Davido feature on Washington Post Article - 'Is this the year that African music will conquer the United States?'. The Article, the popular news room gushes about the Nigerian Born superstar, along side Wizkid.
Washington Post Article Below
David Adedeji Adeleke, a.k.a. rapper, singer
and producer Davido: “Most music that comes out these days has our
elements already in it, so why wouldn’t the people love African music?”
(Tom Oxley)
Whether it’s through hip-hop, R&B, Top 40 radio or Internet
memes, Drake is a ubiquitous presence on our cultural landscape. Yet for
all of his inescapable hits in the past few years (“Hotline Bling,”
“Started From the Bottom,” guesting on Rihanna’s “Work,” to name a few),
it was only in May that Drake finally topped the Billboard charts, with
the bubbling, shuffling beat of “One Dance.” And while Drake is known
to assist rising stars such as Migos and iloveMakonnen, on “One Dance,”
he was the one who got a boost, from singer Ayodeji Ibrahim Balogun,
better known as Wizkid.
All but unknown in the United States,
Wizkid is a star in his native Nigeria and a major force behind
Afrobeats, a fidgety musical hybrid mashing Afro-pop, Caribbean soca and
American hip-hop (not to be confused with Afrobeat, the genre pioneered
by Fela Kuti that has a heavier, more driving beat).
Nigeria has a long
musical heritage, including Fela, King Sunny Ade and William Onyeabor.
But in singing a verse on “One Dance,” Wizkid became the first Nigerian
artist to land on the U.S. charts, as well as the first to top them. And
don’t think it’s an anomaly. Along with fellow Nigerian rapper and
singer Davido, South Africa’s Black Coffee (who became the first South
African to win a BET Award this year), Ghana’s Sarkodie or Ayo Jay,
African artists of all stripes might soon become permanent fixtures on
both the U.S. pop charts and in the dance music underground.
“Most music that comes out these days has our elements already in it, so
why wouldn’t the people love African music?” said David Adedeji
Adeleke, a.k.a. Davido. He’s a superstar in Africa who recently
co-headlined alongside Wizkid at the One Africa Festival, a huge
coming-out concert at Brooklyn’s Barclays Center. The showcase included
Ghana dance hall singer Stonebwoy and Fela’s son Seun Kuti. There was
also a strong Afro-Caribbean connection, as Nigerian singer Timaya was
joined onstage by the Trinidadian “King of Soca,” Machel Montano. And
even though some of the songs might not have registered to the everyday
U.S. music fan, elements of that African sound definitely felt familiar.
Label it Afrobeats, tropical house or dance hall lite, but turn on
the radio now and the shuffling, shimmering, deliciously weightless
syncopated beat that underpins modern African pop bobs to the surface of
any number of recent hits, such as Justin Bieber’s “What Do You Mean,”
Rihanna’s “Work” and Alicia Keys’ “In Common.” When Keys performed her
hit at the Democratic National Convention last month, it meant that
Afrobeats had sneaked onto the national stage.
If you follow Keys on Instagram, you’ve already seen her shimmying poolside to Wizkid,
so it seemed inevitable that she would absorb that sundress-light sound
into her music. A 15-time Grammy Award winner, Keys also tapped South
African producer Black Coffee to give “In Common” a Mbaqanga twist, and
she’s now working with him on new music.
Her husband, hip-hop producer Swizz Beatz, is also a fan, and at One
Africa he joined Wizkid onstage. Together, they ran through Wizkid’s
playlist of Nigerian hits, as well as some of Beatz’s biggest tracks,
including Jay-Z’s “Onto the Next One” and DMX’s “Party Up (Up in Here).”
And even though Afrobeats is decidedly more nimble with its beats and
breezy with its melodies than hip-hop’s heavy-hitting meter, the two
mixed effortlessly. And the ritzy braggadocio of the latter carried
across the ocean intact, with Wizkid’s lines boasting about Prada, Dolce
& Gabbana and that “my girl wear designer.”
Even outside of
shows in giant sporting arenas, ambitious African music is also making
inroads in the U.S. and European underground. Addis Ababa-based
electronic producer Mikael Seifu released his debut effort, Zelalem, a
forward-thinking fusion of traditional Ethiopian instrumentation — such
as the washint wooden flute and masenqo (a one-string bowed lute) —
along with dubstep-indebted beats. And South Africa’s Culoe De Song, who
caused a sensation in Berlin clubs when he dropped his first deep-house
single, “The Bright Forest” in 2009, has been a fixture on the European
club scene and at U.S. festivals.
“The crowds in South Africa really enjoy the warm sound of house
music, and we have a big radio culture for house music there,” Culoe De
Song said. “In Europe, they have a huge clubbing culture that’s not
necessarily driven by the radio, and the culture originates strictly
from the underground and then goes outward.”
Culoe
de Song’s ambitious concept album “Washa” is about a dystopian future
world destroyed by pollution and greed and redeemed by music. (Courtesy
of Culoe de Song)
And as tracks make ripples in Europe,
attuned U.S. DJs and dance fans pick up on it. For de Song, the
challenge is in straddling both worlds. On the eve of releasing his
ambitious, 18-track, 90-minute concept album, “Washa” (about a dystopian
future world destroyed by pollution and greed but redeemed by music) he
had just played a well-received set at a superclub in Ibiza.
When
“Washa” came out in South Africa, it was No. 2, behind BeyoncĂ©’s
“Lemonade.” Although his darker, more abstract sound might not cross
over to the United States the way African pop singers might, he still
thinks there’s a huge audience here that appreciates it: “A lot of
tracks I DJ are by African producers, and American crowds definitely
react to it,” De Song said.

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