On “Chvmeleon”, Alpha Ojini Aims to Please, And He Hasn’t Missed Yet
(Words: Danie Rayn) Rapper, songwriter, and record producer Alpha Ojini’s latest project Chvmeleon one that lives up to its name. Set to confessional...
Read MoreAyuu Returns With New Project, “AYÜÜNIVERSE”
Ayuu is an artist and songwriter based in Abuja. His new project is 15 tracks long, with the project’s roll out themed after the award winning movie...
Read MoreLaughter, Tears and Goosebumps: A Lyrical Guide to Fireboy DML’s Debut Album
(Words by Boma Praisegeorge) At 11:24pm last night, one of the hottest artists on the Nigerian music scene announced on Twitter that he had given us...
Read MoreHow the acceptance of songwriters ushered in a new wave for Nigerian acts
(Words by Chibundu Egboh) These days, songwriters are accepted in the Nigerian music industry with a warm embrace. Although, it wasn’t always this...
Read MoreMeet T’neeya, Pan-African Songstress Extraordinaire
T’neeya is a Cameroonian-born singer and songwriter currently based in Ghana. While growing up in Douala and Limbe, Cameroon music (Makoussa,...
Read MoreSarz and WurlD’s “I Love Girls With Trobul” Marks a Shift in Homegrown Sounds
Sometime during the summer of 2018, Sarz introduced Nigerian music listeners to a sound they didn’t believe could come out of their country. Or even...
Read MoreAYLØ On Riding His Own Wave and Creating a Musical Identity
Over the years, I’ve come across an interesting variety of music, especially as a new dawn of alternative sounds came upon us, the listeners, as a...
Read MoreSuté Iwar Shares New EP, “Jericho Rose”
Sute drops new EP “Jericho Rose”, few months after he dropped his album “Paradise”. Sute is a Nigerian recording artiste, producer and saxophonist....
Read MoreSute Iwar discusses artistry and the need for self belief
Music, along with other forms of self expression and creativity, is as subjective a phenomenon as they come, and it’s not any less different in...
Read MoreEnjoy Your Life: Lady Donli’s Sweet-Sounding Time Machine
Living in an African home, we grew up listening mostly to music our parents loved, either on drives to school or on lazy Saturday mornings. On her...
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