Category: Entertainment

  • SOLANGE  KNOWLES: ‘I identify with Sade, Erykah Badu’

    SOLANGE KNOWLES: ‘I identify with Sade, Erykah Badu’

    Beyonce’s baby sister has been in the news recently for all the wrong reasons. In this interview with Leigh Belz Ray the singer talks for the first time since the incident of her infamous altercation in a lift with her brother-in-law, rap mogul, Jay-Z, among other issues.

    Solange Knowles remembers the first time she got in trouble big trouble as a kid. Her parents, salon owner Tina and Xerox businessman Mathew, always allowed their youngest daughter to express herself through fashion. But on that particular night, when Mathew was taking his family to an office holiday party, he put his foot down.

    “He worked a super-corporate job,” she remembers. “And naturally he just wanted us to look nice, and six-year-old me came out in a tutu and tap shoes. He said, ‘No. Not this time.’ It was the first situation where he really gave me a look and sent me to my room. He was up set. It was a big deal.” She smiles at the memory. “When I look back at old pictures, my dad was always smartly dressed, my mom had the most elegant, beautiful style, and my sister was very into the ’90s Cross Colours look, and I …” she pauses. “I just had all of these different things inside me.”

    Solange Knowles was born to stand out. And today, on a hot late-May afternoon in New Orleans, she’s looking straight-up vivid. Slightly east of the French Quarter, Washington Square Park is full of all types construction workers, kids on skateboards, girls hula-hooping. This is a city known for its colorful buildings, bold flavours and oversize characters. So it takes something special to draw the eye: Heads turn when the girl dressed in a bright yellow Christopher Kane dress, turquoise neoprene Josh Goot shell and gold Aldo sandals strolls through the grass with her rainbow-bright bike.

    Colour-blocking is the singer’s current obsession. The departure from her wildly creative mixed-prints look is just the latest iteration of her ever-changing style. It started back in the tutus-and-tap-shoes days and continued in earnest through her teen years. “I had issues with dressing weather-appropriate,” she remembers. “In Houston, it’s pretty much always hot. But I was mad I didn’t get to have seasonal outfits so I’d wear sweaters and tights anyway.”

    There were also thematic shifts. When she started listening to Alanis Morissette, she says, she “went through a goth phase … even though Alanis was not goth at all.” The summer before sixth grade, she visited Tokyo and a Harajuku Girl moment began. “It was not good,” she recalls. “I had on stars-and-stripes stockings with a poufy skirt, two balls in my head, some crazy sweater and platform sneakers. When I went to the Sharpstown Mall in Houston with a friend, people were falling out laughing. It was a hot mess, but I was committed.” Then, when she was 14, she went to Jamaica and embraced the Rastafarian lifestyle. “I was into veganism and spoken word,” she says with a self-conscious flush. “I only wore clothes from secondhand shops and did a lot of meditation. My first album came out during that phase, so there’s unfortunately a lot of photographic evidence.”

    These days, there’s less of a theme guiding her wardrobe choices, though she says all of her childhood fashion adventures are in there somewhere. She’s been returning to the colors of Jamaica recently: red, green and yellow pieces from brands like Acne, Marni, Opening Ceremony, Tibi and J.Crew. “It’s interesting how the past comes back full circle and then it becomes more refined,” she says.

    Knowles talks about how she’s been “casualizing” her look recently, now that she’s living here in New Orleans with her nine-year-old son, Julez, and her boyfriend, video director Alan Ferguson. The 28-year-old says she loves the tempo of the city and the fact that for all its richness, there’s a more laid-back vibe than in her previous home bases. “I lived in New York and L.A. and they were different worlds I learned to navigate. Fashion and music have so many elements I’m connected to, but they also have parts that I’m not so interested in. I can step in and step out of those worlds. Being in New Orleans gives me space.”

    It was on a sugar plantation in nearby New Iberia, her grandparents’ hometown, that Knowles recently retreated for a month to write songs for her upcoming album, due out this fall. New Orleans may be a change of pace, but it has its own distractions. “I have friends who call in the middle of the day and say, ‘Come around the corner for a drink we’re going to hear this band,’ and I’m just like ‘No, I can’t! … Okay, wait for me.’ So I have to remove myself. As an artist, I lack discipline in terms of buckling down. But if I’m isolated then I have no choice.”

    The music is changing, she says. Though she cites Michael Jackson’s Off the Wall and Marvin Gaye’s Here, My Dear as inspiration, she has even more to say about Erykah Badu, Kate Bush and Fiona Apple. “My last EP, True, was about the overall vibe the message was fun. This one, I really want you to hear what I’m saying. I want you to hear me.”

    Though she and sister Beyoncé grew up in a house where Motown musicians were in constant rotation, Knowles says she reacted by choosing a different path. “Any time you’re a kid and you’re told, ‘You’re gonna love Donny Hathaway,’ naturally you’re like, ‘No, I love Fiona Apple.’”

    As a child, Knowles studied dance and planned a Juilliard career until destiny in the form of Destiny’s Child intervened. Her older sister’s pop group was breaking and, days before a 1999 summer tour, one of the backup dancers got pregnant and bowed out. The younger Knowles was tapped to fill in.

    “I had no idea how to dance hip-hop at the time,” she says. “I was trained in classical ballet! But it sounded chill and I was going to make a little weekly check and be with my whole family, so I said okay.

    “I loved traveling,” she continues. “We were in Europe for a month, and that’s when my musical eyes opened up. There, Björk was on pop radio. She wasn’t some obscure underground thing like she was in America.” Knowles spent the next two years as part of the Destiny’s Child machine until an injury forced her to take a year off from dancing. “Dance had been my everything since I was a little girl and all of a sudden I couldn’t do it,” she says, her voice going quieter. “Some beautiful things came out of that year but also some painful things. I started writing songs because I had all of these emotions that were so real.”

    One of the first people Knowles shared her songs with was Destiny’s Child member Kelly Rowland. “Kelly’s like a sister. When I let her hear my music, she said, ‘I want you to write for my album.’ That gave me a lot of confidence.” Telling Mathew and Tina was a little harder. “I was nervous to talk to my parents. Part of my mom was like, ‘Please be normal and get a regular job,’ because she had gone through so much with my sister. She knew how strong-willed I was and how the industry was probably not going to be the most supportive thing for a 15-year-old girl.” But they gave in and Knowles signed her first record deal with Columbia. In 2003, she released Solo Star.

    The album failed to break out, and Knowles says the whole experience was an eye-opener. “I was serious about my song writing but not necessarily too gung ho on all the other elements of being an artist the public nature of things, the lack of privacy, the feeling of always needing to be on. I also felt really misunderstood by my peers and the musical landscape that I was in,” she says. So she stepped out of it.

    In 2004, she married her high school sweetheart Daniel Smith and gave birth to Julez soon after. The pair moved to Idaho, where Smith played football for Boise State, and Knowles started living a quieter life, focusing on writing songs for her sister, Destiny’s Child, Rowland and others. “It was chill; I got to be at home with Julez all the time,” she says.

    After divorcing Smith in 2007, she was ready to get back into the scene this time with the confidence to shape her own experience. “I had written all of the songs [that ended up on 2008’s Sol-Angel and the Hadley St. Dreams] and I believed in them,” she says. “I felt I was strong enough to put them out specifically how I wanted to. I identify with Sade and Kate Bush and Erykah Badu, who are artists but on their own terms.” Since then, she’s been fine-tuning her creative view adding DJ and creative consultant for Puma to her résumé and starting her own label, Saint Records, last year. The latter move allows her to let go of some of the major-label sales pressure and concentrate on creating her own left-of-centre niche.

    Family is a centering force for Knowles and she speaks of wanting to expand hers once the new album is finished. The day we’re talking in the park is two weeks after TMZ published a leaked elevator video of Knowles getting into an altercation with brother-in-law Jay Z the night of the Met ball at the Standard Hotel. It’s a subject she expects in conversation but one she doesn’t want to focus on. She calls the incident “that thing.” “What’s important is that my family and I are all good,” she says. “What we had to say collectively was in the statement that we put out, and we all feel at peace with that.”

    She is happy to discuss the values her parents taught both of their daughters: hard work along with unconditional love and support for each other. “We’ve always held each other down no matter what,” she says. “That’s something I’m drilling into Julez now.”

    “I think about all of those phases that I went through,” she continues, looking out over kids playing in the park, “and the ridicule and whatever that I experienced. And I can’t think of one time where I ever felt like I was going to break. That’s because I had confidence instilled in me by my parents. They didn’t always like it in fact, most of the time they didn’t but they never asked me to change.”

  • If I wasn’t an actress, I’d have been married  –Collette Orji

    If I wasn’t an actress, I’d have been married –Collette Orji

     Although she holds a Higher National Diploma (HND) in Chemical Engineering, Collette Orji has been making a living out of acting. In this interview with OVWE MEDEME, she gives a peep into her career, charity and business, among others.

    You seldom appear in movies in recent times. So, what have you been up to?

    Personally, I have been working more on stories that I have been selling and on scripts that I’ve been writing. I have been doing a lot of screen plays. This year, I haven’t worked much. I have done just four films and two of them were cinema movies. I’m really falling in love with the cinema system. There is something about it that is just gearing me up to it. For me, I think I would be doing more of cinema films as much as it comes because it doesn’t come every day. Apart from this, I run my business as well as my NGO. I won’t be fully based in Nigeria again because I am expanding. I live in Abuja and the current state of insecurity there is getting me crazy.

    Are you leaving the country because of insecurity?

    Not at all! But it’s driving me crazy. I wasn’t there when they happened. I was on holidays when I heard of the recent bombing in Wuse II. It was very emotional for me because I go there almost every other day. I have some guys whom we do movie business with and they were also traumatised by the bombing. It is like when you had an accident on a road, you will have a phobia when next you have to travel on that same road.

    By writing more of scripts, are you saying goodbye to acting?

    Are you kidding me? I don’t know what else I know how to do in this world. I will be featuring in some of the stories I write. Sometimes, you don’t want to be featured in the stuff you write. But in the movies that I produce, I will be featuring in them.

    Which of your scripts have been made into movies?

    Some of them are War against Tradition and Bleeding Heart. Sometimes, the name with which we write a script is changed when it is made into a movie.

    How soon are you coming out with your own production?

    I would have done it already. I am ready, in terms of the story and the actors. But I am not sure of the finances because I’m trying to do it on my own; and if I put everything I have right now into it, I will go broke (laughs). I am a businesswoman. I have to put some things in place so that it will not affect my business. I need a couple of months more.

    What business are you into?

    My business registered name is Coco House. I deal in clothings, women’s hairs, make-ups and all that. I also have an NGO called Coco Medicare Foundation. It is mostly for women who need medication and who need to go to hospitals for medical check. I’m in partnership with a couple of hospitals in India. Apart from working with the women, one-on-one, I am like an intermediary.

    So far, how has it been running the foundation?

    We will be a year old in August, which is also my birth month. My birthday is August 1. Within a year, we have done so much. This year, we went to a community in Anambra State and took care of about 200 primary school children who were returning to school. We also took care of the elderly in the community; so, we are trying to work on what we will do for the one-year celebration. We are still planning. We haven’t really given it the final picture, so I can’t say exactly what we are doing. I will be in Nigeria for that.

    Who runs your business when you are away?

    When it comes to my NGO, I’ve got a team in Nigeria. Gone are the days when you had to travel to sign a business deal. I have my team for my NGO. I have my staff and a personal assistant for my movie jobs. I was called down to do a job recently, but I am not done with my holidays. I looked at the whole story and the money wasn’t that interesting, so I turned it down.

    Who is your closest pal in the industry?

    We don’t like to call out names. I’ve got friends as well as colleagues. Everybody is trying to create a working relationship and we don’t want to come out sounding like I’m closer to this person than that. So, I’m cool with most people.

    Are you in a relationship?

    I am in a relationship.

    Is your man based in Nigeria?

    No, he’s not.

    How does he cope with all your travels?

    He also travels a lot, so it’s both ways.  Also, there’s Skype, so it’s easier to travel these days. Even if you are married and you have to travel a lot, keeping in touch is not difficult anymore. Sometimes, we meet in other countries.

    Is he comfortable with your career choice?

    Yes, he is. The thing about me is that I try to be honest about things. If he is not comfortable, he won’t be in the relationship because nobody is holding his legs and hands down! But there are always concerns. Trust me, if I wasn’t in the industry, I guess I would have been married a long time ago.

    Is the industry holding you back from getting married?

    It is not holding me back. But to some extent, it holds back some men. So, by holding the men back, it is holding me back. People watch our movies and they form their impression about you before they meet you.

    Are you in anyway trying to break into the movie industry in the UK?

    No. But in the U.S., I have opportunities to do that and I’m exploring them. In the UK, I haven’t even tried. I’ve just been with my family. I’m just moving from one person’s house to the other. There is something about me. I’m not trying to do 50 movies in a year. I don’t want to be on all the posters in the whole country. I want a private life. I want to just maintain consistency. That is what I want to do. I want to be able to do my business, have a family and still be able to maintain that consistency.

     It sounds contradictory that you want a private life in a career that puts you in the public eye…

    It is not. Doing movies is a career; it is my job. That is what I do; it is not who I am. I want to be able to have my family, my kids and I am looking forward to things like that. But my job stands.

    How soon do you hope to get married?

    I will be getting married when I get married. I am an adult and I’m in a relationship. I would love to be married, but it is not entirely up to me. That is why I say that. I don’t need to be wearing a wedding ring before having my baby. I can have my baby, if I want to. That is family, isn’t it?

    Is it, for you?

    (Laughs) I don’t know. So, let’s leave that for now.

    Talking about physical appearance, what attracts you in a guy?

    I think when you look at a man, you should look at his eyes because they can tell you a lot. The eyes are the window to his heart. It could be fake, but when you look at the eyes, you will see a lot. I am not attracted to looks and things like that. You have to see before you talk to somebody. Sometimes, you see someone and you don’t need a minute to know what that person is like. When I’m with someone, there are things that tell me the person is kind. Is he someone who can tolerate me? Is he someone who believes that there is God, so he minds his actions? Those are the questions I ask myself. There is no big deal about all the other stuff.

    You were known mostly for doing epic films. Is that still the case?

    I don’t have a problem with that. I just love Africa; I just feel like we have a lot of stories that have not been told. Even if it has been told, I just feel like my voice must be heard. You won’t say because there are a million books in the world, so you won’t write another one. We should let our voices be heard. So,I don’t have a problem with it. The other part is because I don’t really like getting too sexy in movies. I try not to be too sexy in movies. I’ve been trying, but it is not easy. I don’t want to do crazy things. I don’t have a problem with doing it; but somehow, I have this discomfort with exposing too much.

    Why wouldn’t you want to showcase your beauty in a movie?

    I am pretty and that is okay. Of course, I do that in movies, but a scene can be created and told without telling too much. Not everything must be shown explicitly. Sometimes, when it is necessary in a story, I can do it. But sometimes, you look at a story and you realise that, without a particular scene, it still makes sense.

    Have you ever been approached to act nude?

    No! I don’t need to do it. I think nudity is not beautiful. Being completely naked is not a beautiful thing. It is lovely when you are passionate in a movie scene and the more you look, the more you want to see; yet, the less you actually get to see.

    With your love for acting, why did you choose to do a science course?

    (Laughs) I’m a bookworm. That’s what was happening to me. Back in school, I was so much into books; and at the same time, I loved the social life. I don’t know what would have happened, if I wasn’t a little bit social. I think I would have been a geek.

    I thank God that I had a little social life. I had always loved Nigerian movies. I was born in Cameroun and even while there, I watched Nigerian movies a lot. It was the only thing I could do. That was like the message I had. That was the only way for me to know Nigeria. That is why I love the movies. They go so far. While in Cameroun, I watched all the movies. I knew all the actors and everything that was going on in the industry. So, when I came to Nigeria, it was the only platform that I really knew. Every other thing I used to hear about Nigeria was bad. The only thing that was sterling was the movie.

    Will you be putting them to use at some point?

    I still plan to have more. I will go back for more degrees. Maybe I’ll do a Master’s. At some point, I will put them to use. I am here with my family and we are having a lot of talks. They are expanding my ideas and talking to me about so many things. So, I’ve come to the conclusion from everything I’ve heard that I will.

  • Ola Onabule headlines Lagos Jazz Series

    Ola Onabule headlines Lagos Jazz Series

    Organisers of the Lagos Jazz Series have unveiled the artistes who will be performing at the event coming up on August 1 and 2, at La Scala, Muson Centre, Lagos.

    Headlining the show is prolific British-Nigerian jazz and soul artiste, Ola Onabule, as well as the eclectic Abyssinian Jazz Vespers All Stars.

    Onabule and his band will perform, for the first time in Nigeria, after many years of touring Europe. “We are really proud to welcome Ola home. This will be his first concert in his native land and we consider it an honour to be the platform for this historic event,” said Oti Bazunu, founder of Lagos Jazz Series.

    According to him, Onabule will perform materials from his existing seven albums and his yet-to-be released eighth album titled “It’s The Peace That Deafens”.

    Bazunu also stated that the Lagos Jazz Series would be an intimate cocktail that will have in attendance government dignitaries, corporate executives, professionals, media practitioners and culture advocates.

    Lagos Jazz Series, an annual music festival, usually holds in Nigeria in November. It was founded by Mr. Oti Bazunu, a businessman and jazz aficionado, in 2010.

  • Linda Ejiofor covers Nolly Silver Screen magazine

    Linda Ejiofor covers Nolly Silver Screen magazine

    Nollywood actress, Linda Ejiofor, is the cover girl for this month’s edition of Nolly Silver Screen magazine.

    Linda, who plays Bimpe in Tinsel, talks about her journey as an actress, her ideal man and plans for the future.

    “He has to have a deep relationship with God and have a clear vision first for his life and then for his family. He must have a good sense of humour and nice smell,” she said.

    The actress was nominated for an Africa Movie Academy Awards for her role in Rita Dominic’s movie, The Meeting.

    The edition also features interviews with Deyemi Okanlawon, O.C. Ukeje, Iretiola Doyle and Adejoke Laoye. “We decided to expand the magazine for our sixth edition. There is so much happening in the industry and it is our job to communicate it. We owe it to our readers to give them more. Varied contents and great designs are some of the things we have done in this edition, which spans 40 pages,” said Isabella Akinseye.

  • NOHP: Towards rebranding Nigeria

    NOHP: Towards rebranding Nigeria

    A group of individuals has teamed up with the Federal Ministry of Tourism, Culture and National Orientation as well as some corporate bodies to creatively engender a positive global perception for Nigeria under the banner: Nigeria: Our Heritage Project (NOHP).

    A member of the group, Prof. George Obiozor, a former Director-General of the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs, NIIA, said  the new project would change the perception of Nigeria, especially to the outside world.

    Obiozor, who until recently was Nigeria’s Ambassador to the United States of America, USA, said NOHP was conceived as an enduring movement to engender a positive global perception change for Nigeria such that Nigeria would be enabled internally and externally to realise her full potentials.

    “It will be activated by 100 proudly Nigerian public and private organisations that will catalyse the strategic repositioning of Nigeria as a more welcoming nation. With the official endorsement by the Federal Ministry of Tourism, Culture and National Orientation, this project is better poised to achieving a positive perception change through a well-coordinated exposure of our heritage and the legendary Nigerian spirit for a proper appreciation of the world,” the erudite scholar said.

    According to him, part of their programmes includes the Fascinating Nigeria documentary series. “This documentary series shall highlight Nigeria’s rich heritage, enchanting scenery and potentials through syndicated media networks to a wide global audience. All these are created to keep Nigeria constantly in the minds of people across the world for better appreciation of what she is all about,” Obiozor revealed.

    Other programmes include publishing a book titled Nigeria: Our Heritage -The Past. The Present. The Promise as well as the National Heritage Medal Awards, a yearly reward platform for partner organisations.

    Other individuals involved in the project are Prof. Sam Oyovbaire, Prof. Tunde Adeniran, Prof. Isawa Elaigwu, Prof. Jide Osuntokun, Prof. Bukar Bukarambe and Prof. Collins O. Gardner.

  • G-Clemp releases Ini Edo

    G-Clemp releases Ini Edo

    After hitting the airwaves with his single, Microphone, George Clement Pius has dropped a new single titled Ini Edo.

    Better known as G-Clemp, the artiste described Ini Edo as an Ibibio-speaking chorus with Makossa flow, which gives  the listeners an insight into the shape of the beautiful Nollywood actress, Ini Edo.

    “You know, she has a beautiful shape and is also from Akwa Ibom, where I come from. I am trying to promote my language, my culture and my people. I am also trying to remove the perception of many people that Akwa Ibomites are only good as maids,” G-Clemp stated.

    On what makes the new song different from his previous ones, G-Clemp said: “It’s something different from what people used to see from G-Clemp and the song is a club banger. For the first time, you will hear me rap in my native language and the song is a blend of hip-hop, Afro-pop and, of course, the comical flavour, which is always inherent in my style. It has to be funny. The video is funny and entertaining.”  He also disclosed that he would drop his full album before the end of the year.

    Makinde Adeleke of South-South Records, who described G-Clemp as a gifted musician, said: “There is a curious excitement when the name G-Clemp or Microphone is mentioned, because of his kind of musi-comedy. If you don’t hear what he sings, you follow the flow, which is easily adaptable even by children,” he explained.

  • Madam Testimony wows at album launch

    Madam Testimony wows at album launch

    Fast Rising gospel singer, Biola Akintomide, popularly called Madam Testimony, has launched her sophomore album titled The Storm is over at the M.A.N events centre, Ikeja, Lagos,  to the delight of music lovers.

    The Storm is over is a four-track composition produced by music producer/ arranger, Richard Efunbote.

    The energetic Afro-soul singer, whose musical repertoire bears a semblance with famed Gospel singer Tope Alabi, said her music is meant to inspire and heal wounded souls. ”As a gospel singer, I believe that beyond the entertainment value one gets from my music, it should also minister healing and life to the people. My songs cut across every aspects of life. And like the title of the album depicts, there is hope for us, even in the worst situations,” she said.

    The producer, Mr. Richard Efunbote, in his remarks, said the album is a combination of modern trends in music that give delight to everyone who enjoys listening to gospel music.

    He stated that the songs would be available in major music store, adding that the online audience would enjoy it on YouTube and other platforms in Nigeria and beyond.

    During the launch, the gospel act enthralled her fans with her stagecraft, particularly when she rendered her hit track, “Baba to S’ekun mi derin(The God that turned my sorrow into joy)”.

  • Omoni Oboli mentors GLEEHD Foundation’s members

    NOLLYWOOD actress cum producer, Omoni Oboli, was the guest speaker at a programme tagged “Mentors Breakfast” organised by GLEEHD Foundation and The Dream Centre on Wednesday, July 2,  in Gbagada, Lagos.

    The event provided an opportunity for young people to interact with the award-winning actress who shared her success story with them.

    During the session, she revealed that the biggest decision she had ever made was turning down a job in an oil and gas firm to pursue a career in acting with a determination to succeed in the industry.

    Omoni, who also took time to direct an impromptu play during the session, advised members of the audience to choose their spouses very carefully, adding that they should marry people who support their dreams and visions.

    She also said New Nollywood had been trying to reduce stereotypes and address the ills that characterised the early Nollywood movies.

    It was a memorable for the participants as the top Nollywood star gave out free copies of her movie, Anchor Baby, at the session.

  • Fifi Ejindu,Biola Okoya still Poles apart

    Fifi Ejindu,Biola Okoya still Poles apart

    Fifi Ejindu and Biola Okoya appear not to be in a hurry to put the past behind them. Celeb Watch once reported about the silent but bruising war between the two women who were once a reference point in affectionate friendship.

    Society goddess, Fifi Ejindu, and Biola Okoya, the fun loving daughter of the landlord of Oluwanisola Villa, Chief Rasak Akanni Okoya, were so close that one would hardly see one without the other.

    They shopped together and attended A-list parties together. Such was their closeness that the distance between them (Fifi lives in Abuja while Biola resides in Lagos) amounted to nothing. But all that changed as news of their break-up rent the public arena.

    The rumour got substantiated with the decision of the pair not to deny any of the stories alleging a rift between them. In no time, the rumour spread and developed a life of its own as the former friends stopped going out together and even appeared to be avoiding each other at public functions. Celeb Watch gathered that efforts by their mutual friends to settle the rift between them have failed repeatedly.

  • I was born near a dunghill,says 50-year-old Kunle Ajayi

    IT was, indeed, a day of glory recently when ace gospel saxophonist, Pastor Kunle Ajayi, turned 50. The colourful celebrations, which held at the RCCG camp along the Lagos/ Ibadan Expressway, was witnessed by the General Overseer of the church, Pastor Enouch Adeboye and his wife, Pastor (Mrs.) Folu Adeboye, among other dignatories.

    For the respected instrumentalist, it was all thanks to God, as he said: “I give him all the glory and honour for all He has enabled me to accomplish through the music ministry He called me to.”

    Ajayi, who started playing with plastic flute given to him by Pastor (Mrs.) Adeboye when he joined the church choir as a teenager, gave an insight into the journey of his life which, according to him, is a confirmation of how God can raise “anybody to become somebody to be celebrated.”

    “I wish my late mum was here today to really expatiate how it all began. My pregnancy was meant to be aborted, as she tried all she could do, but the grace of God sustained me. I was later born by the dunghill due to the situation of things at that time. People at that time said I would not survive.  I myself also thought that I would never get to 20 years old in life or amount to anything in life because they called me Japala, which means abandoned child. But today, you can see Japala that God has changed the story of his life,” he revealed.

    Pastor Adeboye, who described Ajayi as an exceptional man who fears and serves God with all sense of duties, said: “The relationship between Ajayi and me is a partnership made from heaven.”

    During the occasion, his two sons, Oluwadamilola and Adebayo, entertained guests with sax music to the admiration of all.