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Ahmed Durojaiye, popularly known as Alasari.Born in 1965, Ahmed Alasari was one of the contemporary A-list Yoruba actors...
15/08/2021

Ahmed Durojaiye, popularly known as Alasari.

Born in 1965, Ahmed Alasari was one of the contemporary A-list Yoruba actors, he became famous for his roles in these movies: Oyin Tokoro ( 2005) and Ologbo Iya Ijebu (2007).

The talented actor cm broadcaster died in an auto crash on Sunday, March 20, 2011. His newly acquired black Toyota jeep somersaulted at Onipepeye, along Abeokuta/Lagos Expressway. He was said to be on his way to Lagos for the television promotional show of his last movie entitled, Iyanu.

The day he was buried on March 25, it didn't rain but it poured heavily, colleagues, market women, transporters, students, visitors and residents all thronged to his home at Ita Elega area of Abeokuta.

He left behind two wives and five children.

Five years after his death, one of his widows, Adeola was crushed to death by a truck in the Adatan area of Abeokuta.

May his gentle soul continue to rest in peace.

Madam Emumejiakpo Henrietta Kosoko, late wife of veteran Yorùbá actor, Ọmọba Jide Kosoko.She was an A-list and warm-hear...
15/08/2021

Madam Emumejiakpo Henrietta Kosoko, late wife of veteran Yorùbá actor, Ọmọba Jide Kosoko.

She was an A-list and warm-hearted actress who starred in both Yorùbá and English movies.

Originally from Delta State, she was raised in Mushin and trained as a caterer before going into acting. It was said that her husband Jide Kosoko influenced her to go into acting full time.
She came into the limelight in 1995 after starring in a movie titled, ‘Omolade’ as well as an English one named ‘Onome’.

She was reportedly involved in a ghastly motor accident along Sagamu-Abeokuta road in 2015. Barely one year after Madam Henrietta died on June 6, 2016, she slumped at home and was rushed to the hospital where she was confirmed dead.

Death is a reminder that all that belongs to us in this life is our flesh.

May she continue to rest in peace.

Sunny Ade, legendary Juju musician blessed by Ooni Aderemi during a visit to the palace.
15/08/2021

Sunny Ade, legendary Juju musician blessed by Ooni Aderemi during a visit to the palace.

A very rare photo of the legendary Yusufu Olatunji. Ajao Yusufu Ojurongbe who died in 1978 popularized the Sakara genre....
08/08/2021

A very rare photo of the legendary Yusufu Olatunji. Ajao Yusufu Ojurongbe who died in 1978 popularized the Sakara genre. There are very few photographs of Olatunji captured during the performance. Pictures taken during his lifetime must have been colourized. This photo was taken circa 1972. Only the artist impression image of Abibu Oluwa who pioneered the genre is available. Abibu Oluwa died in 1964.

George Folunsho "Ginger" Johnson (1916 – July 15, 1975) was a Nigerian percussionist and bandleader who was a prominent ...
08/08/2021

George Folunsho "Ginger" Johnson (1916 – July 15, 1975) was a Nigerian percussionist and bandleader who was a prominent musician in London from the 1950s to the early 1970s. He led Ginger Johnson and His African Messengers and recorded and performed with Edmundo Ros, The Rolling Stones, Ronnie Scott and Quincy Jones among many others.

Nigerian multi-instrumentalist, musician, composer, and pioneer of the Afrobeat music genre Fela Kuti (1938 - 1997) in a...
08/08/2021

Nigerian multi-instrumentalist, musician, composer, and pioneer of the Afrobeat music genre Fela Kuti (1938 - 1997) in a hotel room, UK, 6th January 1984. (Photo by Mike Moore/Daily

Breaking News: Veteran Nollywood Actress, Rachel Oniga, Is Dead
31/07/2021

Breaking News: Veteran Nollywood Actress, Rachel Oniga, Is Dead

Veteran actress Rachel Oniga, a highly respected Nollywood actress, has been confirmed dead.

Prominent Nollywood actor, Olumide Bakare.He was born on November 26, 1953, he began his acting career in the sitcom Kok...
31/07/2021

Prominent Nollywood actor, Olumide Bakare.

He was born on November 26, 1953, he began his acting career in the sitcom Koko Close where he featured as Chief Koko with the Nigerian Television Authority (NTA).

He was described as a devoted Christian after he gave his life to Christ in 1998. He was notable for always playing the roles of Chief (a wealthy man) or Sugar daddy. He was part of many award-winning film projects such as Edun ara, Maami, Last flight to Abuja, Kofo the First Lady, Ise Onise and many more.

Bakare died from a disease diagnosed as Dissecting Aortic Aneurysm and Pulmonary Embolism on April 22, 2017.

May his gentle soul rest in peace.

ASISAT LAMINA OSHOALA THE FIRST AFRICAN AND NIGERIAN TO WIN WOMEN’S CHAMPIONS LEAGUE TITLEAsisat Lamina Oshoala born 9 O...
31/07/2021

ASISAT LAMINA OSHOALA

THE FIRST AFRICAN AND NIGERIAN TO WIN WOMEN’S CHAMPIONS LEAGUE TITLE

Asisat Lamina Oshoala born 9 October 1994 in Ikorodu,Nigeria.She’s a professional footballer who plays as a striker for both Spanish side FC Barcelona Femení in the Primera División and captains the Nigerian national team. Four-time African Women's Footballer of the Year winner, Oshoala was named BBC Women's Footballer of the Year in 2015.

Without her parents’ support, She says she had to hide to play football with her friends after school.
It was only her grandmother who is late now that supported her passion for football, often covering for her anytime she went out to play football.

FC Robo, a female club took a chance on her and that was when her story changed. She went on to play for Rivers Angels in Nigeria before she got her big break by signing for Liverpool Ladies.
She finally got her parent’s approval when she won the Golden Ball and Golden Boot of the 2014 FIFA U20’s Women’s World Cup. Since then, She has won the BBC Women’s Footballer of the Year (2015) and has four African Women’s Player of the Year awards to her name.

Oshoala previously played for English clubs Arsenal and Liverpool, Chinese club Dailan, and Nigerian clubs Rivers Angels and FC Robo. She won the 2015 FA Women's Cup with Arsenal; two league championships and a cup title with Dalian; and the 2019–20 Copa de la Reina and 2019–20 Supercopa de España Femenina with Barcelona. She was the first African (and Nigerian) player to score a goal in a UEFA Women's Champions League final and has helped Barcelona reach the semi-finals three consecutive years and one final.

Oshoala was the highest goal scorer at the 2014 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup and was named the best player at the tournament. She was also named best player and second top goalscorer with the Super Falcons team who won the 2014 African Women's Championship.

Asisat Oshoala was named the EaglesTracker Nigeria Women’s Most Valuable Player of the Season in 2020/2021
On 16 May 2021, Asisat Oshoala becomes the first Nigerian and African woman to win the Champions League. She is indeed an epitomised Ben Carson who never allowed his background to hold his back on the ground by going against all odds in spite of being raised in the slum.

In September 2014, Oshoala was made a Member of the Order of the Niger by President of Nigeria Goodluck Jonathan. In 2021, she was named to Forbes 30 Under 30.

Continue to make us proud.

BIOGRAPHY OF THE FUJI MAESTRO ADEWALE AKA MR. JOHNSON.Here is Dr Adewale Ayuba, the Bonsue Fuji king. This is his first ...
24/07/2021

BIOGRAPHY OF THE FUJI MAESTRO ADEWALE AKA MR. JOHNSON.

Here is Dr Adewale Ayuba, the Bonsue Fuji king. This is his first outing at Iperu Remo, on the 26th November 1979. He was then known as Sir Sunny Ayuba & his Ereke Fuji.

"Mr Johnson" redirects here. For other uses, see Mr Johnson (disambiguation).
Adewale Ayuba, born on 6 May 1966, commonly known as Mr Johnson, is a Nigerian singer known for singing Fuji music.

Adewale Ayuba, popularly is known as Ayuba, Mr Johnson, and the Bonsue-fuji maestro was born on 6 May 1966 in Ikenne Remo, Ogun State, Nigeria. He grew up as a child singer, and by the age of eight, he had started singing at local musical competitions and fiestas in Ikenne. This led to him pursuing music as a career after his secondary school education at Remo Secondary School, Sagamu, Ogun State.

Although he had gained admission to study Architecture at the Ogun State Polytechnic in Abeokuta, his music career took centre stage. To carve a niche for himself, he released his first album Ibere (Beginning) at the age of 17 and as a result, he rose rapidly in the Fuji music scene. In early 1990, Ayuba signed with Sony Music (Nigerian) to record an album, Bubble, which was released in 1991 and brought Ayuba into international prominence. Bubble marked the first time in history that a Fuji Music album gained widespread recognition, topping music charts for six consecutive months and winning multiple awards at the Nigerian Music Awards (NMA). It also won Ayuba the coveted Artiste of the Year Awards, including the Album of the Year Award, Song of the Year Award, and Best Fuji Album of the Year Award—four in all.[citation needed] With the success of Bubble, Ayuba hit the pinnacle of his career in Nigeria.

Ayuba's high-tech instrumentation and distinct voice changed the face of Fuji Music. For the first time in History, the Nigerian Elite, who until then had ignored Fuji Music, embraced it. After the success of Bubble, Ayuba released a follow-up album, Mr Johnson Play For Me (also on the Sony Music Nigeria label), which also became an instant success in 1992. In 1993, Ayuba was signed to Premier Music (Nigeria) before embarking on his first West Africa coast tour, performing in several African countries. The success of this tour led to his first US tour, also in 1993, during which Ayuba performed in over ten states. He also successfully performed at the world-renowned New Orleans Jazz Festival. In addition, he was awarded the Key to the City of Providence, Rhode Island by its mayor after two successful concerts there. His Los Angeles debut was also a success, and C.C. Smith of Los Angeles Weekly Magazine wrote that "Ayuba bases his Fuji on two elemental forces—rhythm, and the human voice—to create a compelling, enchanting and powerful sound. Expect frenzied dancing style and colourful costumes, exultant fans and enough talking drums and percussion to remedy even a terminal case of sensory deprivation."

After his return in 1993, Ayuba released another chart-topping album, Buggle D, on the Premier Music (Nigeria) label. It gained even more recognition than Bubble and won multiple awards at the Fame Music Awards, topping the music chart for several months. In 1994, Ayuba took a bold step with a vision to "[internationalize] Fuji Music" and toured the UK and the US with his band. He recorded while in America in 1995, and he performed at various international concerts including the 1996 Summer State Concerts in New York, the African Mondo Concerts of 1996 and 1997, the New Orleans Jazz Festival of 1997, the 1997 International Festival in Houston, Texas, and the Black Entertainment Television Jazz USA Concert. Ayuba was signed by a US-based Q-disc Record Company for a year contract and released Fuji Time on the company's label in 1996. In 1997, he released Fuji Dub on the Agogo Music Label in London.

1970’s -A scene from the popular TV Show that defined at least two generations of Nigerians -The Village Headmaster crea...
24/07/2021

1970’s -A scene from the popular TV Show that defined at least two generations of Nigerians -The Village Headmaster created by Segun Olusola. The drama series was Nigeria’s longest-running television soap opera showed on the country’s National television channel, NTA from 1968 to 1988. It starred actors like Ted Mukoro, Justus Esiri, Jab Adu, Funsho Adeolu, Dejumo Lewis, Wole Amele, Femi Robinson, Ibidun Allison and Elsie Olusola

Pictured are Oja Village School Teachers L-R: Mr Fadele(Dele Osawe), Mr Oghene(Melvin Obriango) Mr Garuba(Joe Layode)

If I call him Tajudeen Adeoye, many people may not know who I am talking about. But the moment I mention Abija, tongues ...
24/07/2021

If I call him Tajudeen Adeoye, many people may not know who I am talking about. But the moment I mention Abija, tongues will start wagging in his praise.

The teenagers of today may not really know him much, but those in their 30s upwards have had more than enough of Abijah's prowess when it comes to acting in Yoruba epic movies.

Somebody described him as the daredevil actor robed in charm-riddled costume; horn in hand, commanding fire and brimstones on his enemies, especially the ‘witches' in movies.
If Abija is not the lead warrior in any movie back then, many people may decide not to watch it. That's to tell you how much love people had for him back in the day.

Abijawarabiekun made our days as kids. We grew up seeing him on our black and white television screens until the days of colour TVs.
From him, many of us learn some incantations and movie actions [laughs]. The ‘butter kids' will not understand this - Those days, after watching Abija films, we will gather somewhere to start our own edition of the movie. Someone will be Abija and another person may be Fadeyi oloro or Lalude or Sokoti or Arakangudu, Dagunro, Ogunjimi and many others; then we start spewing incantations like warriors. What nostalgia!

Abija doesn't die in movies. He is always the winner of all battles and that's why we all kids would want to address themselves as Abija.

At 23, Abija joined the world of make-believe, having been inspired by the likes of late Hubert Ogunde.

However, Abija is not living as expected. There is no money attached to his fame. The many roles he played in movies did not translate to opulence.

At a time, the veteran actor said he did not have his own house.

What a revelation! Isn't that unspeakable?

Though some well-meaning individuals have been coming to his rescue, especially after he survived a fatal auto accident five years ago.

People teased him as the first person to use a mobile phone. That's because Abija in those days used to have an Ado (spiritual gourd) in his pocket with which he communicated with his deity called Ajan. I know many people can relate.

Abija just marked his 63rd birthday on March 22.

Veteran, thanks for your enormous contributions to the Yoruba movie industry. Thanks for laying the foundation for many young actors.

You are an inspiration to the upcoming ones. You're a promoter of Yoruba arts and culture. You are a symbol of what the Yoruba ancients days represent.

Thanks for being our pride. I wish you can come back to our screens again like in those days.

May you live long and reap the fruits of your labour. We love you baba.

You have written your name in gold, not on paper, but in our hearts and nothing can erase that. Much love forever.

Please share this article to celebrate a veteran.

Writer: Anonymous

Isreal Adesanya is 32, Quick Facts about Him
23/07/2021

Isreal Adesanya is 32, Quick Facts about Him

- He's Full Names are Israel Mobolaji Temitayo Odunayo Oluwafemi Owolabi Adesanya - He is the first of five children ( Deborah Adesanya,...

The Story of the Epic Battle Between King Sunny Ade and Chief Bolarinwa Abioro.It was in 1974 that the news broke. Chief...
18/07/2021

The Story of the Epic Battle Between King Sunny Ade and Chief Bolarinwa Abioro.

It was in 1974 that the news broke. Chief Bolarinwa Abioro, the Balogun of Ipokia, the Chairman of African Songs Limited, had taken his star musician to court! Everyone who knew KSA knew Abioro. Everyone who knew Abioro knew Sunday Adeniyi. Sunny was the son. Abioro was the father. What could have gone wrong between father and son?

KSA was the second artist to be signed on to the stable of African Songs Limited. Ayinde Bakare was the first. Sikiru Ayinde Barrister was the third. Like most creative people, young Sunny Ade was more concerned about his passion and less concerned about the business aspect of music. His passion was to play music and to excel as a musician.

It was enough that Abioro – one of the biggest men in the music industry at the time – was ready to promote him. They brought documents for Sunny and his band boys to sign. They called it a contract. It could have been called any other name for all that KSA cared about. Won ni ko wa je saara, o ni ojo ti wonu ju. Se ata ni won ni ko mu wa ni, abi iyo. You are invited to a free feast, you are complaining about the short notice, are they asking you to bring salt or pepper? Sunny Ade and his boys didn’t hesitate. It is doubtful if any of them read what the contract said. The most important thing was that they were going to become recording artists. Sunny signed. His band boys signed. Everybody was happy.

The contract was for 5 years. However, before its expiration, KSA had become a household name. His album, Challenge Cup, sold in excess of 500,000 copies. It was certain that King Sunny Ade was going to dominate the music scene for a very long time to come. African Songs Ltd knew a good product when it saw one. The management of the company didn’t wait for the first contract to expire before they brought a new contract.

The new agreement was carefully worded. KSA and his band boys agreed to perform and record exclusively for ASL u a period of five years. ASL had full copyrights to all compositions and recordings of Sunny Ade. ASL was entitled to the sole right of production, reproduction, and use of King Sunny Ade’s performance throughout the world. That was not all. During the period of the agreement, KSA was prohibited from rendering any performance whatsoever to himself, any company or group of persons. The contract also stipulated that ASL had the option to renew the agreement at its expiration for a further term of two years or for any longer period. Sunny Ade had no such right.

That was not all. On the sale of every album which price was then fixed at N6.00, KSA and his boys were entitled to a princely sum of 20 kobo. Yes, you read that right. African Songs would go home with the remaining N5. 80 kobo. Onigegewura’s mathematics has never been good. He is just an amateur historian. You can do the sum yourself.
Still basking in the euphoria of his growing fame, Sunny gratefully signed again. His band boys signed. 20 kobo was still something. Orogun iya re da sokoto fun o, o ni ko bale, melo ni iya to bi o da fun o? You are complaining that the trousers made for you by your stepmother were not long enough, where is the one your own mother made for you? They were expecting their 20 kobo royalty on every album. Well, when the time came for actual payment, it was then discovered that mathematically and arithmetically, it was not supposed to be 20 kobo. They had not factored in the cost of publicity and promotion! And since it was the artiste that was being promoted, he must be the one to bear the cost! After the addition and subtraction, Sunny was given 15 kobo per album.

KSA was not Chike Obi, the mathematician. But he knew that 20 kobo and 15 kobo were not the same things. Compared with his contemporaries in the music industry, KSA realized that he was holding the short end of the stick. His colleague, Baba Commander, Chief Ebenezer Obey was earning as high as 70 kobo per album. Others were earning between 35 kobo and 60 kobo.

That was when Sunny decided to ask Chief Abioro for a raise of the royalty payment. The chairman listened patiently to KSA and his colleagues. He was nodding as they canvassed one reason after another why a raise was in order. When they finished, Chief Abioro flipped open a file he had on his table. He brought out a bundle of documents. Even from where he was seated across the table, Sunny saw that it was a copy of the contract he signed. “An agreement is an agreement. It is a binding contract!” The chief informed them. “This is what you signed. This is what you are entitled to! No more, No less.” He returned the documents to the file. Case dismissed.

But Sunny was not done. “Chief, this is not about the contract. You are our father. Our request is for adequate compensation! Let’s leave the contract aside.” Chief Abioro looked at the young star the way a parent looks at a child asking for another candy. “Leave the contract aside? We should leave the contract aside?” The chairman asked incredulously. “You know, it would be nice to leave the contract aside. But you know what? That would be illegal!”
Haba! Illegality ke! . It was then that someone brought up the idea of requesting some of his friends to plead their case. Sunny agreed. After all, Eni ti o mo oju Ogun, ni pa obi ni ‘re. It is the person who is conversant with Ogun, the god of iron, that is usually given the duty to administer its rites. They went to meet Prince Okunade Sijuwade who would later become the Ooni of Ife. They also met with Chief Afolabi Joseph. Even Chief Ebenezer Obey was also requested to intervene as well as Chief Nurudeen Alowonle.

The eminent persons appeared in the court of the Balogun of Ipokia as ‘amici curiae’ on behalf of the musicians. Amici curiae are lawyers invited by the judge(s) to assist in filling briefs that may be helpful to the court in deciding a case. Our eminent persons argued their case like experienced advocates. They cited relevant sections of the unwritten Yoruba constitution. They cited Yoruba proverbs. They made reference to the story of Oduduwa. The presiding chairman listened to their submissions and summarily dismissed the case. Contract is contract!

Chief did not only dismiss the request for a raise. He opened another file on his table and brought out a new set of documents. Your guess is right! A new five-year contract! By now, Sunny Ade had learnt enough law. He had become a professional mathematician. He had obtained his Master of Business Administration from practical experience. He knew the implication of putting pen to paper. He applied for an adjournment.

The King of African Beats found himself in a quandary. His new songs were ready but Chief had threatened not to release any new album until he signed the new contract. And KSA was not ready to sign any new contract until the issue of royalty was resolved.

KSA remembered his grandmother’s proverb. Ti abiku ba gbon ogbon ati ku ni igba erun, iya abiku a gbon ogbon ati sin oku e si etido. If an abiku decided to die during the dry season when he knew that the ground would be hard to dig, his parents would also decide to bury him by the riverside where the ground would not be hard to dig.

Sunny Ade decided to release his record with another company. His plan was to use the album to bargain for a better deal with African Songs. Instead of the measly 20 kobo, he was confident that the chairman would be ready to pay him at least N1.00 per copy. The album was recorded in Nigeria but taken to London for mixing. What Sunny Ade did not know was that Chief Abioro was a master at the game. Before Sunny could get a copy of his own album, Chief Abioro was already in possession of the new record.

Baba Ibeji was composing fresh materials at home when the court bailiffs arrived. They served him with an order of interim injunction! The court order was as comprehensive as it was broad. Sunny Ade was prohibited from sale, distribution, marketing, dealing, etc. etc. of the record. He read the order again. Even without being a lawyer, he knew the implication of the document he was holding.

With palpable emotion, his mind went back to how he came to Lagos from Abeokuta with only one shilling and eighteen pence! He remembered his years with Baba Sala. He recalled how he got stranded with Baba Sala’s travelling theatre in Jebba and Kano. How he did not see his mother for two years whilst he suffered to make it as a musician. He recalled how his first album sold only 13 copies. Now when he was at the threshold of success, this court order! With grim determination, he knew he couldn’t afford to quit.

He remembered his first day at Oshodi when he missed his way trying to locate Moses Olaiya’s house and how he was directed instead to Dr Victor Olaiya at Tinubu. He recalled how he knelt down in the dust of Oshodi to pray. Immediately he knew what he must do. Sunny went down on his knees and with an emotional voice, he prayed and prayed. It was not the Sunday Adeniyi that knelt down to pray that stood up. He had become empowered. He had become emboldened. That same evening, he established his own label.
Sunny Alade Records was born! He didn’t bother to sit down again. He remembered the threat of Chief Abioro to bring him down at all cost. He needed a lawyer who knew his law and who would be prepared to fight his cause against the Magnate. He went off in search of Gani Fawehinmi.

Gani collected the court papers and looked at the claims. He looked at his client. He looked again at the claims. Chief Abioro was not leaving anything to chance. He knew what he wanted from the court. His lawyer had read the agreement between African Songs Limited and Sunday Adeniyi.

Chief Abioro wanted only four things from the court: a declaration that the agreement between ASL and Sunday Adeniyi and his boys was still subsisting; an injunction restraining Sunny Ade from distributing or selling the record; an account of all sales of the record; and N1 million for breach of contract.
I hope you are not sneering at the N1 million as being ‘chicken change’. Remember this was in 1974. The price of a brand new Volkswagen Beetle car was about N500 at that time. N1 million in 1974 was a princely sum!

On the day of the trial, the court was filled to capacity. Gani Fawehinmi was armed with every conceivable legal authority. The law books he brought to the court were more than enough to open a library. There were books on Contracts. There were books on Human Rights. There were volumes on Intellectual Property. Gani even brought some books on Slave Trade.

The first application Gani brought before the court was for an order to compel African Songs to produce its statement of account over the preceding three years. The court granted the order. It was discovered that the company was making almost N900,000 every year from the sale of Sunny Ade Records. It was also discovered that the total sum that KSA received was N62,000 in the almost ten years he was with the company. How can you be asking me what is 900,000 divided by 62,000? I have told you that I’m not a mathematician. Please don’t ask me about percentages or fractions.

Gani did not forget to raise the issue of how 20kobo became 15 kobo. He also cross-examined Chief Abioro at length on the onerous terms contained in the contract. Gani put it to the chief that the contract was in restraint of trade and that it was, therefore, null and void as it amounted to the colonization of King Sunny Ade, a free citizen of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and a citizen of the Commonwealth!

My Lord Justice L. J. Dosunmu listened patiently to the parties. His Lordship also asked the witnesses some probing cases. The court thereafter adjourned the matter to February 14, 1975, for judgment. It did not even occur to the King of African Beats that the day was St. Valentine’s Day. His only preoccupation was to find out the direction in which the pendulum of justice was going to swing.

On February 14, people started arriving at the court as early as 7am. The court officials had a hectic time controlling the mammoth crowd that had come to court to witness the historic decision. In His Lordship’s judgment, Justice Dosunmu held that although some of the terms of the contract were stringent, that was not a ground for holding the contract invalid. In effect, the contract between ASL and KSA was therefore valid. As the court pronounced the validity of the contract, Sunny looked at his lawyer. Gani signalled to him to be calm, the court had only resolved one issue out of four.

With regard to the second claim, the court held that since the records in question had been distributed all over Nigeria, there was no way the court could order them to be recalled. The court, therefore, refused to restrain Sunny Ade and his marketer, M. Ola Kazim from distributing the album. A tiny smile crossed Sunny’s face.

You recall that Chief Abioro was asking for N1,000,000 as damages for breach of contract. The court ruled that for recording with another company during the subsistence of the contract, Sunny Ade was liable. He was asked to pay N300! Yes, Three Hundred Naira! From N1,000,000 to N300! Sunny smiled for the first time.

The court has found that the contract was still subsisting, KSA was ordered not to release another album pending the expiration of the contract with Chief Abioro’s company, which was due in six months. Six months! What am I going to be eating? Sunny thought. Apparently, this was the only part of the judgment that Anti Wura, Buroda Alani’s third wife must have heard, and heard wrongly too! As if reading Sunny Ade’s mind, Justice Dosunmu said he realized that Sunny Ade would need to eat and feed his family in the six months that the contract had to run. His Lordship, therefore, held that the injunction was limited to only recording of albums and that Sunny Ade was free to do live performances for fees. His Lordship said that this was in order to avoid a situation where the King of Music would starve or be compelled to go back to Chief Abioro.

The Judge had hardly risen before King Sunny Ade jumped up to hug his counsel. He was free! He gave Gani a bear hug. He had learnt his lesson. Creativity and Business must go hand in hand. Years later, the King of Music recalled: “The lesson I learnt from the episode is that if an artiste is churning out hit records, he needs to keep an eye on the business side of things. If not, he would be in a mess.

Sade AduHelen Fọláṣadé Adú was born in Ibadan, but her father was from Ekiti, Yorubaland in West Africa. She was the fir...
16/07/2021

Sade Adu

Helen Fọláṣadé Adú was born in Ibadan, but her father was from Ekiti, Yorubaland in West Africa. She was the first Yoruba to ever win a Grammy award.

She is also the most successful Solo Artist in British history to have over a 50million sales with 110 music albums.

She was born into a Yoruba Ethnic from West Africa. She is an English singer, songwriter, and actress, known as the lead singer of her eponymous band.

She has been credited as one of the most successful British female artists in history and is often recognised as an influence on contemporary music.

Biography
Born: 16 January 1959 (age 61 years), Ibadan, Oyo State, Yorubaland, West Africa
Spouse: Carlos Scola Pliego (m. 1989–1995)
Net worth: £50 million (2015)
Children: Izaak Theo Adu
Parents: Anne Hayes, Adebisi Abu
Pic: One-year-old Sade Adu, January 1960.

Hubert Ogunde, (born 1916, Ososa, near Ijebu-Ode, Yorubaland was a playwright, actor, theatre manager, and musician, who...
16/07/2021

Hubert Ogunde, (born 1916, Ososa, near Ijebu-Ode, Yorubaland was a playwright, actor, theatre manager, and musician, who was a pioneer in the field of African folk opera (drama in which music and dancing play a significant role). He was the founder of the Ogunde Concert Party (1945), the first professional theatrical company in Nigeria. Often regarded as the father of Nigerian theatre, Ogunde sought to reawaken interest in his country’s indigenous culture.

Ogunde’s first folk opera, The Garden of Eden and the Throne of God, was performed with success in 1944 while he was still a member of the Nigerian Police Force. It was produced under the patronage of an African Protestant sect, and it mixed biblical themes with the traditions of Yoruba dance-drama. His popularity was established throughout Nigeria by his timely play Strike and Hunger (performed 1946), which dramatized the general strike of 1945. In 1946 the name of Ogunde’s group was changed to the African Music Research Party, and in 1947 it became the Ogunde Theatre Company. Many of Ogunde’s early plays were attacks on colonialism, while those of his later works with political themes deplored interparty strife and government corruption within Nigeria. Yoruba theatre became secularized through his careful blending of astute political or social satire with elements of music hall routines and slapstick.

Ogunde’s most famous play, Yoruba Ronu (performed 1964; “Yorubas, Think!”), was such a biting attack on the premier of Nigeria’s Western region that his company was banned from the region—the first instance in post-independence Nigeria of literary censorship. The ban was lifted in 1966 by Nigeria’s new military government, and in that same year, the Ogunde Dance Company was formed. Otito Koro (performed 1965; “Truth is Bitter”) also satirizes political events in western Nigeria in 1963. An earlier play produced in 1946, The Tiger’s Empire, also marked the first instance in Yoruban theatre that women were billed to appear in a play as professional artists in their own right.

Ogunde’s technique was to sketch out the basic situation and plot, and then write down and rehearse only the songs of his plays. The dialogue was improvised, thus allowing the actors to adjust to their audience. The plays produced by his company usually reflected the prevailing political climate and interpreted for audiences the major issues and the aspirations of those in power.

His company performed with equal ease in remote villages and in metropolitan centres of Nigeria (as well as throughout West Africa). Many of Ogunde’s later folk operas were basically popular musicals featuring jazzy rhythms, fashionable dance routines, and contemporary satire. Through this format, he set an example for a successful commercial theatre and prepared audiences all over Nigeria for his followers. During the 1960s and ’70s, his plays became an important part of the urban pop culture of West Africa. Apart from his song 'Yoruba Ronu' (Yoruba please reflect) of the 1960s which was a hit, he also produced the indelible Aiye and Jaiyesimi. He sadly died in London, Eng
land on 4th of April, 1990.

A museum was opened at Ogun state, Yorubaland in 2015 to immortalise this icon.

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