Tag: Fela Anikulapo-Kuti

  • Nigeria: struggling to make culture a new treasure trove

    Nigeria: struggling to make culture a new treasure trove

    • struggling to make culture a new treasure trove

    It is going into the second year that the popular Artists’ Village, located some few metres away from the iconic National Theatre, Iganmu, in Lagos, Nigeria’s economic capital, was demolished by a raging bulldozer.

    This brings to many minds the invasion of the residence of the late Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, the country’s biggest musical export and inventor of Afrobeat. In the seventies, Fela’s house named Kalakuta Republic was invaded by unknown soldiers and many of his female singers were beaten and raped while the musician’s mother, Funmilayo, a stormy petrel was thrown down from the upper floor of the house. She survived the fall but never recovered from it and died some months later.

    The famous Artists’ Village was like a commune of artistes from various walks of life who have made the place their homes, workshops, studios and all. They found the place to be conducive and good to foster their creativities and make them bloom. They have been there so long that many of them consider the place as their second home and since their presence does not pose any threat to anyone, at least by their own estimation, they never thought it could one day be a subject of controversy.

    The area occupied by them is situated away from the iconic National Theatre which was itself built in the 70s when Nigeria hosted the Black world during the Festival of Arts and Culture (FESTAC), which was then considered as the world’s biggest cultural assemblage of black people which exhibited its arts and culture to the world.

    A world for artistes


    By its very nature the Artists’ Village was a vast self-creation by most of the artistes who animated the vast complex. The commune is made up of various tribes of artistes: musicians, instrumentalists, dramatists, visual artists, poets, playwrights, writers and other bohemian artists who find their muses there. They said they are tenants of the National Council of Arts and Culture (NCAC).

    But the idyllic world of an artistes’ commune was broken in the evening of January 22nd, 2016. It was approaching the end of the day and a few of the artistes who felt they had done enough for the day decided to leave and go home to have a well deserved rest for the day. One of the artists who had made the village a home and office was Owie Smart,38, a sculptor who was working frantically day and night and round the clock to meet with a scheduled exhibition in Abuja.

    Around six in the evening of that day his smartphone rang. It was a friend who was close to the authority of the National Theatre. According to the caller, the authorities had decided to move against all those it considered as illegal occupants of the artistes’ commune in the early hours of the next day.

    This, to Smart, was strange. As tenants to the National Council of Arts and Culture (NCAC), a parastatal of the federal government of Nigeria to which they had been paying rents, it seems absurd to be declared as illegal occupants of the facility. He concluded that it was impossible for his studio and others to be demolished.

    However, the status of the Artists’ Village has been long standing even under the previous administration and the then parliament had prevailed on the government not to tamper with the place until thorough investigation was carried out. This held until the government of former President Goodluck Jonathan was voted out in 2015.

    On January 23, 2016, at dawn, a caterpillar moved in and the pulling down of the village began in earnest. Painter Mufu Onifade and others around begged the manager of the National Theater who was in charge of the demolition to hold on so the artists could salvage some of their belongings and artworks.

    It was in the course of that day that what could have terminated the life of Smart happened. During a confrontation between the artists and the armed uniformed men who had accompanied those demolishing the structures, things got out of hand. The police fired in the direction of the artists and one of the gun shots lodged in Smart’s leg.

    Working like orphans
    The fate that befell Smart is illustrative of what happens in Nigeria to artists. It is a well known fact that artists in the country are not well valued or regarded until they get recognition or endorsement abroad.

    This is why many wonder if the country is serious at all about its search for a new treasure trove in its arts, of which it is rich in, abroad. Nollywood, Nigeria’s film industry is reputed to be the third largest in the world. All this was achieved without government support. The same goes for its literature, music, visual arts and others.

    It is perhaps not an exaggeration to say that Nigerian artists, no matter in whichever genre they are involved –music, visual arts, theatre, movie making etc- are like orphans; they work without any form of assistance from government. For instance, a film maker has to provide power, transport, camera, studio and all other appurtenances need to produce films.

    Shedding light on why he thinks artists don’t get support from the ministry or government, Samuel Osaze of Arterial Network, a non-governmental organisation, which works with artistes to promote arts and culture was not surprised at what is happening because “Budget to our (arts) sector is the least in the national budget. In fact, when the new administration came into power, culture was not even remembered.”

    The new oil


    The art sector is always treated as non-existent. However, with the new reality of the country’s biggest export –oil – running low and many countries looking for alternative to fossil fuel, the government is turning its attention to arts and culture to get foreign exchange since the country’s artistes are getting all the rave reviews needed abroad.

    Culture is primed to become Nigeria’s next oil. The government has labeled the cultural sector ‘potentially the biggest source of economical growth’ and accords it preferred status.

    Although culture has now officially become a priority, its ministry has to make due with limited funds, or ‘mere tokenism’ as the minister of culture Lai Mohammed called his budget. The yearly funding is around N40 billion.

    Plagued with problems such as terrorist group Boko Haram, famine and widespread illiteracy, the country spends most of its money on safety, internal affairs and education. But as a result, the ministry of culture barely has enough money to maintain its buildings, let alone realize the administrations’ ambitious plans.

    Osaze says the sector has been working with an old policy document from 1998 which artists have been asking for it to be reviewed without success. He adds, “There’s no political will to change the policy of the sector for the better.” He laments that a country like Nigeria has no adequate Cultural Policy adding that this was not due to lack of capacity but because the bureaucracy of government has been frustrating the process.

    His conclusion is that it is only the private sector that can galvanise the policy to make it work for the sector because it must be looked at first as important.
    Ganiu Ayodele, Osaze’s colleague at Arterial Network agrees that what obtains in the sector is paradoxical. “Creators don’t get the support they need. Even so, our artistic production is much larger and more sophisticated than that of most other African countries.”

    He agrees that most artists in Nigeria have strong will and they do things by themselves without looking back. He adds, “We have a lot of die-hard practitioners who are very entrepreneurial.”

    One of Nigeria’s biggest private art collectors, Dr. Yemisi Shyllon, is not in any way impressed by the government’s lackadaisical treatment of culture. He believes the way culture is treated does not show any seriousness that the government is looking towards it as the nation’s next treasure trove. According to him, “Without historical sites, museums and so on, how can we attract tourists when we don’t have something that tourists would be interested to see? If you want to develop Nigeria, one of the greatest gold mines is culture. Invest in culture.”

    Asked further to talk about the policy, the art collector declared, “It is all very good propaganda and lip service, but I don’t see any hope.” To him, the real hope for the culture sector is in the private sector and to achieve that he has already set himself a goal. It is to build a private museum which would warehouse his numerous art collections. The museum is almost completed and it is situated in the Pan Atlantic University to ensure it is well taken care of after him.

    On why he decided on building a private museum, he said this is to ensure his art collection does not end up in the trash after his death. He laments that there is not a single decent museum in Lagos, the country’s economic capital. “If we had a proper public gallery.

    I would only need to donate a couple of artworks. But now I’ve had to spend my own money to have a building erected and keep it maintained.”
    He observes that the movie industry which the government is today boasting about its contribution to the country’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) was facilitated by individual professionals.

    There is no doubt that the plan to transform the creative sector into a creative economy must be driven by the private sector, according to the government. The modest growth that has been achieved in the creative industry so far, whether in films, music or fashion, has been achieved in spite of the government. Instead of providing cultural subsidies and grants, the government refers artists to the Bank of Industry for low interest start-up loans.

    Unkown soldiers
    Although every Nigerian artist will welcome the aspiration to make culture the new oil, they urge their leaders to cherish existing initiatives and support local artists, instead of threatening their lives.

    Years ago Fela’s Kalakuta Republic was demolished by unknown soldiers. In 2016 history seemed to repeat itself when Smart was shot by unknown soldiers. Not even the voice of Nigeria’s most respected writer Wole Soyinka, a Nobel laureate could make the government act on finding who shot Smart or who ordered the demolition of the Artists’ Village.

    Soyinka had said, “These artists have lost their entire means of livelihood in a single day. I’m tired of saying ‘it was the police, it was the army. A few specific people have given the order to do this. We have to find out in detail who were responsible.”

    The man who serves as the coordinator of the Artists’ Village, Aremo Tope Babayemi is pained that going to two years the case had not been attended to by the Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed. The minister who personally visited the village after its demolition had promised compensation for the artists. Today, the affected artists are still waiting for their compensation to be paid out.

    According to Babayemi, “The affected artists and the community have gone through untold pain and discomfort. So much for all the noise and hot air about government nurturing creative entrepreneurship in Nigeria! We are not interested in paternalistic benevolence from government.

    What we need is recognition of our work and worth and professional engagement with an administration that keeps professing an intention to develop the creative economy in Nigeria.”

    A damning and forthright verdict. Will the government prove its critics right and continue to pay lip service to culture as the new foreign exchange earner?

     

    This article was developed with the support of Journalismfund.eu

  • ‘I still can’t believe Fela is gone’

    ‘I still can’t believe Fela is gone’

    Seun Kuti, a scion of the late Afrobeat sage, Fela Anikulapo Kuti, yesterday said that he still finds it hard coming to terms with his father’s passing. According to him, what started as a rumour turned out real, leaving him quite traumatized.

    Recounting the incident as he remembers on his Facebook page, the singer, who took over his father’s Egypt 80 band wrote; “the week preceding this one 20 years ago was quite traumatizing as rumors of Fela’s death had spread.

    “It was so widespread that Fela’s very good friend Michele Avantario #rip flew in from Italy to mourn. He arrived in the morning of this exact day. He stood at the top of our street, too shaken to approach the house. I stumbled upon him while going to see my friend, Arthur. Michele what are you doing here crying? He said Fela is dead! I said no; stop crying it’s just a rumor. He pulled himself together and we went to KK (Kalakuta).

    “He said he bought me the new Play station on his way. I was beyond elated. We chilled at KK. I went back to his hotel; we discussed a bit till it was about 8, got my PS and headed back home.”

    At that moment, Seun said, he was the happiest man in the whole world.

    As I approached KK I saw a huge crowd outside, my elder brother’s friend Siasia was outside. I asked him what was happening and he said Seun Just go inside. Everyone was crying. ‘FELA DON DIE, FELA DON DIE’ couldn’t believe it. #20years later, I still can’t believe it. YEAR 20 A F E (After Fela Era) PS: Happy post humous birthday Dr Beko Ransome Kuti,” he added.

    Fela’s demise was announced a day later, on August 3, 1997 by his elder brother, Olikoye Ransome-Kuti, a prominent AIDS activist and former Minister of Health.

     

  • AFRIMA receives 4,816 entries for 2017

    AFRIMA receives 4,816 entries for 2017

    • Eastern Africa has highest entries

    Organisaers of the All Africa Music Awards (AFRIMA) have announced a large number of entries for the 2017 edition of the award.

    At the close of the two-month entry submission process on Monday, July 17 which raked in close to 5,000 from African music artistes and music professionals, organisers noted that this edition is on its way to becoming an epoch-making awards event.

    “The African Union and the International Committee of AFRIMA had opened the 2017 AFRIMA Call for Entries on May 8 giving the opportunity to African music artistes, record producers, songwriters, video directors and music journalists to enter their qualified works on the AFRIMA website www.afrima.org and the awards social media platforms.

    “The overwhelming response to this call putting the total number of entries received for 2017 at 4,816 is an astronomical increase from the 2,714 number of entries received in 2016 which amounts to a whopping 77.25% increase compared to last year. The analysis reveals the regions with the highest entries as Eastern Africa, with 47% of the total entries and Western Africa, with 30%. This immense progress is a positive marker and has elicited satisfaction from the African Union, the International Committee of AFRIMA, the Regional and Country Directors of AFRIMA, the statement reads.

    Expressing excitement at the high number of entries in 2017, the AFRIMA International Advisor and member of the International Committee, Mr. Rikki Stein stated: “This is tremendous news, indicative of an increasingly healthy music industry across Africa, particularly from a creative perspective.

    Rikki Stein, former friend and Manager to African music legend, Fela Anikulapo Kuti.

    “AFRIMA is plugged in to the aspirations of the African continent, providing a platform for excellence in the field of music and a source of inspiration and encouragement for its associated fields of endeavour; songwriters, producers, sound engineers, distributors, publicists, marketers, photographers, videographers, stylists, journalists, bloggers, DJs and on and on.”

    The former friend and Manager to African music legend, Fela  Anikulapo Kuti also added that,

    “As one by one, African artists are making their mark in the wider world, acting as ambassadors of their countries and their culture, the eyes and ears of that wider world are opening and turning towards Africa as the source of much more than entertainment. In its finest form, as will be evident amongst AFRIMA nominees and eventual winners, they provide an antidote to negativity and cynicism, offering a healing form for ailments of heart and spirit; what Fela used to call ‘The Underground Spiritual Game’.

    To follow the close of entry submission is the screening and adjudication processes from July 18 to July 28 and August 2 to August 8 respectively. The 13-man AFRIMA Jury will review the 4,816 entries to determine the works of African talents that are adjudged on merit to be on the AFRIMA 2017 Nominees List.

    In partnership with the African Union, AFRIMA is centred on the promotion and marketing of African music and is by far the largest gathering of such magnitude of stakeholders in Africa. The biggest awards event on the continent packs exciting activities into its annual events calendar including the AFRIMA Music Village, the Africa Music Business Roundtable and the AFRIMA Host City Tour.

    The event is scheduled to hold from November 9 to12 with a live broadcast to 84 countries across the world.

  • The Nomoreloss you never knew

    The Nomoreloss you never knew

    Olumuyiwa Osinuga, also known as Nomoreloss, was born in Lagos western Nigeria in the 70’s. The veteran singer had his primary and secondary education at A.D.R.A.O International school, Victoria Island.

    His growing up in the high-brow areas of Lagos, Nigeria played a great part in his appreciation of classical music as well as music of international flavor.

    Nomoreloss was also privileged to study the rudiments of music from one of Nigeria’s greatest instrumentalist and jazz saxophonist Kunle Ajayi.

    He started out as a rapper while in high school and later on switched to master of ceremony at various events. An accomplished stand-up comedian, mc, musical video director as well as a television host, he has directed musical videos for such artists like Lexy Doo, Jagunlabi, Jah Borne, Cimion, Folake Umosen and was project coordinator and producer for the video CD for the controversial rapper Rugged Man’s Thy Kingdom Come Album.

    With role models such as Ebenezer Obey, King Sunny Ade, Fela Anikulapo Kuti, Orlando Owoh, IK Dairo, King Wasiu Ayinde Marshal (KWAM 1), he is also a producer of both music and television programs.

    With a fusion of R&B, pop, jazz, reggae and jazz with an underlying tone of west African high life has led him to create a style that is unique in its appeal but most certainly soulful in its delivery which has been labeled, ‘New High-Life’.

    In 2012, Nomoreloss wrote the biggest song of singer, Jaywon’s career titled ‘This Year.’ In June 2015 he released the album ‘Grass to Grace’. In 2014 he dropped the album ‘Standing ‘, and ‘Then & Now’. His debut album ‘Let Them Say’ was released in 2006.

    Nomoreloss entered public consciousness in 2002 when he featured in Ruggedman’s classic cut ‘Ehen’. Prior to that he was a presenter on the music TV show ‘Groovoidz’.

    While making a name for himself as a gifted singer, Nomoreloss also shot music videos for many Nigerian singers at the time.

    Nomoreloss got married to Rhythm 93.7 FM OAP Phoenix (Adeola Osinuga) in 2008 and they welcomed their daughter on Saturday, January 15, 2011.

    He will forever be remembered as a Veteran singer, an inspirational artiste and a producer.

  • Fela Anikulapo Kuti: Musical genius and activist

    Fela Anikulapo Kuti: Musical genius and activist

    Sunday 18 October was the final day of Felabration; a weeklong annual musical jamboree to celebrate the life, times, music, and ideology of the phenomenon called Fela. Born Olufela Olusegun Oludotun Ransome-Kuti on 15 October 1938, this scion of the popular Ransome-Kuti family of Abeokuta was a singer/songwriter, composer, and multi-instrumentalist. They gained worldwide popularity as a foremost Nigerian family. The family has put the country on the world map, being as popular for their musical heritage, as they are for their political activism.  Fela’s musical genius was never in doubt, and even in death, eighteen years on; his great body of work is still being studied, enjoyed, and reworked, finding a presence in every corner of the globe. An off Broadway production of Fela Anikulapo- Kuti’s life titled Fela, and a full length documentary titled Finding Fela have even been produced.

    A cursory look at his family tree reveals that Fela was not an accident, in his case the apple did not fall far from the proverbial tree. This son and grandson of Anglican priests (popularly known as the musical priests) simply carried on the family tradition. The story begins with the Reverend Canon Josiah Jesse Ransome-Kuti; an Anglican priest responsible for composing many of the hymns sung in the Anglican Church, both within and outside Nigeria. He recorded a series of songs in the Yoruba tongue for the Zonophone record label in London. JJ it was who took the name Ransome, in honour of the missionary who converted him.

    Next comes the Reverend Israel Oludotun Ransome-Kuti, a priest like his father, he was an educationist who went to become the Principal of Abeokuta Grammar School, and also president of the Nigerian Union of Teachers. His wife Funmilayo was an activist, and women’s rights campaigner, who received the Lenin peace prize in 1970. Mrs. Funmilayo Kuti’s marriage into the family brought political activism into the Kuti family. The couple had four children; Olikoye, Bekolari, Fela, and Dolupo. Olikoye; a renowned doctor, and Professor was at various times Minister of Health, and Deputy Director-General  of the World Health Organisation, Beko also became a doctor, and was Secretary-General of the Nigerian Medical Association,

    As was usual with the offspring of the upper middle class Nigerian families of his day, Fela was a young colonial Nigerian male music graduate of an English university, playing a fusion of Jazz and highlife music charting a course for himself. In 1969, he went to Los Angeles on tour with his band, and met Sandra Smith, now Izsadore. Smith belonged to the Black Panther Party and the Nation of Islam, and was overjoyed to meet Fela as she hoped to learn more about African history from him. To her surprise and dismay, she discovered that he knew next to nothing about the history of Africa, thereafter she took him under her wing and opened his eyes to the vista of African consciousness, and the black power movement. They became lovers, and by the time Fela returned to Nigeria nine months later, his psyche, and music had changed. He left Nigeria a colonial relic, but returned a proud black man.

    As radical as he was talented, Fela discarded the family name Ransome, saying it was a “Slave name”, taking on Anikulapo, which means “He who has death in his pocket”. He also turned his back on the Anglican, nay Christian faith of his fore bearers, preferring to return to his African roots. For the rest of his life, Fela would practice the African traditional religion. He entered the Guinness book of records for wedding twenty seven women in one day. The wedding was blessed by the chief ifa priest of Lagos. Fela was often vilified for licentiousness, but as his son, Seun puts it, “Fela was just a very open person, and lived his life as he wished. Many men were guilty of the things he did, they only tried to hide theirs. Many men have children showing up after they are dead and gone. Quite a number of people from all works of life smoke Marijuana, but prefer to hide it.”

    Continuing the family tradition, albeit in his own way; Fela trained his eldest son in the age old way of the apprentice learning at the feet of the master. Residents of the John Olugbo axis of Ikeja, Lagos in the early eighties remember a father teaching his young son to play the keyboard; he would play a note, and ask the lad to do the same. It was no joke, only the already famous Fela taking the time to teach his heir the rudiments of the family business; unknowingly preparing him for the international stage and stardom. Although his father had a degree in music, Femi’s success and subsequent superstardom without a music degree are testimony to the genius of the afrobeat icon. Speaking to the Nation Femi said, “When my first international hit album broke, Fela asked me, ‘ Do you now see what I have been trying to teach you all these years? You can now feed yourself through music’. And I agreed.”

    Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti was the matriarch of the clan, and was a great source of inspiration to her large brood. Her granddaughter; Yeni Kuti vividly captures this when she said, “My grandmother is my role model. She inspired me a lot. She once teased Femi about his laziness in rehearsing his saxophone, wondering how he could succeed as a musician without rigorously rehearsing. Femi never missed daily rehearsal ever since.” Fela was  a very hardworking musician as visitors to the shrine can testify. During his lifetime, Fela was known to play his saxophone into the wee hours of the morning; meticulously blowing his sax day in day in day out, year in year out. This acerbic tongued Egba woman was also known to be self-sacrificing as she was part of the group that campaigned for the abolition of women paying tax at the time. Why? Women were already overstretched, supporting their husbands in taking care of their families. As the wife of a middle class reverend gentleman, and educationist, she was financially comfortable enough to have buried her head in the sand, but chose to fight on the side of the oppressed.

    A chip off the old block, Fela’s music was often critical of the different corrupt, and profligate Nigerian regimes; whether military or civilian. He churned out hit after hit; songs as aesthetically pleasing, entertaining, and thought provoking as they were full of acidic wit. Songs like Unknown Soldier, Soldier go soldier come, and Zombie ruled the airwaves during the military era, oftentimes causing him to be brutally beaten, his house and properties burned, in addition to being thrown behind bars. He quickly got used to going to prison. As his daughter Yeni puts it, “It was a challenging time for us because when we left home for school in the morning, we did not know if we would meet him on our return, or even when next we would see him”.

    Dede Mabiaku paints a more graphic picture of the ire Fela’s songs drew from previous governments when he said, “How many people even know that the last time Kalakuta was burned that they beat the merciless bombastic element out of everyone there, to the extent that his mother was thrown out of the window, that is true, to the extent that they even tore somebody’s stomach open, and he held his guts in with his hands. Nobody told you about that, they wanted to jab Fela with a bayonet, and somebody flung one of the boys on top of him, so the bayonet pierced the guy’s stomach, and his guts came out. Let me paint a picture for you, they held his guts in hands to the hospital (the guy is still alive today). But that was not the issue, they stripped Fela naked, flogged him silly, broke his leg. He was bleeding all over profusely from being caned with whips, down to his privy . . . .”

    Surprisingly, with their political activism, and patriotism one would have thought that one or the other member of the family would vie for political office. But as Yeni puts it, “As long as the political terrain of Nigeria remains as it currently is, I can never play politics.”She goes on to say, “I would never want to do anything to disgrace the name of my family.”

    A down to earth and humble lot, they made friends with people from different strata of the social divide. Charles Oputa, a much younger artist to Fela has this to say about Fela, “When my friend; Tina Onwudiwe graciously paid two years rent for an apartment in the Gbagada area of Lagos for me, in a bid to encourage my movement to Lagos from Oguta, I was overjoyed.” Can you guess the superstar who visited him the day of his housewarming party? Yes, Fela. Charlie Boy continues, “When he showed up at my apartment that day. I was so shocked, because I usually visited him at the shrine, Fela was not known to visit musicians, and I felt honored to be the only one he visited.” That was not all, Oputa quipped, “Fela stayed the whole day, chatting and goofing around. I finally had to tell him, ‘Fela, a beg I wan sleep’ before he left late that night.”

    Are the Kuti’s a lucky family, or is there something in their gene pool responsible for their success? What character traits stood them in good stead to continually conquer whatever stage they found themselves? What reasons can be adduced for their success? As Seun Kuti puts it, “Our direct fore bearers were so accomplished that we have to work hard to live up to their standards.” Speaking about the man Fela, Dede Mabiaku; his protégé has this to say about his late mentor, “He was a perfectionist.  He was one who believed that if something had to be done, it had to be done the right way. Fela scored his songs by himself, he scored notes for everyone and the instruments; for the guitar, the drums, the horns, the tenor, the alto sax, and gave everybody. So you had to rehearse it to his dictates”.

    Tracing directly from JJ Ransome Kuti, to Reverend Oludotun Ransome- Kuti and beyond, the musical line directly continues through the late Fela, to his sons Femi, and Seun who have continued the family tradition on the world stage; the former with his Positive Force Band, and the latter as the helmsman of Fela’s band. Femi’s son; Made is the fifth generation of the musical family, and is presently in the UK studying music at his grandfather’s alma mater.

    Like him or hate him, Fela was not a man you could ignore. When he died of an AIDS related complaint in 1997, Lagos state stood still to say goodbye to the man who bestrode the Nigerian musical, and sociopolitical terrain like a colossus. More than a million people comprising fans, friends, well-wishers, and even critics turned up for his funeral at the old shrine premises; Nigeria had never seen anything like it, and probably never will.

  • Winners emerge in Spirit of Lagos song contest

    Winners emerge in Spirit of Lagos song contest

    The civic and cultural advocacy initiative, Spirit of Lagos, has closed curtains on its first project, a theme song contest which produced three winners, adjudged to have captured the essence of Lagos, the commercial hub and most populous city in Nigeria.

    Tagged Spirit of Lagos Theme Song, the contest which was flagged off on August 29, with over 238 entries, saw Amadin Samuel Ihegie, winning the coveted prize of N500, 000, having polled a total of 2,782 votes to defeat other finalists.

    Amadin, who was formally presented to the public at the Freedom Park, Lagos on Tuesday, will, according to the organisers, have his song reproduced professionally and adopted as Spirit of Lagos theme song.

    The panel of judges, which include seasoned professionals, was headed by Pa Benson Idonijie, first manager to late Afrobeat legend, Fela Anikulapo-Kuti.

    Coming next to Amadin in the competition, was Miss Temitope Susan Fajemilehin, who polled 783 votes and got N200, 000 for her effort, while Michael Uzoma, the second runner-up with 218 votes, was also rewarded with N100, 000.

    Speaking at the event, Mr. Olaniyi Omotoso, the Project Director, Spirit of Lagos, expressed appreciation to the contestants for their professional conducts while the competition lasted. He added that the essence of the contest was to preserve the positive ideals which Lagos is known for.

    According to Omotoso, the project is expected to change the mindset of Lagosians towards their environment, public infrastructure and neighbours, among other virtues.

    He said the theme song contest is just one in a series of other projects of behavioral transformation that will be unveiled in the coming months, noting that the public advocacy project is an engagement platform that aptly describes the four cardinal points of the Spirit of Lagos campaign.

  • Felabration: Organisers satisfied with Don Carlos

    Felabration: Organisers satisfied with Don Carlos

    FOR the members of the Felabration Organising Committee, the presence of the Jamaican reggae singer and composer, Don Carlos, at the recently held Felabration, which ended on Sunday, will be treasured for a long time.

    No wonder, the organisers have expressed satisfaction at the performance of the headline act at the annual event celebrating the memories of the late maverick singer, Fela Anikulapo-Kuti.

    A member of the Committee, who simply gave her name asTosin, said: “On the whole, I would say it was a success, although there is more to be done. Though we can still do more, we did our best to ensure that it was a success. When you bring somebody, you have to be satisfied. Don Carlos pretty much represented what we are trying to achieve as a celebration and as an international brand. Over everything, he did very well.”

    A festival of music of different genres, this year’s edition of Felabration also witnessed performances from the likes of Weird MC, Omo Baba, Wale, Olamide, Saeon, Duke Amayo, MC Bash and a host of others.

  • ‘Nigerians must embark on self-discovery’

    ‘Nigerians must embark on self-discovery’

    Nigerians have been urged to discover themselves, if they are to succeed in addressing the nation’s problems.

    This was the view of the panel of discussants at the sixth series of the Fela Debates in Lagos yesterday, as part of the annual week-long Felebration.

    Felebration celebrates the life and time of Afrobeat legend Fela Anikulapo-Kuti.

    The panel concluded that the culture of impunity, social inequality and injustice, which characterise the society today, had their roots in colonialism and neo-colonialism.

    Former Education Minister Dr. Obiageli Ezekwesili said what was required to realise Nigeria’s potential was to provide equal opportunities and the development of the country’s human capital.

    The example of the United States of America, she said, had shown that the diversity was not the problem.

    “It used to be said that small is beautiful, but evidence suggests that big is better, when it comes to nations,” she said.

    Dr. Ezekwesili, who moderated the discussion, said unemployment, poverty, social inequality and injustice, affect everyone, irrespective of ethnicity.

    This year’s debate, with the theme: “The Amalgamation of the Peoples of the Niger Area”, featured two speakers- Prof Sophie Oluwole, a retired professor of African Philosophy and Emeka Keazor, a lawyer and historian.

    The third speaker, Mallam Nasir el-Rufai, could not attend.

    Prof. Oluwole, 78, said the progression of Third World countries to First World was rooted in culture and tradition.

    She added that it was best to educate a child in the mother tongue so that the child can identify with his or her immediate environment.

    She said: “Our educational system produces literate but ignorant people; people who do not know where they are coming from and where they are going. If you make me the minister of Education today, I will change the syllabus.”

    Keazor, who is the consultant-historian to the official Federal Government documentary on the amalgamation, “We are Nigerians”, said the disconnect caused by colonialism was partly responsible for the nation’s problems.

    He said those who took over from the British in 1960 were products of ‘mis-education’ of the colonialists and they were not able to embark on a re-orientation.

    Keazor said it was better to work on children, rather than adults who are already products of ‘mis-education’ of the white man.

    His words: “I’ve stopped working with our generation; we are lost. I now work with children.”

     

     

     

  • Why I can’t be faithful to one woman-Femi Kuti

    Why I can’t be faithful to one woman-Femi Kuti

    Femi Kuti, a Nigerian musician and son of the late Afrobeat legend, Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, has revealed that he planned to marry more than one wife, while growing up.

    The Grammy-award nominee, in a recent interview with E 24/7, a weekly entertainment magazine, was quoted as saying that his early exposure to polygamy also made it impossible for him to be faithful to one woman.

    ”I grew up in a polygamous home, wanting to be like my father. I wanted to have many women. That is my training, and I cannot tell you if it’s right or wrong. Because of the way I was brought up, I know that there’s no way I can be faithful. I love my independence because I was brought up in the real house of Kalakuta, where there were many women around,” he said.

    When asked if he would encourage his children to be polygamists, the leader of the Positive Force band, said he would never dictate to them how they should live their lives.  “They must have the liberty to choose for themselves. This is because if they fail or succeed, they have to realise that it’s their lives. However, Made, my son, believes in monogamy. He has a girlfriend whom he has been dating for so many years and they want to even get married in a church. I won’t tell him not to follow just one woman. I can only pray and support him. Even if he breaks up with the girl, he might still believe in monogamy and find another person,” he added.

     

  • ‘As an Eyo  leader, I can  recite the ofo (incantations)  fluently’

    ‘As an Eyo leader, I can recite the ofo (incantations) fluently’

    Chief Rasheed Gbadamosi ranks among the luckiest in his generation. He became a commissioner in Lagos State at a young age of 27, and followed it up with the position of Minister of National Planning and Chairman, Petroleum Product Pricing and Regulatory Agency (PPRRA). In this interview with GBENGA ADERANTI and SEGUN AJIBOYE, the scion of a successful industrialist talks about his life, relationship with Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, career and his unparalleled passion for the arts, among other issues. Excerpts:

    You wanted to be a medical doctor but ended up an economist. What happened?

    In my time, you were either a doctor or a lawyer. You are talking about the 50s, when even your parents’ daily prayers for you were that ‘you’ll become a doctor or lawyer’. So, they were the in-thing in those days, and I am sure that there must be something to it. But thankfully, my biology was lousy. If I saw blood, I would scream and almost run mad. So in that respect, I was a non-starter. Secondly, my father was a successful businessman and member of the House of Assembly, self-tutored. My sister, Mrs. Folami, was the attorney-general of Lagos State.

    So your father was a member of the House of Assembly?

    Yes. Alhaji S.A. Gbadamosi, he was the treasurer of the Action Group. He was also a national executive member of the Action Group, and one of the founders of the group.

    How much of these would you say reflected on you?

    I went with him to campaigns. Akintola lived in our house. Many other top politicians of those days lived in our house. And they were part of my growing up process. Their children were my friends. So we all mingled, and my mother used to joke that ‘you young man, you’re going to be a politician’. She said this because I always read newspapers and I was very close to my father.

    Your mother thought you were going to be a politician. Was she right at the end of the day?

    The fact that I participated in public issues moved me near enough. All the appointments then came. I was public-spirited.

    Let us go back to the question of what you wanted to study. What we gathered was that as a successful businessman, your father wanted you take over the family business.

    That is absolutely true. I remember what transpired between us that day. We were approaching our school certificate examination period, and dad and I stood on the balcony, and he said ‘Young man, you’ll soon be done with your school certificate. What do you think you want to do?’ That was the first time we would be having such a discussion. I said I wanted to read medicine, but that my biology was not the best. And he just laughed and said something like ‘children of these days, you would go and read economics.’ As at that time, I had not heard about economics. So as soon as we completed the school certificate, I hopped on the plane and off to overseas.

    Was it the allure of overseas that made you agree to go abroad to study economics?

    I think it was assumed. But even before then, all the people that my father has had a hand in training had schooled abroad. And when the likes of SLA and HOD came back and stayed in our house, that made our house a spectacle.

    You were a commissioner in Lagos State at the age of 27. Don’t you think your generation was very lucky?

    If that is your interpretation, I think I accept it in good faith. It was a conference of circumstances. First, I had a background. And secondly, I had this profile, I was writing a great deal in the newspapers, especially the Sunday Times of those days. Sam Amuka, Gbolabo Ogunsanwo and others all knew me. I always contributed to the papers. I was writing a lot of analysis. I would analyse the budget and make deep comments, which I think must have come to the notice of the powers that be.

    Any regret not studying medicine?

    There couldn’t have been any regret. I soon fell in love with the science of economics and the allure of public discourse. Public affairs became a wonderful fascination. As a matter of fact, as soon as I entered the university, I was immersed in world affairs a great deal. I belonged to several organisations involved with world decolonisation. And the University of Manchester was a hotbed for world politics at the time. And when MPs came to give lectures at the university, we would bombard them with questions. Issues like the apartheid, Vietnam and the Eastern block captured our imaginations.

    While growing up, you were surrounded by great people like your dad, Awolowo, HOD Davies and others like them. How much of these imparted into you to form the kind of person you are today?

    Let me exemplify that by taking on one of the trials of the Action Group crisis. A lot of youngsters were affected by the socialist orientation. But my father would not want to hear it. He was a businessman, running his business successfully, running his factories and making his money. Whereas Chief Awolowo was rubbing minds with the left-wing people like Sam Ikoku and all the radicals of left-wing persuasion.

    Which side do I belong? Ideologically, I had my sympathy with these people, but my father was still my father, and my heart was with him. But in terms of the global dimension, I was a socialist. By the time I came back, Kanmi Ishola Osobu, Fela Anikulapo-Kuti and others had become my great friends. At the beginning, my father thought it would soon wear off and that I would come to his side to join him in the business, which I did. So the transition from a rabid left wing youngster to daddy’s assistant in the office, helping him to run the factory…

    (Cuts in) Most people in your age bracket are either members of Afenifere or other socio-cultural groups. You don’t seem to belong to any group. Do you have any particular reason for this?

    It is wonderful that you raised this. Erstwhile leader of Afenifere, Baba Abraham Adesanya, in-between seriousness and humouring, wondered why I would not join Afenifere and be part of what he thought my father would have been, the Yoruba persuasion of Afenifere. But I could not see myself in sectional politics like that. Looking at the national picture, I could not fathom a bifurcated political alliance like that. I mean if I were going to talk or reason about anything at all, it would be about Nigeria, Africa and world politics.

    But you’ll agree that Afenifere is not a political organisation.

    It is a cultural organisation, but tending towards politics.

    Is there any possibility you might still join?

    That is too late now.

    You are a businessman, a playwright and one with deep passion for the arts. When do you get all the energy to do all these from?

    Even me, I have always wondered where it comes from. Let me tell you a story of what happened to me recently. A childhood of mine dragged me and my wife to a shindig. It was the first time in a very long while that I would be up till about 2am, dancing and eating. The following day, I found myself sleeping all the day because I couldn’t cope with the deprivation of sleep. And so I said to myself, is this what I would be doing if I were a politician? But let me say something here, the assignments I had for the country, as a commissioner in Lagos State, and more importantly, as a federal minister, were gripping and of high concentration. But thank God, it was for a short period, but which was very tasking. Abdusalami did not appoint an oil minister, so some of those responsibilities were taken up by me. Within the period, I had a neck pain which didn’t leave me for about six months because you would just wake up and be asked to proceed to Geneva or to proceed to New York. You didn’t know how many hours you spend flying all over the world. It was so tasking, and I really didn’t know that I was made of that stuff.

    This was a period when the country was trying to democratise.

    Exactly, we were democratising, and it was taking a lot of tolls in terms of what we did and how we did it. And Abdusalami was absolutely insisting on quitting along with his team. It was a fine legacy, and I am very proud of that.

    Your period at the PPRA, how did you get the appointment?

    I was sitting down, minding my own business when President Olusegun Obasanjo sent somebody to me to say they wanted me to come and help.

    But you accepted to serve once again.

    Yes, of course. I will not really turn down an offer to serve my nation. It is a national assignment. Although it wasn’t a full-time job, but it turned out to be very tough, locking horns with Adams Oshiomhole and his men. We had to endure six strikes led by Oshiomhole.

    So Adams Oshiomhole gave you people tough time?

    Of course, he did (laughter).

    Do you have any particular regret about that period?

    There is none at all. I was doing what I thought I had to do in terms of policy choices. Being an economist, you would be confronted all the times by choices.

    Looking back, what would you love to have done differently, starting from when you were a commissioner, a federal minister and in the PPRA?

    It was a progression in terms of accumulation of knowledge, service to humanity and trying to make the country better.

    You were with Obasanjo and Abdusalami. Many people have said so many things about these two, including the good, the bad and the ugly.

    (Cuts in) I don’t know about that (laughter).

    Kindly give us a little insight into these two men.

    I think their military background makes them rather stern and decisive. I found out that whatever I presented to them, say ‘sir, how would you advise me on this?’, I found them exceptionally exemplary, if you like. In terms of policy choices, they were both discerning. And I picked up a lot of lessons from their capacity to take decisions. I went through some tutelage in statesmanship.

    Could this be as a result of the respect they have for you?

    On the contrary, the respect I have for them.

    Let’s look at your passion for the arts. At what point did you fall in love with arts?

    For me, art is an alternative definition for beauty of life. You look at mother art and all the things that are attributed to us to have pleasure, and you could get yourself involved in it or you could be a bystander. Most of us are bystanders. There are those of us who immerse ourselves in it than others. So, that has been my own choice.

    I loved literature in my secondary school days. I was taught by my seniors whom my white teachers thought I should emulate to hone my skill in literary expression. And I decided to take an interest in whatever was going on around me. Alongside reading for economics and reading the literature of dissent and politics of agitation, I found myself reading about protest literature. Those are the expressions of my generation. And that transmitted into literature of drama and literary readings of literature of protest and appealing to the young minds. By the time you find yourself immersed in all that, you find yourself adoring creative efforts, adoring what people are drawing and what people are composing, like in the case of Fela; and Fela and I became great friends. There is something I found fascinating about him, the ability to translate songs into protest songs. When you compose songs and talk about life’s absurdities. You know, 24 hours in a man’s life cannot just be taken up by sitting down reading, eating. You have to be engaged in what goes on around you. In French literature, there is a play, which translates into ordinary English that you must always be engaged in what goes on in the society. You cannot just sit down and wish that something happens. Get up and do something, go on the streets and protest and share views with your countrymen. And so, Kanmi Ishola-Osobu, Fela Anikulapo Kuti and others, together we formed an association. I was the secretary.

    All these people that you mentioned are known radicals. What about you?

    Of course, we are all radicals, nobody will deny this.

    But unlike them, you didn’t get into any trouble with the government.

    I spent two weeks in Kirikiri prison.

    What offence did you commit?

    I wrote a play.

    What play was this?

    It was called Trees grow in the desert.

    Was it a protest play?

    It had elements of dissent in it, and Gowon said they should come for me because it was playing on radio. He listened to it on a Sunday afternoon, and said ‘go and get that guy, whoever wrote it’. So I was arrested and put in Kirikiri. My father was worried and sent people to ask Jakande why his son was sent to Kirikiri prison. In the end, they saw that I was harmless. But till tomorrow, Gowon would see me and laugh and joke about it. He would say ‘Eh, my prisoner, how are you today?’.

    Can you give us a conservative figure that you have spent on arts?

    I cannot put a figure to it.

    Would it be millions, billions or more?

    Definitely it cannot be billions. Where would I get that from?

    Okay then, how much would you say that you have spent to purchase a single arts collection?

    I have paid something in the range of N6 million or N8 million for a collection.

    You knew Fela intimately. What is it that you knew about him that the world didn’t know?

    Hardly anything. His life was public knowledge. The most moving fallout from my relationship with him was attending to him at his death bed in his house. And Dede Mabiaku, who was one of his disciples, came looking for us when he was very, very ill and at the point of dying. And I looked for Wole Burknor, who was our chairman, to inform him that one of us was dying. So we trooped to his house in Kalakuta Republic, and proceeded to take him to the hospital.

    Up and till that time, Fela was still very rascally, refusing to go to any hospital. But at that last minute, he finally submitted himself and we drove him to the farthest hospital so that the prying eyes of journalists would not know where he was. So we took him to a hospital in Lagos Island. But it was too late, and few days later, he was gone.

    Looking at him in those last moments, what went on through your mind?

    It was sorrowful. Resonance of his songs and compositions came flooding through my mind. The world should not have lost such a person.

    Are you blaming the world for his death?

    The society in general, I mean all the beatings that he got, they must have no doubt taken a toll on him.

    Do you still listen to his music?

    Of course, I still listen to his music. I am one of his greatest fans.

    What is your attitude to religion?

    My father brought me into this world as a Muslim. And I took my Rasheed as a name, and I try to live by Islamic tenets, though I cannot claim to be the most religious. I respect the religion like I would respect any other religion. I even went to a Methodist primary school, and I got a distinction in Christian Religious Study.

    What is your attitude to traditional religion?

    There is a lot of philosophy in it. I have just rediscovered my D.O. Fagunwa novels, and you know you can get a lot of philosophical ideas in them. I am the Chairman of Eyo Agere in Lagos; I inherited that title. There is nothing fetish about it. It is a cultural and entertainment thing, especially where you need to learn all the sayings and ofo (incantations).

    So you can conveniently recite the ofo?

    Sure, I have to know them in order to lead my flock (general laughter).