Tag: video

  • Aramide releases Iwo Nikan video

    Aramide releases Iwo Nikan video

    Nigerian soul diva, Aramide, has released a video for her recently released single, Iwo Nikan. The video which was produced by Laitan Dada was released on Tuesday.

    Shot in Lagos, and directed by cinematographer, Tosin Igho, the video of the love song has its clips scrolling in a film format.

    In the video, Aramide who also plays the guitar and the saxophone, seamlessly changes from English to Yoruba as she croons of a special love she desires.

    This is Aramide’s first official video since joining Baseline Entertainment last September after leaving Trybe Records. The singer now has artistes like Skales and Saeon as colleagues on the same label.

    A statement from Howie T of Baseline, at that time read: “Aramide has great potentials. With her unique voice and talents, she has what it takes to bloom and expand in this industry. With her exceptional fusion of afro beat and soul music, she can surpass anything.”

    The talented singer, since joining the industry, has dished out many soulful songs.

  • Lagbaja hits Obasanjo in satire video

    Lagbaja hits Obasanjo in satire video

    In what fans and music lovers describe as overkill, Afrobeat singer, Bisade Ologunde, better known has Lagbaja, has parodied two-time Nigerian leader, General Olusegun Obasanjo, in the video of the song, 200 Million Mumu.

    Lagbaja is seen as going overboard in the satirical video when he takes shots at ex-president Obasanjo, making mockery of his failed third term bid, among many other issues. The video shows the caricature of Obasanjo addressing a society that cannot do anything about the decisions their leaders make, saying; “there is nothing that I have wanted that God has not given me, except a third term.”

    It would appear that Lagbaja is becoming more vocal in the nation’s political space. He recently declared publicly that he has picked up his Permanent Voter’s Card (PVC) while stating that he wants the incumbent President, Goodluck Jonathan, out of office in the forthcoming presidential election.

    The Koko Below singer, who is also a Glo ambassador, shared a photo of his PVC on Facebook with the caption: “Congratulations Nigeria! I don collect my Voter’s Card and there will be no 2nd term for President Jonathan.” The singer noted that the Jonathan-led administration has not been people-oriented as he had wanted it to be.

  • Gbelee drops new single, video

    GOSPEL artiste, Gbele Mathew Adegboyega aka Gbelee, has released a new single titled Idupe L’ona. According to the artiste, the song which means ‘thanksgiving is the way that opens doors’, will be coming with a video in the next couple of weeks.

    “The song talks about thanksgiving as the secret that opens doors for us to enter into God’s presence. Without thanksgiving, nobody can reach him. It is just like the password for your phone. Without it, you can’t access your phone. I have done a lot of songs but this is the first one I will be shooting a video for. I shot the video last year but it will be out this year. It is being edited now but in the next two or three weeks, it should be out,” he said.

    The artiste, who is also a voice trainer, songwriter and music producer says that he has a collection of singles which he intends to compile into an album soon.

    “I am hoping to release my album in a couple of months. I intend to compile my old singles and get some new songs. It should have at least nine tracks. It has some gospel tunes, motivational tunes and some love songs,” he added.

    He also revealed that his music school, Divine Touch Music Academy, will be putting together a gospel concert in the month of August. “We call it World Praise Day. It will start this year by the Grace of God. About five hundred choristers will be there. We will start with Nigeria then subsequently, we will be taking it outside the country. It is a vision that God gave me some years back. For now, we will be performing with our local artistes in Nigeria. I have access to Mike Aremu and some other known gospel artistes,” he further revealed.

  • 4real out with Super video

    WITH songs like High Place, Cold, featuring 2Face Idibia, Hot and Double Traffikator featuring Wizboy, Eze Franklin Chekwube, aka 4real, launched his potentials as a music artiste to reckon with. But with Super, the Kakuri, Kaduna State-born singer appears to be taking his place in the Nigerian music space.

    In the last quarter of last year, 4real’s Super, not only ranked among the highly downloaded Nigerian songs online, it enjoyed heavy rotation on radio. And while the song continues to garner fans for the artiste, who is the first to be signed to Don Maseratte music label, its anticipated video has just been released. Shot by the award-winning music video director, Clarence Peters, the work was said to have gulped several millions of naira to produce.

    According to the Artiste, “To be candid, we don’t have intention of shooting the video, but the rate at which people accepted the song, gave us a second thought, and the demand for the video propelled us to hit the location with Clarence Peters, one of the most sought-after music video directors in Nigeria. The track is very fortunate, as I have other songs begging for videos.”

    As if this was not enough, 4real is also out with a new song titled Stylee, which he said is a New Year gift for his fans. The song was produced by More Money.

    “With the way my career is going right now,” said the burgeoning artiste, “I so much believe that the sky is my starting point. I rarely settle for less and I always try to give my fans the best. My style of music, dancing step and stage craft are some of the reasons ladies call me ‘IceCream4real”, he said, beaming with smiles.

    Meanwhile, CEO of the record label, Don Maseratte, has revealed that plans are in top gear for 4real’s club tour.

  • Boko Haram releases video of sect killing civilians in a dormitory

    Boko Haram at the weekend released a video showing gunmen mowing down civilians lying face down in a dormitory, and a leader saying they are being killed because they are “infidels” or non-believers.

    There are so many bodies the gunmen have difficulty stepping to reach bodies still twitching with life. Most appear to be adult men.

    “We have made sure the floor of this hall is turned red with blood, and this is how it is going to be in all future attacks and arrests of infidels,” the group leader says in a message. “From now, killing, slaughtering, destructions and bombing will be our religious duty anywhere we invade.”

    The video was released on Saturday, two days after fleeing villagers reported that the extremists are rounding up elderly people and killing them in two schools in Gwoza, in northeast Nigeria.

    The setting of the latest video appears to be a school, a long dormitory furnished with bunk beds which the leader says is in Bama, a town 40 miles north of Gwoza. Students and schools are frequently targeted by Boko Haram, which means “Western education is sinful” in the Hausa language.

    Previously, the militants had told residents of villages and towns that they would kill only enemies and wanted people to live peacefully in the area they have dubbed an Islamic caliphate, a large swath along Nigeria’s northeastern border with Cameroon that they have controlled for more than three months.

    In the video, the leader notes that the prophet Mohammed advised prisoners should be held, not killed, but says “we felt this is not the right time for us to keep prisoners; that is why we will continue to see that the grounds are crimsoned with the flowing blood of prisoners”.

    He says some of those killed may call themselves Muslims, but are considered infidels by Boko Haram, a Sunni Jihadi group that imposes strict Shariah law.

    Thousands of people have been killed and about 1.6 million driven from their homes in the five-year insurgency that is spilling across borders into Cameroon, Chad and Niger.

    Last week, extremists killed 35 people and kidnapped at least 185, fleeing residents said Thursday of an attack near the town where nearly 300 schoolgirls were taken hostage in April.

    Last month, an official in Chibok said the extremists forced thousands of residents to flee the town.

    The attack on Gumburi happened one week ago, said a security official and a local government officer, who insisted on anonymity because they were not authorised to speak to the press. The news took days to emerge because the militants have destroyed communications towers in the area.

    Gumburi is 12 miles from Chibok, the northeastern town where extremists kidnapped 276 schoolgirls in April. Dozens of the students escaped but 219 remain missing.

  • The ‘evil one’ did it, says Joshua as congregation views video

    The ‘evil one’ did it, says Joshua as congregation views video

    Despite Friday’s calamity at the Synagogue Church of All Nations (SCOAN), service were held yesterday. Prophet Temitope Joshua’s sermon was, however, unusual. He attributed the incident to the work of “the evil one”.

    Prophet Joshua had earlier said an aircraft flew over the building just before it collapsed.  A CCTV footage showing the “strange aircraft” overflying the building four times before it collapsed was shown to the congregation.

    In the security camera footage, apparently from opposite the vast church compound,  an aircraft is seen over the building four times at 11:30 am (1030 GMT), 11:43 am, 11:45 and 11:54 am.

    The uncompleted building, five floors of which are visible above a high wall, is then seen to collapse at 12:44 pm, throwing up huge clouds of dust into the air.

    “After the incident, the “strange aircraft” does not return,” a commentary accompanying the images adds.

    There was no independent verification of the authenticity of the footage but Joshua said he would make it available to Nigeria’s security agencies.

    Managing Director of Nigerian Airspace Management Agency  (NAMA) Mr. Ibrahim Abdulsalam said the matter is being investigated. He said Minister of Aviation Osita Chidoka had not directed him to comment on the matter. He said details would emerge shortly.

    Joshua brought out a white sheet of paper which had an email sent by a convert who he said was a Boko Haram member.

    “I did not bring this out before now because I did not want people with little faith to be scared and stop coming to church.

    “Even my wife did not know of the existence of this mail. Only the people at the email department and myself knew of it and I told them not to disclose it to anyone.”

    He said the picture on the mail is that of a man from Kogi State, residing in Jos with his soldier parent.

    “He was a Boko Haram member as you have heard them read it, who came to SCOAN to plant a bomb but could not do it because of our God and got converted and went back to Jos with the explosives.

    “I am showing members for them to know the God they serve. If I had shown it in the past, faithless people may not want to come to church again.

    “We have to believe what happened so that our people can learn and be educated to be on alert at all times,” Joshua said, adding:

    “Boko Haram will not stop here. I have said it before. It won’t stop here but our God will get back at them such that they will know it is because of what they have done in this church.

    “Maybe, this one will be the end of the whole thing. I have remained silent because I have to. My life has been like that. People will lie from the beginning and later realise the truth. It is my life and I accept it. It is a good life”.

    Prophet Joshua saluted the “heroes and God’s generals. It is a security matter and so, I have to allow the security people to do their job,” he said.

    Immediately Fashola got to the scene, he queried the presence of church members ordering security personnel to send them out in order for rescue agencies to do their jobs.

    “What are they doing here? This is now a national disaster. Cordon off this area and let anyone who is not a rescue operative be sent out so that professionals can do their jobs.

    “Anyone obstructing the duties of emergency agencies should be arrested.”

    To Prophet Joshua who arrived while the governor was issuing the arrest order, Fashola said: “We understand that this is an unfortunate situation but we need your men to understand that it is an emergency situation.

    “Let them allow those who are trained to do their jobs. We cannot carry out emergency and rescue operations in this situation.”

    While walking with the Prophet to his office for a meeting, the governor, who observed that construction was ongoing in the main building of the church, queried the leýgality of the action.

  • Yemi Alade shoots Tangerine video

    Yemi Alade shoots Tangerine video

    As a sequel to her hit single, Johnny, which gained impressive airplay at home and abroad, Nigerian singer, Yemi Alade, may soon release the music video of her other single, Tangerine, which had the imprint of talented Selebobo.

    The singer has also announced that her anticipated debut album, King of Albums, will hit shelves across the country in September.

    Already, her record label, Effyzzie Music Group, has been unveiling footage and shots from the video shoot directed by award-winning music video director, Clarence Peters, who had also worked on the video of her previous single.

    Yemi Alade, who is currently in Ghana as part of her African tour, said she cannot wait to share the video with the world.

    After she launched her professional career in 2005 under the supervision of Bayo Omisore, she went on to win the maiden edition of the Peak Talent Show in 2009.

    Her debut single Fimisile which featured eLDee was released in 2010 with recommendable acceptance from fans.

    She has performed on stages across Nigeria with major artists such as Dipp, Ice Prince, eLDee, M.I, Sauce Kid, Shank, Sir Shina Peters, Waje, Wizkid and Yemi Sax among other. Her extensive discography has also seen her working with veteran and burgeoning music producers like OJB Jezreel, eLDee, E. Kelly, IBK, MajorOne, SizzlePro, Red Bull Music Academy alumni DJ Klem, Bigfoot, Flip Tyce and World renowned South African producer Garth.

  • Video of cook’s survival broken by The Nation now viral

    Video of cook’s survival broken by The Nation now viral

    The story was broken by The Nation’s Shola O’Neil. It was the story of how a cook, Harrison Odjegba Okene, entombed at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean in an upended tugboat for three days begged God for a miracle.

    A video of the cook, who survived by breathing an ever-dwindling supply of oxygen in an air pocket in May, has gone viral on youtube. The video was posted on the Internet more than six months later.

    As the temperature dropped to freezing, Okene, dressed only in boxer shorts, recited the last Psalm his wife had sent by text message, sometimes called the Prayer for Deliverance: “Oh God, by your name, save me. … The Lord sustains my life.”

    To this day, Okene believes his rescue after 72 hours underwater at a depth of 30 meters (about 100 feet) is a sign of divine deliverance. The other 11 seaman aboard the Jascon 4 died.

    Divers sent to the scene were looking only for bodies, according to Tony Walker, project manager for the Dutch company DCN Diving, who were called to the scene because they were working on a neighbouring oil field 120 kilometres away.

    The divers had already pulled up four bodies.

    So when a hand appeared on the TV screen Walker was monitoring in the rescue boat, showing what the diver in the Jascon saw, everybody assumed it was another body.

    “The diver acknowledged that he had seen the hand and then, when he went to grab the hand, the hand grabbed him!” Walker said in a telephone interview Tuesday.

    “It was frightening for everybody,” he said. “For the guy that was trapped because he didn’t know what was happening. It was a shock for the diver while he was down there looking for bodies, and we (in the control room) shot back when the hand grabbed him on the screen.”

    On the video, there’s an exclamation of fear and shock from Okene’s rescuer, and then joy as the realisation sets in. Okene recalls hearing: “There’s a survivor! He’s alive.”

    Walker said Okene could not have lasted much longer.

    “He was incredibly lucky he was in an air pocket but he would have had a limited time (before) … he wouldn’t be able to breathe anymore.”

    The full video of the rescue captured by divers was released by DCN Diving after a request from The Associated Press. Initially, a shorter version of the rescue emerged on the Internet. The authenticity of the video was confirmed through conversations with DCN employees in the Netherlands. The video showing Okene was also consistent with additional photos of him on the rescue ship. The AP also contacted Okene on Tuesday who confirmed the events.

    Okene’s ordeal began around 4:30 a.m. on May 26. Always an early riser, he was in the toilet when the tug, one of three towing an oil tanker in the oil-rich Delta waters, gave a sudden lurch and then keeled over.

    “I was dazed and everywhere was dark as I was thrown from one end of the small cubicle to another,” Okene said in an exclusive interview after his rescue with The Nation.

    He groped his way out of the toilet and tried to find a vent, propping doors open as he moved on. He discovered some tools and a life vest with two flashlights, which he stuffed into his shorts.

    When he found a cabin of the sunken vessel that felt safe, he began the long wait, getting colder and colder as he played back a mental tape of his life — remembering his mother, friends, mostly the woman he had married five years before with whom he had not yet fathered a child.

    He worried about his colleagues — 10 Nigerians and the Ukrainian captain, including four young cadets from the Maritime Academy. They would have locked themselves into their cabins, standard procedure in an area stalked by pirates.

    He got really worried when he heard the sound of fish, shark or barracudas he supposed, eating and fighting over something big.

    As the waters rose, he made a rack on top of a platform and piled two mattresses on top.

    According to his interview with The Nation: “I started calling on the name of God. … I started reminiscing on the verses I read before I slept. I read the Bible from Psalm 54 to 92. My wife had sent me the verses to read that night when she called me before I went to bed.”

    He survived off just one bottle of Coke, all he had to sustain him during the trauma.

    Okene really thought he was going to die; he told The Nation, when he heard the sound of a boat engine and anchor dropping, but failed to get the attention of rescuers. He figured, given the size of the boat, that it would take a miracle for a diver to locate him. So, he waded across the cabin, stripped the wall down to its steel body, then knocked on it with a hammer.

    But “I heard them moving away. They were far away from where I was.”

    By the time he was saved, relatives already had been told the sailors were dead.

    Okene kept faith with the psalm he recited, that promises to “give thanks in your name, Lord,” at a service at his Redeemed Christian Church of God.

    He was rescued by a diver who first used hot water to warm him up, then attached him to an oxygen mask. Once free of the sunken boat, he was put into a decompression chamber and then safely returned to the surface.

     

  • Video shows how Jang lost NGF poll

    Video shows how Jang lost NGF poll

    Rivers State Governor Rotimi Amaechi won last Friday’s election of the Nigerian Governors’ Forum (NGF) with 19 votes , an amateur footage of the election released yesterday has proved.

    Amaechi was reelected chairman after he defeated his only challenger, Plateau State Governor Jonah Jang , who had 16 votes.

    Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola captured most of the proceedings of the election on his mobile phone, it was learnt.

    When the arrowhead of the opposition against Amaechi, Akwa Ibom State Governor Godswill Akpabio realised the proceedings were being taped, he charged angrily at Aregbesola. The Osun State governor asked Akpabio to stay away from the camera if he did not like it. Kwara State Governor AbdulFatah Ahmed also tried dodging the camera.

    Despite the protest, Aregbesola found a way to continue the recording, even after promising that he would stop.

    At a point in the video, one of the governors complained about the air-conditioning system. Another wondered what some women in an adjacent room were doing there and he was told they were staff of the NGF.

    It also showed Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha battling with cold and taking a piece of toilet roll to clean his nose.

    The video showed the intense maneuvering by the governors on both sides, documenting how the 35 governors voted, the counting of votes and the declaration of result by the Director-General of the Forum and Presiding Officer, Asishana Okauru.

    There was so much noise at a point. Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi stood and said: “DG, can you start counting.”

    The recording is the first documentary evidence of a transparent process in which Delta State Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan played the role of the Presiding Officer. He was standing by Okauru all through the sorting and counting of the votes and giving instruction to the DG on how to handle the ballots. He went back to his seat after the counting showed that Amaechi had won.

    After the exercise, Okauru declared Amaechi the winner — to the disappointment of the pro-Jang governors.

  • ‘We don’t need naked  girls to sell a video’

    ‘We don’t need naked girls to sell a video’

    Lydia Idakula Sobogun is the CEO of Gbagyichild Entertainment and the brain-child behind Taruwa, a monthly gathering for budding talents in music, poetry and drama. Through Taruwa, this graduate of Law has provided a platform for artists like Jude ‘M.I’ Abaga, Omawuni, Bez, among others, to hone their skill and become international stars.

    In spite of her efforts, very little is known about the mother of one, as she lies content in doing all the work behind the scenes. In this interview with Rita Ohai, she raises the veil on her life as she shares on her love, temper and childhood.

     

     

    WHAT drives you to do your job in spite of the challenges?

    It is my calling. It’s very simple really. I cannot do anything else. This is my purpose and I’m just blessed to have seen it very clearly with no confusion.

    I also live by the philosophy that lives must be affected positively with everything that I do because I truly believe that we do not live for ourselves and the world would be so much easier if we lived for each other. For every person who has said to me Taruwa has blessed him or her, there’s a sense of fulfillment.

    Did you take any steps to prepare you for a life in the arts?

    I trained at the ‘Idakula Institute’ of performing arts! (she laughs). I grew up in a very artsy family. My father taught my brother, Bez, his first chords on the guitar and we used to sing as a family in churches. We were like the Von-trapp family singers in the day.

    We listened to music from morning till the television came on at 4 and we were allowed space to be creative. In other words, we never went anywhere, so our boredom drove us to acting plays and composing songs.

    I studied Law in the University of Jos and went to Lagos Law School. Law broadened my mind and formed the basis on which other things took shape for me.

    Other than that, I have years of experience and lessons learnt from mistakes made.

    Are there things people do that upset you?

    Most of the things that annoy me happen on the road, especially because I feel the way we drive in Nigeria is an indication of our ‘every man for himself’ mindset. We don’t care about the person in the next car as long as we get to where we’re going. My friends say I have road rage (I don’t agree with them).

    I hate to see people intentionally do stupid things like run a red light, park in the middle of the road, or drive recklessly. When I see those things, my I-Too-Know comes out. I recently, for example, saw a truck from a popular bottled water company drive ‘uselessly’ I got their number from the back of the truck and reported the number plate. I feel the need to be a road marshal.

    When you come home from work, what special dish would you prepare and why?

    I always have ogbono soup in my house because we all love it. I make ogbono in my biggest pot!

    What can you not stand about Nigerian entertainers?

    I do not know if there’s something I can’t stand. Everybody has his life to live. We just need to remember that the industry is fickle and so is life.

    I would really like to see less nudity in our videos. We do not need naked girls to sell a video. We need to be a little more creative. Also, I’d really love for more quality music to get airplay.

    How has married life been treating you?

    Married life has been good. Like every relationship, it has its ups and downs but my husband is a kind and thoughtful man who lets me be myself. I feel blessed and I’m really grateful for him.

    I know that there’s something beautiful about the intimacy that marriage brings. I think everybody should have someone who you know is your ‘person’ for life. And two heads are better than one, so in as far as the marriage relationship makes you a better person, why not?

    Tell us about your childhood, what are your most fond memories…what do you miss?

    I miss the innocence and carefree life of childhood even though I would not go back.

    I love where my life is at right now. I miss my dad who died in 1997. I feel like we would have been best friends, and he would have been a great granddad.

    What values do you want to pass on to your children?

    I would like for my child to be confident and self-assured. To know the difference between right and wrong and be brave enough to do what’s right. Above all, I’d like her to fear God and be true to herself.

    How did you start Taruwa?

    Taruwa started in August, 2007 and it was because we saw a need for stages that would let upcoming artistes express and sharpen their talents, also one that would let corporate workers who love and have a talent for arts express themselves where they would not at work.

    It was something I needed too because I love the arts desperately. My life’s calling is in the arts.

    The day Taruwa was conceived, I went with Sage (the Spoken word Poet) to Bogobiri and as soon as I saw it I knew it was the venue. I spoke with Chike and he was gracious to let us use it. The story can never be complete without Bogobiri.

    On the day of the first Taruwa, we were only 7 in attendance.