation comments from South African and Nigerian music listeners too, while other Nigerians maintained that Amapiano “belongs to us now”. Even Nigerian producer, Killer Vybez, tweeted that Nigeria doesn’t recognise copyright.

    On November 23, Deep London quoted one of Smada’s promo tweets with “Can you please at least respect South Africans?” In a subsequent quote, he promised to take legal steps against Smada. The following day, he posted a statement that included a suit against Smada for copyright infringement. On November 29, Deep London posted that SMADA EH! had been removed from all digital music platforms. As of December 4, Smada still performs the song.

    To understand how copyright infringement works in the music industry, we spoke with Nigerian entertainment, intellectual property and data protection lawyer, Lola Oyedele. She explained the infringement in Smada’s case and what the situation means for the African music scene.

    Good vs bad interpolation

    Lola: Interpolation is when a song is re-recorded, note by note, copying the basic composition. Artists do this when they don’t have enough money to pay the owner to sample the original song. However, it doesn’t mean you shouldn’t pay to interpolate it. It’s just a cheaper alternative. You still have to get a mechanical license, and you have to give credit. 

    Sampling is taking an original composition and using it as is in an entirely new song.

    Smada interpolated both the beat and melody of Hamba Wena in his song, SMADA EH!. Anyone who doesn’t know who Smada is will hear “Smada ah, Smada eh” and assume Deep London and Boohle made a remix of Hamba Wena.

    But none of the money earned off SMADA EH! goes to the South Africans who created the original composition.

    Copyright infringement 

    Lola: What Smada did on his song is copyright infringement because he copied someone’s work without permission. The moment you use and commercialise someone’s creation, it’s an infringement. The only exception in the Nigerian Copyright Act 2023 is in cases of fair use — writing your thesis or news articles with footnotes, you don’t need express permission to do so.

    If Smada didn’t get express permission to use the musical composition, there’s no reason why the matter should be taken lightly. That’s somebody’s intellectual property, so he needs to pay. 

    How Smada could’ve avoided legal drama

    Lola: When you plan to use someone else’s work in your music, you should write to them first. They may charge a fee or ask for credit as the original owner of the song. Some also demand a percentage of the music sales.

    When it gets legal

    Lola: Most unestablished artists use copyrighted work without authorisation because they don’t expect that their songs would exceed five or ten cities, so the original creator may never hear about the used composition.

    As a lawyer working with an established artist whose music has been used without permission, I’d write to the unestablished artist saying, “I know your probably didn’t think the song would have a huge traction or reach, but here we are now. What do you want to do about it?” If my legal team decides not to take “sorry”, the next thing to do is pull down the song. But the drama doesn’t end there. My legal team would state which part of our client’s copyright suffered infringement. Smada is earning from the stolen music. “Smada, eh, Smada, ah” is all over on the internet, and he’s getting paid; it doesn’t matter if it’s just a naira or two. 

    I’m not sure how it’ll go in Smada’s case, but ideally, he should pay the original creators a percentage of every dime he’s earned from the song. As the infringed artist’s lawyer, I wouldn’t take a one-time fee. People are even using the catchphrase as a joke.

    The song will be on the internet forever. 

    If negotiations don’t work, the last resort is to go to court. Court proceedings would happen in the defendant’s jurisdiction or where the infringement occurred. So, in Lagos, Nigeria, where Smada made his record. This case is a civil suit because it’s a matter of intellectual property (IP).  The consideration and ruling rests finally on the judge, and the new Nigerian copyright law (2022) is stricter than ever. If Smada’s team can prove they didn’t infringe, no problem. But a case like this can drag, depending on the infringed artist’s label or whichever company might own the original musical composition. The company will institute the action against Smada.

    What to do when you’re about to sample or interpolate a song you like

    Lola: Don’t incorporate what isn’t yours into your work. It’s alright for inspiration, but learn to get credit. Reach out to the artist, no matter how established they are. There are many internet-savvy entertainment lawyers like Foza Fawehinmi you can also approach.

    I work with Teni. Some artists from different places have reached out to use her song, and we gave them out Pro Bono.

    What this means for the African creative industry moving forward

    Lola: Some artists may find it harder to clear songs, and it may mean tighter copyright laws depending on the location.

  • Congratulate Yourself For Surviving 2023 With These 10 Songs

    Whether 2023 has been your year or it’s nothing like you wished for, you’ve tried what you can and you’re still standing as a new year approaches. 

    As we prepare to round up the year and welcome the holidays, take time to reflect and big-up yourself with these celebratory Nigerian songs that popped up on the radar in 2023.

    Man of the Year — Seyi Vibez

    Seyi Vibez is one of the most talked about artists in Nigeria this year due to his incredible three-project run this year. Thy Kingdom Come, the last of the projects, opened with Man of the Year. As Seyi throws his usual worship style on the song and lays claims at having the best year, he states the sky is enough for everyone to fly. This jam is for you to boastfully say you’re the man of the year while you motivate others they can be the men of the year too.

    OVER DEM — Davido

    “If dem wan turn Goliath, I be David for life,” Davido sings as he declares his dominion over haters. Not to sound like an opp, but this can also be a prayer point against Nigeria. The country can be the weapon fashioned against its people.

    Eyes — Reminisce feat. Mayorkun

    Reminisce grabbed Mayorkun for the opening chorus on his new album, Alaye Toh Se Gogo. Mayorkun starts by singing about the pressure he’s passed through to become somebody. Reminisce complimented this effort with two solid verses about determination and persistence. If 2023 has shown you a lot of shege, the song Eyes is the best recap of an interesting 2023.

    Sunshine — Asake

    “Sun gon’ shine on everything you do,” Asake sings on Sunshine, the fourth track on his sophomore Work of Art. As the choral vocals press against the log drums, the song hits on resilience and the promise of rest after work. So sit back and enjoy your 2023 wins. You’ve tried.

    Sability — Arya Starr

    Self-confidence is one of the best and most admirable qualities everyone should aspire to. Arya Starr knows this and turned it into an anthem.

    City Boys — Burna Boy

    When you finally realise your beauty, strengths and steeze, you see yourself bigger and better. From the J Hus’ intro speech to Burna Boy’s message about enjoying soft life, City Boys admonishes you to flex around your city this end of the year and live your life to the max.

    Oloun — PayBac Boro feat. Payper Corleone

    Even if you don’t get all you wished for, never stop fighting for them. In a painstaking but fired-up, passionate delivery, rappers PayBac and Payper Corleone swear that they must blow up and have the flyest things. 

    Keep optimism with you, fam. 

    BEZOS — BlaqBonez

    With faith, Blaqbonez walks and believes that today may be challenging, but tomorrow, he may also be as rich as Jeff Bezos. This is the reality of life, and it can happen to anyone (who isn’t sitting down, lazy and entitled sha). Moreover, this is Nigeria, and the idea of waking up and blowing tomorrow morning is the delulu we need.

    Holy Ghost — Omay Lay

    First, let me say that I hope Omah Lay is doing alright wherever he is. Secondly, thanks to him for this emotional piece that kicks against inferiority complex. 2023 might shake your morale, but you can dance in 2024 with the assurance that the supernatural will boost your confidence. This song is consuming and uplifting.

    Party No Dey Stop — Adekunle Gold feat. Zinoleesky

    It’s the end of the year, and the title of this jam should be taken literally. Drink up and dance away. But don’t spend all you have on party o. 2024 is just a few weeks away, and saving will help you avoid the shege in the beginning of the year.

    Press play.

  • Flavour Returns With New Album, ‘African Royalty’

    It’s been three years since the veteran Nigerian Highlife musician Flavour put out a full-length project. But the album break is coming to an end with his forthcoming album, African Royalty.

    Although Flavour announced the album on Friday, November 17th, he only just shared the album artwork and tracklist on his social media on November 23, 2023; his birthday.

    This is everything we know about the upcoming album.

    The early hints

    In October, Flavour  posted a clip of himself and The Cavemen in the studio, which he signaled “Album mode”. On November 2nd, he finally asked us with his chest if we were ready for his new album.

    African Royalty

    This upcoming album is Flavour’s eighth studio album, coming three years after Flavour of Africa. Aside from the gospel-like titles he has released including Uplifted (2010), Blessed (2012), Thankful (2014) and Divine (2018) — Flavour has always tilted towards indigenous themes. See N’abania (his debut in 2005) and Ijele the Traveller (2017). After several years of moderating traditional-inspired Igbo sound and Highlife music, there’s almost no doubt that African Royalty is a level-up on his previous works. 

    Artwork and tracklist

    The African Royalty announcement was accompanied bythe official album artwork and tracklist. This new project has 12 tracks, his shortest album since N’abania (2005) and Divine (2018).

    Features

    African Royalty features just three acts  including Ejyk Nwamba, a popular Ogene musician in South-East Nigeria. The Cavemen is on it too — we can call this the meet of Highlife maestros. The third guest artist on the album is Efya  from Ghana . These features seem very intentional. Bring it on, Mr. Flavour.

    Release date

    African Royalty will be released on December 2, 2023. Just in time for the holidays.

    Singles

    I’m a bit surprised his latest hit, Ndi Ike didn’t make it to the album, but I think it has built enough anticipation. Flavour noted that the lead single of the album, Big Baller, willdrop on Friday, November 24, 2023. But I’m a little lost because Game Changer, a single he released on December 2, 2022 is also on the album. Anyway, the lead single is what the artist says it is.

  • New Cats We’d Have Loved Albums From In 2023

    2023 has been a busy year for the Nigerian music industry, particularly Afrobeats. As artists like Burna Boy and Rema aggressively sell out shows and arenas, get nominations and win awards, they’re also in the studio to cook jams and feed their fans new music. 

    Over the past few years, the new generation artists have held our attention and climbed up to new, noticeable heights. After a series of releases and commercial success, one would expect these artists to present to us their full-length musical projects this year, but we’re still biting nails with no hope they’ll serve us.

    These are the new school Nigerian artists we expected to drop an album in 2023.

    Tems

    In the last two years, Tems has trailblazed her path and registered herself as a global brand. She has worked withartists like Brent Faiyaz (Found), Drake (Fountains), Rihanna (Life Me Up), and Beyoncé (MOVE), showing her musical range. After the releases of two EPs (For the Broken Ears in 2020 and If Orange Was A Place in 2021), we’re due for an album.

    Although the release of Me & U may be a step closer to Tems’ debut album, we don’t know how many steps are left to get us there. On November 20, 2023, Tems tweeted on X that she’d leave the internet and lean more into the background after her debut album drops. There’s no pointer it’s coming out in 2023. Temilade, see you in 2024.

    Oxlade

    We anticipate an Oxlade album, but he’ll also take the time to get back in the right headspace. The falsetto-singer mentioned in an interview this year that he went through a lot mentally and Ku Lo Sa was one of the expressive pieces that came out of this situationl.

    Ku Lo Sa is now one of Oxlade’s biggest songs ever. Also, he just released a two-song pack which has a very emotional single, KATIGORI, which addresses backbiters andfolks sabotaging his brand and business. In all that, he still found a pocket to remind his peers and detractors he’s far above them. Honestly, this type of confidence sounds fresh from him and gives the let-me-talk-my-shit vibes. With his current energy, he needs to give us the album ASAP!

    Victony

    Victony has had an incredible run in 2023, defining the year with hits like Soweto (original and remix), Jolene, My Darling, Angelus, Jaga Jaga, No Joke, and the latest, Ohema, which has over 14 other artists on it. Though it’s an incredible idea and execution, I’m wondering why he can’t just make an album and feature each one of them.

    Magixx

    We heard the ATOM EP in 2022, and we were sure it was the next direction after Magixx’s self-titled debut EP. Fast forward to 2023, only three songs (Colors, Loyal and Maria) have come out from the artist. Yes, they’re great titles but we exist in a period where almost all his new-cats colleagues likeCrayon, Rema, Ruger, Teni, Blaqbonez etc., have dropped their albums.But we’re patient and looking forward to his 2024 plans. Hopefully there’s an album in it.

    Fave

    Honestly, we are tired of getting only singles from Fave. It’s like giving a kid a piece of biscuit but never the whole pack. Don’t you want us to get filled? If that’s Fave’s intention, releasing a few songs and doing some features here and there, then she wins. Maybe in 2024, we’ll get a full experience of her talent and artistry in an album.