Tag Archives: Nigeria

Nigerian Musician faces the death penalty for sharing his song on WhatsApp – help demand his release

According to Freemuse, as well as other media and international human rights organizations, Yahaya Sharif-Aminu was first arrested in March 2020, after audio messages of a song he wrote started circulating on WhatsApp.

Sharif-Aminu, a musician and follower of the Sufi Tijaniyyah Order, was charged with insulting the reigning religious creed in Nigeria and offending Islam.

The young musician is one of many artists around the world whose voice is feared by authorities, artists who are thus oppressed, arbitrarily arrested, and in the worst cases, sentenced to death or killed by fellow citizens.

This is a clear case of the violation of a fundamental human right: the freedom of artistic and religious expression.

Join us in calling for the immediate release of Yahaya and the dropping of all charges against him by signing this petition!

BANTU charged and relevant as ever on What Is Your Breaking Point?

It must take a rare kind of resolve to continue to lay down the marker with daring political views as Afrobeat mastersย BANTU have done over the years, particularly on their latest recordย What Is Your Breaking Point?

What Is Your Breaking Point? album cover.

This article was written by Gabriel Myers Hansen and originally published on the Music In Africa webpage under a Creative Commons License.

The 13-piece collectiveโ€™s new album, a brazen 10-track manifesto following 2020โ€™s Everybody Get Agenda and2017โ€™s Agberos International, not only strips back dire social circumstances that have bedevilled [insert African country] but also works as the soundtrack to an impending revolution.

What Is Your Breaking Point? is rooted in traditions originally plotted by Fela Kuti, and sees BANTU devotedly playing to the strengths and identity of Afrobeat. Mainly via the charisma of frontman Adรฉ Bantuโ€™s voice, the project bursts with the quintessential Fela-esque fury yet hopeful vision of Nigeria, driven by frantic percussion work, charged horn sections and biting allegories conveyed in English, West African pidgin, and Yoruba.

Shorn of filler verbiage or breathers, the collection invites listeners to engage with Africaโ€™s dynamic political landscape while underscoring the transformative muscle of music, diving headfirst into the key issues: corruption, blind imitation of Western culture, the troubling perpetuation of gender norms and the danger of remaining silent.

Largely, when Afrobeat takes on the โ€˜Sโ€™, it paints a vain and glamorous picture preoccupied with love, sex and other nightlife rituals. Take the consonant away, and itโ€™s serious business. What Is Your Breaking Point?, whose only guest is African-American rapper Akua Naru, does precisely this.

The feverishly paced โ€˜Wayo and Divisionโ€™ kicks things off, tackling an integrity deficit among Africaโ€™s leadership, which is often characterised by a strategy of deceit and division. โ€˜Japaโ€™ is a cautionary tale against the mass exodus of Africans to the West, highlighting the perils of illegal migration and the illusory promise of greener pastures. โ€œYou just dey run from frying pan to fire,โ€ a line goes. 

โ€˜Ten Times Backwardsโ€™ rues the crippling of many an African dream by regressive structures, while โ€˜Worm and Grassโ€™ returns to the topics of duplicity and manipulation among the ruling class. โ€˜Borrow Borrowโ€™ examines the aftereffects of Western imperialism, while sobering revelations on โ€˜Africa for Saleโ€™ summon more troubled sighs.

How much longer must this continue? When do we collectively decide that enough is enough? This is the focus of โ€˜Breaking Pointโ€™, and the question that shines throughout the project.

Focus track โ€˜Your Silenceโ€™, a sublime and reflective highlife (or Afrobeats) offering, resonates with the sentiments of German Lutheran pastor Martin Niemรถller, invoking a connection to Niemรถllerโ€™s famous quote on the Nazi atrocities. โ€œFirst they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out โ€“ because I was not a socialist. Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out โ€“ because I was not a trade unionist. Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out โ€“ because I was not a Jew. Then they came for me โ€“ and there was no one left to speak for me,โ€ Niemรถller mourns.

The song prompts introspection and encourages listeners to consider the consequences of silence in the face of injustice. โ€œThe silence no go protect you,โ€ is how BANTU puts it.

The project closes out with โ€˜We No Go Greeโ€™, which retains the urgent ardour it commences 45 minutes earlier. โ€œThe political elites have only been concerned with short-term benefits,โ€ Adรฉ declares in his parting message, although if you are an African, this goes without saying. โ€œWe must take back our freedom, our voices and our future.โ€

These days, commentary surrounding governance on the continent can feel like a broken record, seeing how poorly a number of African countries have been run for decades. And so, while this new project, a fearless Afrobeat album of political resilience, represents an urgent and valuable perspective on the problem with Africa’s administration, I wonder how many more BANTU albums must arrive in the coming years to catalyse true transformation. As Sam Cooke once sang, โ€œA change is gonโ€™ comeโ€, but when?

The answer remains vague, but until then, the struggle continues. Aluta continua!

The Kuti Clan Protesting Through Music, And Other Nigerians Who Sang Against Apartheid

Femi and Seun Kuti, have kept Fแบนlรก’s protest music alive.

Orlando Juliasโ€™ band (Nigeria). Image by Steve Terrell, September 26, 2015 (CC BY 2.0)

This article was written by Nwachukwu Egbunike and originally published by Global Voices on 31st of March 2022.


Nigerian musicians have been very vocal about social injustice in the country. The term protest music as a genre, which gained popular cultural validity in the 1970s, has continued to date. These songs fought military dictatorship, apartheid in South Africa, and police brutality, as part of the youth-led #EndSARS protests.

The father of Nigerian protest music

An artistic representation of Fแบนlรก Anรญkรบlรกpรฒ Kรบtรฌ. Image by Danny PiG uploaded to Flickr on September 11, 2012. (CC BY-SA 2.0)

Fแบนlรก Anรญkรบlรกpรฒ Kรบtรฌ (1938โ€“1997), the father of protest music in Nigeria, employed his distinctive Afrobeat genre with lyrics that were replete with โ€œsarcastic humor, rebellion against authority, and political consciousnessโ€ as a means of fighting social injustice, notes Titilayo Remilekun Osuagwu, a culture scholar in Nigeriaโ€™s University of Port Harcourt.

Fแบนlรกโ€™s genius lied in his conceptualization of the root causes of oppression. That’s why his music has remained โ€” to date โ€” a powerful tool in the โ€œsustenance of ongoing protests,โ€ asserts Olukayode โ€˜Segun Eesuola, a political science scholar in Nigeria’s University of Lagos. In the course of his over three decades-long musical career, he heightened the political consciousness of generations of Nigerian citizens. However, this attracted brutal visitations from security agents of successive Nigerian governments.

Understandably, most of Fแบนlรกโ€˜s music was directed against the excesses of successive military governments in the country. Nigeria was under military dictatorship for 29 years (from 1966 to 1979 and 1983 to 1999).

At the time of his death in 1997, Fแบนlรก fiery musical body of work had earned him a place โ€œin global consciousness as a quintessential โ€˜political musician,โ€™โ€ asserts Tejumola Olaniyan, professor of African Languages and Literature at the University of Wisconsin-Madison in his seminal book โ€œArrest the Music! Fela & His rebel art and politics.โ€

Femi and Seun Kuti, like father like sons

Fแบนlรก’s two sons, Femi and Seun, have inherited and โ€œcarried forwardโ€ their father’s passion for social justice through music.

Femi Kuti, performing at Warszawa Cross Culture Festival. Image by Henryk Kotowski via Wikimedia Commons, 25 September 2011 (CC BY-SA 3.0)

Femi Kuti, Fแบนlรก’s eldest son, is an accomplished Afrobeat musician and saxophonist in his own right. Femi’s songs like โ€œSorry Sorryโ€œ, โ€œWhat Will Tomorrow Bringโ€ and โ€œ’97โ€ โ€” do not spare Nigeria’s corrupt and incompetent rulers. For instance, in โ€œSorry Sorryโ€, Femi laments the hypocritical attempt by the ruling elites, who in secret destroy the nation but pretend at finding solutions in public:

“Politicians and soldiers hold meetings/they want to repair our country/ they behave as though/ they don’t know/ that they are the ones who spoilt our country.”

Femi, a multiple Grammy nominee, is as brash and impatient as his late father. In an interview with Vanguard, a Nigeria newspaper, in February 2011, he decimated Nigeria’s corrupt class: โ€œIt is very evident that things are very bad in our country; politicians keep stealing money, we donโ€™t have good roads, proper education, and potable water and so on. I canโ€™t accept that. The majority of Nigerians are suffering. I donโ€™t accept this and my father showed us a way to complain through music and that is what I am doing.โ€

Seun Kuti at the 2008 Marsatac Festival in Marseille, France. Image by Benoรฎt Derrier via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 2.0).

Fแบนlรก’s youngest son, Seun Kuti is a musician and social justice advocate. Seun was an active participant in the 2012 #OccupyNigeria protests against the gas price hikes. He was also involved in the 2020 #EndSARS protests.

Seun has been described as the โ€œPrince of Afrobeats,โ€ in the footsteps of his father, the king of Afrobeat. Toyin Falola, Nigerian historian and professor of African Studies further asserts that: โ€œSeunโ€™s alignment did not start recently. He showed an early interest in music, especially the type of music his father sings, and he started to perform alongside Fela and the Egypt 80 band when he was just nine years old. It would not be out of place to call that a prodigious act.โ€

Nigerian voices against Apartheid in South Africa

Cover of Sonny Okosun’s Vinyl record

Critical music against political leadership was not limited to military dictatorship alone.

Nigerian musicians like Sonny Okosun, Majek Fashek, Onyeka Onwenu โ€” and many others โ€” also protested against apartheid in South Africa, calling for the release of Nelson Mandela.

Sonny Okosun (1947โ€”2008), Nigeriaโ€™s highlife and reggae star, in โ€œPapaโ€™s Landโ€ (1977) and โ€œFire in Sowetoโ€ (1978) condemned the suppression of black South Africans by their apartheid governments.

Following in Okosunโ€™s footsteps was Nigeriaโ€™s guitarist and reggae star, Majek (Majekodunmi) Fashek (1963-2020) dedicated his song โ€œFree Africa, Free Mandelaโ€ to South Africaโ€™s Nelson Mandela, whom he described as a prisoner of conscience.

Onyeka Onwenu (Image credit from Onyeka Onwenu Facebook Fan Club)

However, one of the most endearing and emotional protest renditions against apartheid came from Nigeriaโ€™s singer, actress, and journalist Onyeka Onwenu in her song, โ€œWinnie Mandela.โ€ Onwenu described Winnie Mandela as the โ€œsoul of a nation, fighting to be free!โ€

Onwenu explained that she wrote the song after watching a documentary about the Mandelas, which moved her to tears. She โ€œidentifiedโ€ with Winnieโ€™s โ€œloneliness and some of her pain.โ€ During the sleepless night that followed, the Nigerian musician put her โ€œpain to a songโ€ to โ€œgive something back to Winnie for the sacrifice of her life to the Apartheid struggle,โ€ Onwenu wrote in April 2018.

Other Nigerians who sang against the social injustice of apartheid were Victor Essiet and the Mandators in the song โ€œApartheid.โ€