State Of The Music, Why Nigerian artistes do ‘bad’ music
One of this country’s favorite discussions has been
on the subject of the quality of songwriting or lack of it, in Wizkid’s
songs.
After the release of his sophomore album,
“Ayo (Joy)” Nigerians were quick to point out that his songwriting is of
substandard quality. He had to change, they said. He needed to switch
the lyrics of his song, they said. The IQ of what he offers is crass and
needs revamping, they said.
That album, has not
left the iTunes charts for bestselling African projects since its
release, raking in, by our estimate, almost N100 million. The album is
winning, Wizkid is winning, using his lack of songwriting to break
barriers and become the only African pop star to hit the number 1 spot
for weeks on end, on the Billboard Hot 100 Charts.
Kiss Daniel's Performance With 9ice & 2Face Idibia At His 'New Era' Album Launch |
Why change a winning formula? Why switch a great
creative pattern for something this is uncertain? Why fix a thing that
is not broken?
It’s the same for everyone else.
You come into the industry, work your ass off to infuse top-shelf
artistry into your craft. Your songs fail to impress. People move on,
the general populace ignore your ways. Finally, you get the attention
with a good song, but it fails to spark an increase in your earnings.
Everyone points in your direction and says ‘you are a great singer’. On
twitter, and websites, you make multiple lists. But the money does not
match the hype. When it comes, it’s in trickles.
9ice and new act Mikol onset |
Small Doctor |
Then there’s the issue of the fans. An overwhelming
majority of good music fans fail to put their pockets where their mouth
is. Artistes are left to glow and wallow in their shallow recognition.
But they won’t commit to buying albums, streaming the songs, and paying
premium for content.
The good music artiste has no
choice to go pop and get the money bags rolling. It’s a business after
all, and the return on investment should be present for anything to make
sense and stay sustainable.
There’s hardly any
big bucks in Nigerian ‘good music’. Bad music has all the money, the
numbers, the fans, the fame, and the success stories. Until that
changes, it will become our reality.
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