Tag: Fela

  • Ogun to  immortalise Fela, Ogunde others

    Ogun to immortalise Fela, Ogunde others

    If the quality of guests and the colourful atmosphere at the June 12 Cultural Centre, Kuto, Abeokuta, Ogun State capital, were a measure of the success of the recent presentation of Abeokuta…Beyond the rocks, the organisers of the event may have realised one of their objectives.

    The guests included Ogun State Governor Ibikunle Amosun, Oba Michael Gbadebo Adedotun, Alake of Egbaland; Senator Daisy Danjuma, Omooba Yemisi Shyllon, Oloye Lekan Alabi, Mrs Bolanle Austin-Peters, Tunde Kelani, Segun Odegbami, Air Vice-Marshal Okanlawon (rtd).

    Governor Amosun, who pledged to buy many copies of the books for distribution, reiterated his administration’s determination to immortalise the illustrious sons and daughters of Ogun State who have contributed immensely to the growth of the state.

    He disclosed that there were plans by the state to create memorials for legends, such as the late Fela Anikulapo Kuti and the doyen of theatre, the late Hubert Ogunde. “As for development, we have not scratched the surface because there is a lot to be done. We will buy the books and send to all our embassies, schools and libraries. We will like to have memorial for the late Fela who is a music legend. Also, the late Ogunde will be remembered too. We will look at all of these in order to add value to the state heritage. Nothing else excites me now than to develop Ogun State. Let’s put our heads together for the overall development of the state,” he said.

    He recalled that he wanted to launch the book earlier to distribute to relevant bodies in the state, but changed his mind.

    “I realised that it would make greater impact and more symbolic to distribute the book when the state will turn 40 in February. The book is not for us alone but for the Diaspora and younger generations of Egba.

    Governor Amosun, who commended the author of the book, Hakeem Adenekan, said the state occupies a prime place in the country and the world, noting that before the advent of Nigeria as a country, the Egba had been accessing loans from international bodies.

    According to the governor, there are new things in the book he never knew, saying there is more to Abeokuta than Olumo rock, which the author has proved in the book. “Let us tell our story. We want to see more of this,” he added.

    Oba Adedotun said there are many books on Abeokuta by many authors, but that the latest by Adenekan captures the scenic views of the ancient city known for its rusty roofing sheets and rocky hills of Olumo. He hoped that there would be more books on Abeokuta, a community that has moved from a small town 185 years ago to a city.

    Chief launcher Omooba Shyllon drew the attention of the state to tourists’ sites, such as Oyan dam and Olumo rock, saying they are capable of generating revenue for the state. “With all the firsts in Abeokuta, we can attract tourists to the city thereby generating revenue,” he said.

    Senator Danjuma described Abeokuta…Beyond the rocks as one of the best coffee table books that will be valuable to tourists and researchers to Abeokuta. “Hakeem has written a book that will preserve the heritage of Egba,” she said.

    Reviewer of the book, Jahman Anikulapo lamented that Nigerians have not done enough to document and preserve their heritage, saying no one book can capture all about the local councils in the state. He, therefore, called for the involvement of writers in the local council areas in the documentation of the state heritage.

    Adenekan described his book, which took him five and half years to complete, as one way to put Abeokuta on the world map. He regretted that Nigeria doesn’t have quality record, commending the Alake of Egba for his support.

  • Beyonce a fan of Fela Kuti?

    Beyonce a fan of Fela Kuti?

    Whoever knew that Beyonce is a fan of the late Fela Anikulapo Kuti? The-Dream, Beyonce’s song writer, revealed that he recorded an entire, unreleased album with Beyonce prior to 2011 LP 4. According to the producer behind hits “Single Ladies (Put A Ring On It)” and “Run The World (Girls),” the project was inspired by Nigerian Afrobeat pioneer Fela Kuti.

    “We did a whole Fela album that didn’t go up,” Terius Nash (his real name) wrote in a lengthy annotation to the lyrics of “End Of Time.” “It was right before we did 4. We did a whole different sounding thing, about twenty songs,” he continued. “Beyonce said she wanted to do something that sounds like Fela. That’s why there’s so much of that sound in the ‘End of Time’.”

    “There’s always multiple albums being made,” The-Dream wrote. “Most of the time we’re just being creative, period. We’re talking about B, somebody who sings all day long and somebody who writes all day long. There’s probably a hundred records just sitting around.”

     

  • ‘Fela would not have been cool with Jonathan’

    ‘Fela would not have been cool with Jonathan’

    Nigerian-born anthropologist and soulful singer Nneka Lucia Egbuna, who has just released her new album, My Fairy Tales, talks about music, memories and the prevailing situation in Nigeria with Teo Kermeliotis (CNN).

    rapped up in a long brightly-coloured scarf, which does little to contain her free-flowing curly hair, Nneka sits back quietly as she tries to bring to mind her very first memory of music. “I was a kid,” the Nigerian singer finally says, her thoughts traveling back to Warri, the Niger Delta city where she grew up. “While I was doing my domestic work in the house, sweeping, waking up at 5am in the morning, there was this bird (singing) — and I never forgot the melody,” she continues, breaking a warm smile. “Funny wise, like 25 years later I was in Lagos and I heard the same melody — it was amazing!”

    Nneka’s first musical recollection might be firmly rooted in her birthplace, but the award-winning singer’s career was destined to begin thousands of miles away from home — the daughter of a Nigerian father and a German mother, Nneka moved to Hamburg at the of 19 to study anthropology. Whilst attending university, she also started exploring her musical talents, and soon found herself performing in various clubs opening up for top reggae and hip-hop names.

    In 2005, she released Victim of Truth, a much-lauded debut that fused soulful beats, tasty hip-hop-and reflective ballads with politically-charged lyrics and black consciousness. Since then, she went on to enjoy further chart success, tour extensively and collaborate with global stars like Lenny Kravitz and Damian Marley.

    And now, the soulful singer is back with a brand new, self-released album — My Fairy Tales is a formidable collection of rich afrobeat grooves, reggae-tinged beats and uplifting rhythms that reaffirm her place as one of the continent’s most exciting — and relevant — artists.

    CNN’sAfrican Voices caught up with Nneka in London to talk about music, memories and the current situation in Nigeria.

    In the past, you’ve dealt with issues ranging from the environment and politics, to religion and love — what are the themes that you’re emphasizing at this moment?

    What is happening in Africa at present concerns me a lot. Boko Haram has always been an issue obviously for the past five, six years — funny wise, there’s a track in the album called “Pray For You” which I recorded when not too many people knew what was going with Boko Haram in the West.

    I’m talking about the problems and possible solutions, and what are the reasons for the problems that we have. We as Nigerians, we’re not united, that has always been the issue… that’s our problem, tribalism, and what belongs to whom.

    I also talk about children and the future, bringing children into this world… Everyone’s living in a cage and then you bring your child into that kind of society, where your child is forced to live in fear.

    People are afraid to express themselves politically, and even in their home — I remember the way we grew up, I didn’t look my father in the eye until I was 22; you call your father “Sir, Sir, Sir” — apparently it’s a form of respect, OK, but respect should not be mistaken with fear. I was afraid and that’s the thing, that’s the colonial mentality: we mistake fear for respect.

     

    Nneka on the postponement of Nigerian elections

    He (Goodluck Jonathan) says he wants to tackle Boko Haram, obviously every Nigerian is asking why now, he could had done it a long time ago…but I’m not good at the whole blaming game, I don’t want to blame anybody but I pray that he comes up with a good idea for us if he is an honest and genuine guy. But I know that Fela Kuti would definitely not be cool with him, Seun Kuti is not cool with him, and many other musicians who are very outspoken are not cool with him.

     

    What is the power of music and how can it influence things to bring positive change?

    Music is very powerful, music is big; music is even more powerful than politics at present. Beyonce would definitely draw more crowd than [Nigerian president] Goodluck Jonathan if she was going to hold a speech — if Beyonce is going to talk about Boko Haram, many people are going to listen, and if she had something to tell Nigerians about love or whatever, many people are going to listen.

     

    How do you see the political and security situation now in Nigeria?

    All I can say is that we do need proper leadership. Yes, that’s just easier said than done, but we also need ourselves to take more things into our own hands — so if we want change, we have to show that we want change, peacefully — I love Malcolm X but I’d rather go for Martin Luther King — peacefully. And be part of it, not just blame our leaders and making sure that you, yourself, contribute to the change that you want to see.

     

  • All rise for Fela

    All rise for Fela

    When some hundreds of admirers of the late Afrobeat legend, Fela Anikulapo-Kuti and fans of Afrobeat music trooped out last Saturday morning for a road carnival at Ikeja, Lagos,many thought it was a protest march. The crowd of dancers and singers took off from the New Afrika Shrine at NERDC Road, Central Business District, Ikeja through Alausa, seat of Lagos State government, to Ojota, Maryland, Ikeja and Gbemisola, home of the maverick musician and New Afrika Shrine. The carnival that was to kick off by 7am did not flag off until 3pm lasted about three hours. It was part of this year’s Felabration– a parade of African culture at its best. A pageant of sorts, the carnival sets its trail alight with fancy colours, beautifully decorated cultural costumes, acrobatics and lovely choreographers.

    As the carnival train traversed the city, residents of Lagos were reminded of the memorable long walk -from Tafawa Balewa Square, Lagos Island to Gbemisola in Ikeja -that trailed the burial of the late musician in August 1997.

    The week-long celebration of cultural icon and Afrobeat maestro, FelaAnikulapoKuti and his enduring legacy as the annual Felabration took had stared penultimate Sunday with screening of a documentary, Finding Fela, at the New Afrika Shrine, Ikeja. Expectedly, the annual celebration of the life and times of Fela, over the years has attracted high class musical acts from all over the world as well as from the local scene.

    A festival of different genres of music, witnessed performances from artistes such as Oritsefemi, Wizkid, Tuface Idibia, Weird MC, Omo Baba, Wale, Olamide, Saeon, Duke Amayo, MC Bash and a host of others. These musicians kept the New Afrika Shrine alive with musical performances at different nights all through the week. However, the icing on the cake was the appearance of Jamaican reggae singer and songwriter, Don Carlos.

    Currently showing in major cinemas across the country, Finding Fela is a documentary about the artiste’s life, music, social and political relevance. It portrays his journey into creating the Afrobeat genreof music which has transformed into a movement and using that forum to express his revolutionary political opinions against the dictatorial Nigerian government of the 1970s and 1980s.

    On Monday, October 13, organisers held a symposium which dwelt on the unification of the people of Nigeria, a topic of the dear to the late Fela as evidenced in the themes of most of his songs. Tagged The Amalgamation of the People of the Niger Area, the symposium, held at NECA House Auditorium, Alausa, Ikeja which had Dr. Obiageli Ezekwesili as keynote speaker. The discourse which was described as timely owing the centenary celebration and the challenges the country is currently facing also featured Prof Sophie Oluwole and Edward Emeka Keazor.It also had in attendance, individuals from the political, cultural and social circles.

    As has become a culture, the effervescent followership the music icon built during his life time gathered for one week every year to celebrate their icon. This is further heightened with the concert which took place every night for the whole of the week.

    Highpoint of the week was the carnival held on Saturday. A display of culture and tradition, the culture brought memories of Fela to the residents of Ikeja and its environs.

    Felabration is our annual festival of music and arts commemorating the life and times of Nigerian’s foremost musical icon, the late great Fela Anikulakpo-Kuti. As a music brand, it’s revered and highly influential.As the creator of Afrobeat, social critic, political activist and champion of the underprivileged as well as a philosopher of his own political ideologue, Fela is still today a hero to millions for his contributions to society. The entire essence of Felabrationis to create a lasting legacy for Fela and all his struggles,” Essien stated.

    He added that Fela, in his essence, should be better celebrated than he already is in our national annals. “Gradually we are getting there. A few years back, Fela was not as celebrated as he is today but the case is different now. People now come from all over the world to celebrate him. There is even a documentary in his honour currently showing in the cinema. Perhaps soon, he will have a national holiday to his name,” according to Essien.

    Born October 15 1938, FelaKuti was a Nigerian multi-instrumentalist, musician, composer, pioneer of the Afrobeat music genre, human rights activist, and political commentator. On 3 August 1997, his brother and former Minister of Health, Olikoye Ransome-Kuti, stunned the nation by announcing his death a day earlier from Kaposi’s sarcoma which was brought on by AIDS.

    More than a million people attended Fela’s funeral at the site of the old Shrine compound. After his death, a new Africa Shrine was opened in a different section of Lagos under the supervision of his son Femi Kuti.

    Every year Felabration features exciting line ups of artistes designed to whet the appetite of music lovers. The Felabration Week always runs through the week of October that includes the 15th ensuring that Fela’s posthumous birthday celebrations are part of the Festival, organisers reveal.

    At the National Museum, Onikan Lagos, Leo Entertainment in collaboration with the National Museum, held an art exhibition and music concert between October 12 and 13. The exhibition featured portraits of the Abami Eda, which were collected from different artists who loved Fela. It was part of the celebration of the life of the late Fela Anikulapo Kuti. The musical concert and art exhibition was tagged The Fela You Don’t Know.

    Looking at the art and listening to the music reminded the people who knew Fela and also show who does not know Fela, the type of person who Fela was while on earth.

    According to the organizers, the event was to combine visual art with musical concert to show and tell different stories about the life of the legend as a talented musician.

    The late Afrobeat legend who was a justice fighter using his music was seen as a political threat to the government when he was alive. He spoke more on how to govern the community and was able to impact people’s ideology and belief through his songs.

    The late Olufela Oludotun Ransom Kuti was born 15 October, 1938 in Abeokuta. He was a multi-instrumentalist, musician, composer, pioneer of the Afro beat music genre, human right activist and political maverick, who was also good in various aspect of musical instruments, saxophone, vocal, keyboards, trumpet, guitar, drums. Fela Kuti had several labels which are Barclay/Polygram, MCA/Universal, EMI Nigeria and JVC.

    Fela was a first cousin to the Nigeria writer and Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka, the first African to win a Nobel prize of literature. He (Fela Kuti) who also changed his middle name to Anikulapo (meaning  He who carriers death in his pouch), said that his original middle name of Ransome was a slave name. Fela music was popular among the Nigeria publics and Africans in general. In fact, he made the decision to sing in pidgin English so that his music could be enjoyed by individuals all over African where the local languages spoken are very diverse and numerous.

    The death of Fela in August 2, 1997 gave birth to the Felabration concert, a yearly event held by various organizations and individuals to celebrate the life of late Fela Kuti.

  • Time for Zombie  once again

    Time for Zombie once again

    Once again, Fela came alive; he came alive on stage in the minds of those who cherish what he did to challenge oppressions of all sorts through his lyrics. Last weekend, thespians and artistes gathered at the National Theatre, Iganmu, Lagos, to watch Fela Son of Kuti, a stage satire on the life and times of Fela, written by Cornel Onyekaba. The show re-enacted the 1977burning down of the Kalakuta Republic and other sundry issues around the Abami Eda. Edoze Udeze reports.

    n writing Fela Son of Kuti, Cornel Onyekaba has demonstrated that there is plenty of theatre in life itself.  Every man’s life is full of theatre, more so someone like Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, the Abami Eda, whose own life was full of events, activities and actions that made him the cynosure of public eyes.  From the moment Fela Son of Kuti hit the National Theatre, Lagos, Fela himself came alive stirring souls and touching and piercing hearts.

    The opening scene created the magic.  Fela was seen on stage with his numerous wives and band boys playing Zombie.  His trade mark Igbo was dangling between his right fingers.  At a stage, it really appeared as if Fela himself was the one playing the scene.  The scene was done on purpose.  Soon after FESTAC’77, Fela was noted to have criticised the Federal military government led by General Olusegun Obasanjo for having wasted a lot of money on the festival.  For a while, the anger which he ignited in the minds of the military was reaching a boiling point.  The Federal government was waiting for an opportunity to hit Fela and probably destroy his Kalakuta Republic.

    Then suddenly Fela released his Zombie, a mockery of the lifestyle of the military.  This was the height of it all.  So, as he and his people were on stage playing and demonstrating Zombie, the military struck.  They struck, not only to disrupt the flow, but to also cripple Fela, render him useless and teach him an everlasting lesson.  So, with brutal force, never seen in the history of any society where the military displayed the worst heinous crime ever, the Kalakuta Republic, located along Mushin – Ojuelegba axis of Lagos, was dismantled.

    Fela was taken away in a commando style, while most of his queens were raped, brutalised and dehumanised.  Watching the scenes in form of stage theatre brought back the memories of those days when the military held the yam and the knife.  It showed Fela entangled in the hands of his worst enemies, the enemies of the society, where no one had the temerity to criticise the government.

    As the soldiers stormed the inner foyers of the Kalakuta, they unleashed mayhem on everything, everybody in sight.  The most pathetic and perhaps symbolic of the scenes was when they began to look for Fela’s mother.  “Kai, kai,” a soldier shouted, “where that woman dey? Make we make am pay.  No be she dey give Fela juju?.”  As he did so, he looked upstairs with blood stained eyes, pointing his gun everywhere, towards every movement, looking for Funmilayo Ransom-Kuti, the 78-year-old mother of Fela, to harass and torture and perhaps kill.

    Meanwhile, in the background, Fela’s music played nonstop.  Different songs of his played to depict the scenes, the sorrowful mood to register the agony and the import of the situation in the minds of the people.  “Stupid man,” a soldier shouted is he sighted one of Fela’s boys.  “You people say water no get enemy.  Today you go see enemy plenty.  Kai – kai yeye man.”  Then he spat and hit the man on the head.  As the man struggled to his feet, a busty lady came along, trying to find a way of escape, because at that time the place was already burning. There was confusion everywhere.  He got closer to her, pointing both his torch light and gun on her chest, asking: Wetin be this for your chest?  Na water abi na chest out?  Answer me now now or I go bust the yeye thing comot for your chest.  Ashawo like you.”  Then he disappeared with the lady amid more confusion and yelling and screaming.

    Interestingly, the audience reaction was spontaneous.  It was a show that held people spellbound.  No one was in a hurry to leave.  The intriguing elements of theatre were present and the totality of the show proved that the playwright did his research very well.  Tunji Sotimirin, who handled proceedings, told the audience that this is the Fela we knew.  This is the Fela everybody is missing today.  This is Fela that used music, beautiful lyrics to rule the minds of the people.

    At a stage the whole scenes sounded as if people were at the shrine, the African Shrine, savouring the opulence of the place and watching Fela release yabis in reasonable quantum.  As he was led out of the Kalakuta, the boys regrouped someplace with a few of his queens who still had the courage.  The scenario thus registered proved how critical the situation was.  The band boys and girls began an argument as to whether Fela was right in his approach to music.  Was it right for him to build a republic within a republic?  Why would he abandon Kola Lobito to delve into Egypt’80 or rebrand his music to criticise government nonstop?  The issues raised by those people and the content and strength of their argument went further to show how deep they were; how Fela’s doctrine had been able to penetrate their inner-minds.  While some of them berated him for his fire brand stance on national and international issues, others supported him, saying, one has to live the sort of life he desires for himself and for his people.

    On the symbolism of Kalakuta Republic, some of them agreed that it was an artistic expression which Fela created to support his brand of music and the messages he had for the people.  Fela was an iconoclast and you cannot silence him.  His exposure to the United States of America where he met Sandra thus became a turning point in his life.  Then, the tempo of the music changed, the content became more forceful, with Fela himself being a person whose attitude towards oppression, subjugation and bad government, becoming more vociferous and somewhat volatile.

    But how did Fela manage to survive?  Well, as an Abami Eda, a cat with several lives, he came out of it, though physically brutalised and terribly dehumanised.  But he became stronger in the mind with renewed psyche more determined to defend the people through his music.  At that point when he called a world press conference to state his case and show where he was inflicted with injuries and wounds, Fela had indeed succeeded in drawing world-wide attention and sympathy to himself.  Even though the Republic was shattered and never to rise again, he nonetheless moved on.  He moved on to create more stirring and disturbing lyrics and soul-searching ideologies to pep up the minds of the youths.  Everywhere soldiers touched, Fela said, they leave sorrows, tears and blood.  Referring to these as their regular trademark, he released coffin for the head of state and confusion breakbone to further diminish the military in the eyes of the people.

    In fact, deeper political and social issues hence remained his stock in trade.  Then the tempo became slower but more evocative, provocative and penetrating.  Fela found strength in his own situation and suffering to further demonstrate that music is a weapon for change and awareness.  Biodun Abe, one of the organizers of the series of plays said “it is a play of all plays to remind people about the place of Fela in history.  This aspect of it was indeed the biggest turning point in his career, in his social and political life and commentary on the issues that affected the larger society.”

    As for Mallam Kabir Yusuf, the General Manager of the National Theatre, the series was created to bring back life to the Theatre.  “It is instructive to start with big theatre issues in the life of the nation.  And this is why we have made the Theatre environment conducive for all.”  This is the kind of show that will be happening at the end of every month as part of returning live theatre back to the society.

    With the stage background replete with some outstanding headlines on Fela during his heyday, the stage was indeed remarkably set to welcome this epic show.  It was an epic because it lampooned the society, it denounced idiocy, it pinpointed the numerous ills that plagued both the people and the government.  And with the crop of seasoned artistes who watched it gave vent to it.  It is the sort of play to keep the theatre ever aglow, busy and hopeful.  Fela son of Kuti as a classical stage play that can serve a better purpose on the Broadway or given enough boost as a travelling play.  It can be shown nationwide to give hope to people to envision the sufferings Fela endured for humanity.

  • ‘FELA: SON OF KUTI’ re-enacts the fall of Kalakuta Republic

    ‘FELA: SON OF KUTI’ re-enacts the fall of Kalakuta Republic

    ALMOST 40 years after the historic invasion of Kalakuta Republic, a stage play, Fela: Son of Kuti, is set to relive the incidents that led to the assault, in line with the National Theatre’s objective of bringing back stage art.

    The piece explores certain historical aspects of the then military regime and its attendant brutality. It also depicts the psychological inquest into the minds of few of Fela’s band boys and backup singers who escaped from Kalakuta Republic during the invasion in 1977.

    Fela: Son of Kuti opens with a well-choreographed re-enactment of the events of the day before the attack on Kalakuta. As the play unfolds, some of the boys and ladies are in hiding, hungry and battered. Out of frustration, some of them begin to express their regrets in joining Fela’s band.

    The play exposes some of the remote reasons behind the invasion of Kalakuta Republic, like Fela’s critical comments and anti-Festac stance, which necessitated his pre-Festac release of two songs that were extremely critical of the Nigerian government, Ojuelegba and Zombie.

    The play will be staged at the National Theatre, Iganmu today and tomorrow, with a grand performance on September 28.

    Billed to be performed by Troopers Art Production, a registered member of National Association of Nigeria Theatre Arts Practitioners and a member of Dance Guild of Nigeria, the drama will be produced by Jubson E- Solution, an Information Technology firm based in Nigeria.

    Fela: Son of Kuti is written by Cornel Best Onyekaba, a theatre scholar, arts teacher and journalist. He currently lectures at the Theatre Arts unit of the Department of Creative Art, University of Lagos.

    The play, which is directed by Toyin Oshinaike, a theatre Director, a poet and an actor, will be choreographed by theatre art practitioner and dancer, Tobi Odunsi

  • As Fela Son of Kuti hits stage

    As Fela Son of Kuti hits stage

    A new stage play by Comel Onyekaba titled Fela Son of Kuti is to kick-start a series of festival of theatres to be held at the National Theatre, Lagos, beginning from September 26th and ending in December. Organisers of the shows explained to Edozie Udeze that the concept is to continue the centenary celebrations of the country and to also ensure that a Broadway-type of theatre is brought to Nigeria not only to honour Fela but to also celebrate Wole Soyinka who turned 80 this year

    As part of the activities marking the centenary celebrations of the Nigerian nation and also in continuation of the 80 years anniversary of the Noble Laureate Professor Wole Soyinka, the Crown Troupe of Africa and the National Theatre, Lagos, are engaged in series of festival of theatres that would begin on September 26 this year. In an interview with The Nation, Segun Adefila, the founder of the group explained that the choice of The Dance of the Forests written by Soyinka is to open people’s eyes to the variety of issues the playwright raised in the play when he wrote it more than 50 years ago.

    “Since the play was written to mark Nigeria’s independence in 1960, it is also imperative to use it as part of the 100 years of the nation. In furtherance of that”, Adefila continued, “ it is proper to situate the play within the context that Soyinka wrote it then. To us, it is a play that mirrored what the Nigerian situation would be in time to come. Besides the fact that it is prophetic, it shows the leadership of a society that is in dire need of focus, direction and the like”.

    Working in collaboration with the management of the National Theatre, Lagos, the plays would also include a satire on Fela Son of Kuti written by Comel Onyekaba, a Broadway kind of play to showcase the musical and the theatrical exploits of the late Fela Anikulapo Kuti. This was selected not only to bring live theatre closer to the people but also show that the place of Fela as an icon cannot be forgotten or downplayed in the annals of Nigeria.

    “Fela is an iconoclast. He is a force to reckon with. If we have his shows on Broadway in the United States of America continuously, why wouldn’t we replicate such here to encourage our people to see the real Fela on stage. It is also to broaden our people’s attitude to what is our own. Fela conquered the stage, indeed the whole world with his type of Afrobeat. He convinced the world that he had something to say. These were messages that were not immediately valued but are even more relevant today”, Biodun Abe of the National Theatre, said.

    The idea is to bring people back to live theatre, using our own artistes within the local needs of the environment to stir the sector. As the programmes begin on September 26 to run through a period of three months, the plays will each tackle some important and salient issues that trouble the nation. “They are plays that address who we are, plays that bring us into the society where we are. We need the plays to talk to us, to help us look at the areas where we faltered and areas where we’ve done well in order to know what to do to be better” Adefila said.

    Crown Troupe of Africa is known for creating dance dramas weaved around some socio-political and economic problems of the Nigerian society. Over the years, the Troupe has travelled within and outside Nigeria to tell the world that satire and hyperbole can be used in forms of dances, theatres, songs and drumming to touch on the norms of the people.

    “This is why we create stories that people can relate with, can identify as part of their own existence in a society where many things have indeed gone wrong”, Adefila explained.

    Apart from the shows for the months of September through to October, other equally important plays will be staged in November and December. For instance Fela Son of Kuti will mount the stage on September 26 and then run till the 28th. This will serve as a teaser to prepare people’s minds for the more serious theatricals replicated in the Dance of the Forests. “We chose Dance of the Forests because of its topicality and relevance to our immediate needs now.” Adefila, who directed the play averred. “We didn’t forget how some people usually consider Soyinka’s works as too difficult to decode or understand. We considered all that before we went on to stage it. However, we are careful so as not to bury or subsume the thematic issues embedded in the play”.

    Given that the festival is yet to release the names of the plays for the months of November and December, Biodun Abe, one of the coordinators of the shows explained that it is deliberate. “We have to be sure which plays to go on stage so as not to lower the tempo or water down on the standard. But you can be sure we will not give you what does not suite your taste or what does not correspond with the aims and objectives of the festival”.

    But for Adefila whose style of theatrical presentation is often seen to be abstract but infused with drama, this is time to ensure that live theatre is brought back into the mainstream of the society.

    “Community theatre which we grew up to watch and cherish is almost dead,” he said. “However, with this sort of show, we can begin to draw the attention of the people to real stage theatre.  It is here that we can see the exposure of the issues that pertain to the people. For me, any society that forgets its theatre is also likely to forget its own story. On stage you give life to the issues, you let the society see its own follies or otherwise and then you make them laugh, make them relax and generally be happy. This is part of concept of the shows”, so said Adefila.

    In creating their stories, the Crown Troupe ensures that they are people oriented. The stories have to be danceable with deep elements of theatre to entertain the audience. This is why variety of characters are infused into the plays to make people understand and follow the sequence of presentation.

    “Yes, this is what we have going for us. You see, I didn’t create or found the Troupe alone. We were four of us who did it way back at the University of Lagos. The total concept we had was to mirror the society using topical and burning issues to reach out to the people.”

    Today even though his other three colleagues have left the Troupe, Adefila says he finds consolation and total fulfillment in all the members who make up the cast and crew of the Troupe. “Yes, I draw my inspiration from them. They are the people who make the dramas tick. Together, we all create those ideas you see on stage. The artistes can be of fun if you treat them well. Many of them from different areas of Nigeria come here to make the ideas rich and diverse.”

    He is also inspired by the masquerade spirits having come from a family where masquerades were revered. “I know I would be an artiste”, he disclosed. “My family was the custodians of masquerades where I come from. So, right from the word go, I knew I would draw my inspiration from that. The spirit of the masquerades often propel me to do most of my creative things.

    “And while at the University of Lagos where I was taught by the likes of Tunji Sotimirin, Laz Ekwueme, Duro Oni and Ahmed Yerima, you had no choice but to allow real theatre to permeate you. These first class scholars taught us how to be creative, how theatre is real in real life.”

    He recalled however, how the era of Hubert Ogunde and others helped to bring life to theatre. “It is we the younger ones who should continue to uphold this tradition. These people suffered to give us theatre, to ensure that it is a profession that gives practitioners money. Today, we are happy and proud to be theatre artistes because someone has paved the way for it. You cannot say artistes are not living well, they are not paying their bills, building their own mansions at Lekki and some other choice areas in the country. All you need do is stick to what you do and do it well”. Adefila offered.

    The centenary festival of theatres will be rounded off with other interesting programmes that will make the audience see the profundity of live theatre. “It will be a show of all shows”, Abe promised. “We will use all sorts of theatricals to keep the Theatre environment warm come the month of October and beyond”, he said.

     

  • Finding Fela opens in US

    Finding Fela opens in US

    Finding Fela, a documentary on the late Afrobeat legend, Fela Anikulapo Kuti, opened penultimate Friday at a New York Theatre, United States. The 119-minute documentary was produced and directed by Alex Gibney.

    The small gesture was not the late Fela Kuti’s style. With his band the Africa 70, this Afrobeat pioneer rolled out monster-size grooves, chugging along with soulful beats, keyboards and horns. His lyrics, partly in pidgin, spoke out against military dictatorship; at home, he declared his Lagos house to be an independent territory. As for marriage, he embraced polygamy, in the cultlike double digits.

    With the perilously stuffed documentary Finding Fela, the director, Alex Gibney, tries to reckon with this audacious child of the Nigerian elite who courted execution with his brickbats, and megalomania with his extravagance. And Mr Gibney gives his rise-and-fall treatment an extra critical filter through a “making of” look at the recent Broadway musical Fela! Accordingly, through interviews and lively clips about Fela’s musical and political evolution in the 1960s and ’70s, “Fela!” director, Bill T. Jones, portrays the man, who died in 1997. Mr Jones is both razor-sharp and candid about his mixed feelings, and he’s part of a robust core of commentators, including the biographer Michael Veal, the former New York Times correspondent John Darnton and the former Black Panther Sandra Izsadore, a formative influence on Fela.

    The behind-the-scenes component, juiced with razzle-dazzle excerpts from the

    “Fela!” production is sound, in theory. But, like many sequences, it’s not so tightly executed, and this strand tends to knock the documentary off balance.

    Mr Gibney’s approach has built-in limitations (and a milquetoast title: where’d Fela go, exactly?). But maybe it’s a tall order for any conventional documentary to get its arms around a man whose 30-minute-plus jams routinely broke free of their moorings.

  • Finding Fela goes to theatres in August

    Finding Fela goes to theatres in August

    After a successful outing at the Sun Dance world premiere in January, North America will have the opportunity to view Finding Fela, a documentary directed by Alex Gibney.

    Art House distributor Kino Lorber has acquired all North American rights to Finding Fela, which Okayafrica/Okayplayer co-produced alongside Jigsaw Productions and Knitting Factory Entertainment.

    All is set for a national theatrical run, beginning in August. The film is scheduled to hit NYC first, with an exclusive engagement at the IFC Center on August 1, followed by openings in Washington DC (Landmark’s E Street Cinema), Los Angeles (Landmark’s Nuart Theatre), San Francisco (Landmark’s Opera Plaza), Philadelphia (Landmark’s Ritz at the Bourse), Boston (Landmark’s Kendall Square) as well as Atlanta (Landmark’s Midtown).

  • Kalakuta  Republic: Four decades  after

    Kalakuta Republic: Four decades after

    THERE is not a stir, not even a faint rustle in the confines of the crypt in Kalakuta Republic, at 14, Gbemisola Street, Ikeja, Lagos. The final resting place of Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, Afro-beat legend, remains undisturbed as the world celebrates the renowned music genius. Perhaps, he lived in hope of becoming an everlasting memory; as the world retires from the 16th annual Felabration festival, a six-day celebration of his life and works, Anikulapo-Kuti looms large in the consciousness of music fans worldwide. It’s almost eternal, like the commemoration of a demi-god.

    How important was Anikulapo-Kuti? The question beggars a surfeit of answers although it is best served by how the world took the news of his death: the streets overflowed with tears and indignation of his loyal fans with death. And for seven hours, his funeral procession meandered through Ikeja, the working-class district of Nigeria’s Lagos metropolis, the hub of Anikulapo-Kuti’s music empire.

    Usually, the journey would take half an hour, but on August 12, 1997, 10 days after his death, about one million people, comprising Nigerians and foreigners, thronged the streets of Lagos to bid the man fondly called Fela or Abami Eda (supernatural being), a teary bye.

    During this solemn procession, one of the vehicles in the motorcade, an open truck, let out the late artiste’s classics in chunky aural waves. The music was live, from a band playing on the moving vehicle throughout the journey. Today, the music is still live and strident enough to sustain the attention of his loyal fans while earning him the respect of even his most virulent critics.

    In death, Fela lives. Famous for his copious use of marijuana, his fascination with women and proclivity for appearing in briefs, Fela was, and is still, many things to many people: an icon, activist, a philanthropist and risqué reverend to whom music served as a tool of evangelism and a fount of inspiration.

    Fela was a thorn in the flesh of the ruling class; outspoken, tough and uncompromising in his denunciation of the sleaze, larceny, violence and hypocrisy emblematic of the Nigerian government since the country’s independence from her British colonialists.

    Born Fela Ransome-Kuti in 1938, he changed his name to Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, which in his native Yoruba language means, “One who radiates eminence, has control over death, and can’t be slain by a mortal.”

    Oludotun Ransome-Kuti, his father, was a preacher. The latter was also a teacher who headed the local grammar school and was once bayoneted by a soldier for defying the British Flag. Funmilayo, his mother, was also a teacher, though more influential as a political activist. In a country where women weren’t encouraged to speak their mind, Fela’s mother was more influential than most men, once dining with Mao Tse-tung a.k.a Chairman Mao, the late Chinese emperor.

    Anikulapo-Kuti, a native of Abeokuta, Ogun State, grew up in a middle-class family on the watch of parents who were strict disciplinarians.

    His mother, Funmilayo, was a feminist active in the anti-colonial movement and his father, Oludotun, was the first president of the Nigerian Union of Teachers (NUT).

    Later, Fela, the third of four children, would claim that he received about 3,000 strokes from his parents. His mother, Funmilayo, was a huge influence on his life as she became active politically in the 1940s, being the first voice to speak out for women’s rights (mobilising at one point 50, 000 women to speak out against unfair tax laws) earning them the right to vote and herself, the Lenin Peace prize in the early 60s.

     

    The making of Abami Eda

    It was not until 1954 that Fela’s music legacy began when he met Jimoh Kombi Braimah (JK for short) who would become a lifelong friend, and who at the time was the lead singer for a local band in Lagos called The Cool Cats. This would lead to Braimah forming a band with Fela, playing High Life and Jazz around Lagos, until the two left for London, United Kingdom (UK).

    Fela’s parents had sent him to the UK in 1958 to study Medicine but he decided to enrol at Trinity College to study music. JK followed soon thereafter to study law at North Western Polytechnic. JK failed to secure admission into the polytechnic and instead, decided to form a band with Fela – The Koola Lobitos.

    The group would play their high-life music (much of it composed by Fela.) for fellow Nigerian students at student dances, and the like. This soon became a little more profitable when they began to infiltrate and play in the many Jazz clubs around London.

    In 1961, Fela met and married his first wife, Remilekun Taylor, the daughter of a Nigerian father and Black American mother, born on the outskirts of London during the Second World War. Taylor bore him three kids, Femi, Yeni and Sola and in 1963, she accompanied him back to Nigeria where Fela invented Afro-Beat.

    Afro beat was his response to competition; Geraldo Pino, a Sierra Leonean who was taking Nigeria by storm. Pino was playing the music of James Brown and other American Soul artists thereby robbing Fela of his audience, forcing him to change his style before he became totally irrelevant. The local press was wooed by Fela and he called a conference where he announced that he was changing to “Afro Beat.”

    Soon, he started a club called the Afro-Spot, gaining a little prestige, but not enough to conquer the more established Pino a.k.a ­ Nigeria’s James Brown.

    At that period, the atrocities being perpetrated during the nation’s civil war wrought far-reaching impression on Fela making him question his patriotism, but paradoxically, it would not be until he left for America on impulse that he would discover his politics.

    After a few fruitless months with his band in New York, with no record company interest and expired visas, it was decided that a move to Los Angeles (L.A.) might yield better results. It was there that he met Sandra Isidore, a native of L.A., who changed his fortune forever.

    As lover, friend and colleague, Isidore, a brainy woman and an impassioned black rights activist, enlightened Fela in ways he had never been. She earned his respect almost effortlessly. A black woman who had been sent to prison for her beliefs fitted perfectly into the new world Fela was sojourning. She would also change his life by making him read The autobiography of Malcolm X.

    Instantaneously, Fela decided to revise his music philosophy, ditching much of the highlife and jazz. He infused more hard funk and African chant and thus gave Afro beat a deserving rebirth. Afro Beat was finally real.

    Fela introduced his new sound to some clubs around L.A. and it was often received with slack-jawed amazement as something deep, powerful and infectious.

     

    Enter Kalakuta Republic

    With heightened purpose, a unique energy and sound, Fela returned to Lagos where he changed the name of his band to Africa 70, and began to make hits. He founded The Afrika Shrine, a new club, and started his own commune that would later become the Kalakuta Republic.

    Located at 14, Agege Motor Road, Idi-Oro, Mushin, Lagos, Kalakuta Republic became a home for many connected to the band and otherwise. It had a free health clinic and recording facility and Abami Eda later declared it independent of the Nigerian state.

    Fela needed a term to describe the thought process of living in a post-colonial mentality, and that’s what the republic was about. “It was when I was in a police cell at the C.I.D. (Central Intelligence Division) headquarters in Lagos; the cell I was in was named ‘The Kalakuta Republic’ by the prisoners. I found out when I went to East Africa that Kalakuta is a Swahili word that means ‘rascal.’ So, if rascality is going to get us what we want, we will use it because we are dealing with corrupt people, we have to be rascally with them,” he explained.

    Inside Fela’s republic, recordings continued, and the music became more politically motivated. Consequently, his music became very popular among the Nigerian public and Africans in general. As a result, he decided to sing in Pidgin English so that his music could be enjoyed by every African.

    However, as popular as Fela’s music had become in Nigeria and elsewhere, it was also very unpopular with the ruling government. Little wonder raids on Kalakuta Republic were frequent. In 1974, the police reportedly, arrived at Fela’s domain with a search warrant and a cannabis joint, which they had intended to plant on him.

    Wizened and full of theatrics, Fela claimed to the officer holding the contraband, that he could not see it. He held to his claim until the joint was in his face. At that point, he snatched it and swallowed it. In response, the police took him into custody and waited to examine his faeces in order to secure evidence to prosecute him but his cell mates would wake him in the middle of the night to use the communal pail -leaving the bumbling police to wonder how their prisoner could go for so long without defecating.

    Another version of the story maintained that Fela enlisted the help of his prison mates who supplied him with excreta which of course, was devoid of cannabis traces. Due to lack of evidence to press charges, Fela was freed. He then recounted his ordeal in Expensive Shit, a listeners’ delight.

     

    How his neighbours described him…

    Benjamin Adegeye, 72, was Fela’s neighbour at the period. According to him, it was interesting to observe goings on at the republic. “Many parents were concerned about the negative messages their wards could be getting. There were incessant complaints about activities and noise at Kalakuta. If anything went wrong in the vicinity, we blamed it on Fela and his boys although many of us secretly admired him and appreciated his music. Some even snuck to his shrine after badmouthing it in public. Kalakuta Republic was an attraction hardly anyone could ignore. Even if you don’t venture in to party and smoke marijuana, you would still find a vantage point to watch happenings inside and around the place,” revealed Adegeye.

    Rasheed and Mulkat Balogun, 58 and 53 respectively, recalled with nostalgia, days they hung around Kalakuta Republic on their way to school. The couple who spent a great part of their childhood in Mushin disclosed that oftentimes, they stopped to watch, mouth agape, activities at the place.

    “There was always something interesting happening at the place. It’s either a parent comes around to drag her daughter out of the place by the ear or a father comes to flog his sons for stopping over at the place while running errands for him. Once, a very pretty friend of mine absconded from home.

    “After we had assisted her parents in searching for her for months, we sighted her at Kalakuta Republic. When we went with her parents and the police to get her, she refused to follow us and started calling us names. She blamed us for snitching on her. She never followed us. She is late now,” said Mulkat.

    Madam Beulah Lasisi, a 67-year-old grocer and resident of the area said: “Even though many people complained, many people still loved Fela. He said all those things everyone wanted to say and made sure the government heard them. Unlike other artistes, he sang and fought for the masses and he really entertained us while doing so. No parent should say he messed up their kids’ lives. That’s just a lie to cover up their failures. Fela wasn’t a bad person and Kalakuta didn’t destroy anyone I knew. I only know that it was destroyed.”

     

    Death of the republic

    Indeed, it was only a matter of time before Kalakuta Republic got destroyed. It happened in 1977 after Fela and the Afrika ’70 released the hit album, Zombie, a scathing attack on Nigerian soldiers.

    Fela employed derisive allegory to describe the schemes of the Nigerian military. Expectedly, Zombie became a chart stopper and smash hit with the people. On the other hand, it incurred government’s wrath hence instigating a brutal assault on the Kalakuta Republic on February 18, 1977. A thousand armed soldiers invaded Fela’s commune and destroyed it.

    Fela was ruthlessly beaten, and Funmilayo, his elderly mother, was thrown through a window, causing her fatal injuries.

    The Kalakuta Republic was burned, and Fela’s studio, instruments and master tapes were destroyed. Fela claimed that he would have been beaten to death if not for the intervention of a commanding officer.

    Destitute and disillusioned with the nation’s justice system, Fela and the 80 former inhabitants of Kalakuta Republic spent the next few weeks sleeping at Crossroads Hotel as The Afrika Shrine had been destroyed along with his commune, and the offices of Decca Records before leaving for Ghana to promote the album, Zombie, which was also a huge hit with the students in that country. The song mocked Nigerian soldiers as mindless puppets.

    Following several successful concerts, and interactive sessions with many students, Fela and his band were deported from Ghana. Subsequently, they travelled for another successful concert in Berlin, Germany (the results of which can be heard on the live album, V.I.P.).

    However, on his return to the country, Fela attempted to outdo himself in his brand radicalism. In one ceremony, he married every one of his dancers and singers, calling them his “Queens.” He bestowed upon them the name, Anikulapo-Kuti. Later, he was to adopt a rotation system of keeping only 12 simultaneous wives. It was the first anniversary of the burning of the Kalakuta Republic and, according to him, that was the happiest day of his life but as it seemed to be so often in his life, it was to be very short lived.

    Less than two months after, Funmilayo, his mother, died as a direct result of the wounds she sustained during the attack on Kalakuta Republic. The musician’s response was both daring and poetic.

    A devastated Fela declared that he intended to deposit his mother’s coffin outside Dodan Barracks – residence of General Olusegun Obasanjo, the incumbent military head of state at the time.

    Despite barricades mounted by an alert military, the coffin was deposited, and the musician and his pallbearers turned around quietly and left. Some music enthusiasts proclaimed that the coffin deposited for Head of State remains Fela’s most powerful and emotionally charged work.

    In the wake of his mother’s death, Fela also wrote, Unknown Soldier, a mockery of the official inquest that claimed Kalakuta Republic was attacked by unknown soldiers. A secondary school, Ransome Kuti Memorial Grammar School, currently occupies the spot the Republic was situated.

     

    Fela’s politics

    He was a fierce supporter of human rights, and many of his songs are direct attacks on dictatorships, specifically the militaristic governments of Nigeria in the 1970s and 1980s. He was also a social commentator, and he criticized his fellow Africans (especially the upper class) for betraying traditional African culture.

    The African culture he believed in also included polygamy and the Kalakuta Republic was formed in part as a polygamist colony.

     

    End of an era

    Although records were recorded and released and concert tour commitments fulfilled, his political silence and seeming complacence instigated speculations of ill-health. Visitors and those closest to him noticed his retreat into himself and a very out of character quietness.

    Fela died at age 59 on August 21, 1997 in Lagos. The announcement was made by his brother, Prof. Olikoye Ransome-Kuti, former Minister of Health. The cause of death was announced as, “Complications arising from AIDS,” though many have since said that they feel that his ill-health was due to the sheer brutality inflicted upon him by the police and military. It was indeed a sad end for the music genius.

     

    Fela, the contrarian

    Fela changed his name to Anikulapo-Kuti rejecting Ransome as a “slave name”; his new title meant “One who holds death in a pouch”. His advocacy of African tradition extended to religion, running contrary to his father’s Christianity, though it’s tempting to see Fela’s “Shrine” as a version of his father’s pulpit. His denunciation of corruption and support for the underclass tied in with his mother’s crusading, though her championship of women’s rights must have been affronted by her son’s sexual politics. On Lady, Fela castigated modern womanhood for thinking itself equal to men, while his infamous 1978 marriage to 27 “wives” mostly his singers and dancers has often been brandished against him. For his part, Fela declared polygamy an African tradition and claimed that by marrying them he was protecting his wives against charges that they were prostitutes. Ever the contrarian, in 1986, he divorced them all, saying that no man should own a woman’s body.

    According to Oke Ogunde, a music critic, Lady is a controversial album released in the mid 1970s. Fela criticised the orientation and appellation, Lady, cherished by a new generation of women. He campaigned for the retaining of the past virtues of African women, including the complete subordination to the male-folk, among others, and against the bleaching of the dark skin by African ladies.

    Despite his passionate views on society, he couldn’t proffer a solution to the crisis facing society in general nor could he see the need to organise the working masses in struggle in order to end their oppression. “This was why he took refuge in mysticism, as he believed that only the intervention of the gods could bring about change,” noted Ogunde.

     

    Fela’s heritage

    According to Femi, Anikulapo-Kuti’s son by Remi – and currently, the acclaimed successor to the late Afro beat maestro- in a recent interview, growing up as Fela’s son was “very hard, very scary. The police, the SSS (State Security Service) were always following us. I was victimised in school, because of who my father was. They would say: (sneering) ‘Ah, your father smokes hemp, he wears underwear.’ I’d say, ‘Your father wears a coat and tie, he’s a slave!’ And we would start punching, and the teacher would come.”

    In a chaotic world burdened with non-stop reformation, many look to music as a means of escaping the problems of the world. Fela did the opposite. His music was borne of humanity and an overriding quest to influence the tide of the tempests tormenting civilisation.

    According to Tony Allen, Fela’s music soulmate, “playing with Fela did not cost me, or hurt my career. Once, after a raid, I was in the police cell for three days, but that was nothing, didn’t matter to me at all. But my cup was full up, to the brim.”Allen said Afro beat is considered radical because of Fela’s combative reputation. “The music sent a message to the world about militancy. No one had ever done anything like that before until Fela. So it is immense,” he said.

    Hardly anyone disputes that Fela was a talented musician. Till date, fellow artistes, his fans and music enthusiasts the world over still unite to pay homage to the late African music genius.

    At the recently concluded Felabration festival, world class performers from Jamaica, Benin Republic, United States of America and Nigeria thrilled the fans to different genres of music at the New Afrika Shrine in Ikeja, Lagos, Nigeria.

    Son of the Jamaican legend, Kymani Marley Nigeria’s Weird MC, Femi and Seun, his sons, Dr. Sid, Burna Boy, Chidima, amongst others performed to the delight of the audience. Past performers at the event include international group, Red Hot Chilli Peppers’ Flea, Baaba Maal, Amadou and Mariam, Tony Allen, his professional associate and long time buddy and a host of other distinguished music stars.

    In further celebration of the Afrobeat maestro, ‘FELA!’ a new musical directed and choreographed by Tony Award winner, Bill T. Jones with a book by Jim Lewis, in which audiences are welcomed into the extravagant, decadent and rebellious world of the Afrobeat legend is currently been staged around the world. Using his pioneering music, a blend of jazz, funk, African rhythm and harmonies, FELA! explores Kuti’s controversial life as an artist, a political activist and revolutionary musician. Featuring many of Fela Kuti’s most captivating songs and Bill T. Jones’ imaginative staging, this new show is a provocative hybrid of concert, dance and musical theater.

    Musically, Fela was a true pioneer. Politically, he was a revolutionary. Discontented with the status quo, Fela tried to further an unparalleled state of affairs. So doing, he created his own Utopia, Kalakuta Republic. Thus he sought to perpetuate his desires as an African. He tried to build an autonomous cultural zone, a place that literally, didn’t exist.

    “Kalakuta Republic was essentially a space that reflected his values and needs – something all too rare in the post World War II African political and cultural landscape. It was an artificial place in the midst of an artificial situation. What could be a better metaphor for contemporary Africa?” said Paul Miller of the Project for a new Kalakuta Republic.

    Sometimes, almost every adjective becomes a cliché in describing Anikulapo-Kuti. However, his 77 albums, 27 wives, over 200 court appearances and a string of confrontations with the Nigerian ruling class offer a colourful picture.

    Artistically endowed, cocksure, belligerent and unapologetically blunt, Anikulapo-Kuti was unusual. And he sought to create an unusual social space founded on purely African needs.

    Harassed, beaten, tortured, jailed, Fela sought to divorce himself from the prevailing mass culture characteristic of his motherland to create a new republic with a different story; a gripping yarn founded on melody and culture indigenous to the people who lived there. It’s the stuff dreams are made of.