Thursday, June 30, 2011

"Lady of songs," Christy Essien-Igbokwe passes on at 51


By Adedayo Odulaja



One of Nigeria's music icons, Christy Essien Igbokwe is dead. The death of the elegant lady of songs who will be remembered for her popular tunes, the most popular of which is Seun Rere, a monster hit in the 1980s,was been confirmed dead today, Thursady, June 30, 2011. Known most notably as the “Lady of Songs,” Christy Essien Igbokwe, the pioneering President of the Performing Musicians Association of Nigeria, PMAN, passed on after being ill, a situation that lasted about three days.

Her last public outing was at the final edition of the Nigerian Idol event March this year. Essien was not only a singer in her lifetime of just a year after five decades, she was an also actress but her her taking to music early became the most recognised of her career path. She is reported to have released her first album titled Freedom back in 1976 when she was still in her teens.

Her other albums are 'One Understanding,''Patience,' 'Time Waits for No One,' 'Give Me A Chance,' and 'Ever Liked My Person’ released in 1981.

Just 51 at the time of her death, many Nigerians think she was older, having started out very early and attaining such enviable heights in her career back in the 80s. Many followers of the entertainment industry are shocked by her death and condolence wishes have continued to pour our on the various social networks. I pray god grants the loved ones she left behind the fortitude to bear the irreplaceable loss.

Mike Aremu, Kenny G, others in battle of the saxes






By Adedayo Odulaja


With the maiden edition of his jazz music explosion held in 2009 very successful and that of 2010 even better, popular saxophonist and one of Nigeria’s finest in the area of jazz music, Mike Aremu is set to make a bigger mark with this year’s edition.
Aptly fitted with the name, Sax Appeal, this year’s edition, to be held on Sunday, July 3 in Lagos, this will be the third in the series of what is gradually becoming an event of international proportion. To underscore this point is not difficult especially leaning that Sax Appeal 3 will feature multiple award-winning jazz legend, Kenny G, all the way from the United States of America.
The decision to bring Kenny G down to Nigeria, considered by many in the music circles as the impossible, according to the team of organisers of the event, is in line with Mike Aremu’s simple and clear vision of further raising the standard of music in the country by constantly bringing quality live music with multi talented artistes from home and abroad.
The event, already creating a lot of buzz in and outside the country, is put together by Mike Aremu in conjunction with Classic 93.7 FM, a radio station which plays classic tunes of legends as well as songs of years past.
At a press conference held in Lagos on Tuesday, June 21 at the new and fabulous Radisson Blu Hotel, Victoria Island in Lagos, Mike Aremu relayed the events that played out in the objective of planning Sax Appeal 3 which is being eagerly awaited. According to him, the planning for Sax Appeal 3 started just about a day or two after the second edition was held and one of the major factors that inspired such spirited efforts being put in is as a result of a promise he had made at the edition which held at MUSON Centre, Lagos.
And the reason he made such a promise is down to one fact: most of his peers and himself grew up listening to Kenny G as a dominant name among other jazz artistes and he simply realised that without Kenny G being involved, any kind of Sax Appeal he says he is doing is not up to scratch yet. And the manner with which Mike went all out to get Kenny G on board was incredible; it led many of the friends and team members around him to label him as stubborn but in the end, he braved all the odds and achieved his aim.
It is not for nothing that Kenny G, born Kenneth Bruce Gorelick in 1956, is so renowned and popular in the music world. This is down to the heights he has attained while doing what he knows how to do best, making his name as a foremost musician and adult contemporary and smooth jazz saxophonist. It was in his fourth album titled Duotones he achieved breakthrough success back in 1986. Today, Kenny G is yet the biggest-selling instrumental musician of the modern era with global sales exceeding 75 million albums in his career.
Born into a Jewish family in Seattle, Washington, Kenny G came into contact with a saxophone when he heard someone performing with one on The Ed Sullivan Show and started playing the saxophone in 1966 when he just was 10 years old.
He has since released many solo albums and collaborated with various artists including Andrea Bocelli, Whitney Houston, Peabo Bryson, Toni Braxton, DJ Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince, Natalie Cole, Steve Miller (which was the only time he appeared on a rock and roll album), Dudley Moore, Michael Bolton, Celine Dion and Aretha Franklin. He earned a place in the Guinness Book of World Records for playing the longest note ever recorded on a saxophone in 1997, using circular breathing. Kenny G held an E-flat for 45 minutes and 47 seconds at J&R Music World in New York City.
With the incredibly talented American on Sax Appeal, that is as big as it gets and the show promises to be a show-stopping one the king of Smooth Jazz come to town. But of course, Kenny G is not the only one to dazzle lovers of music come July 3, Kunle Ayo, Judith Sephuma, Yolanda Brown and Waje.
Sax Appeal 3 is bigger in terms of artistic content and steadily growing demand from the first edition has led to organizers seeking a larger venue to accommodate more people as the 2011 edition will hold at the prestigious new Expo Centre at Eko Hotel and Suites, Victoria Island, Lagos.
Yolanda Brown is a British jazz urban contemporary saxophonist and composer, who will be making her third appearance, having been part of the first two editions. Nigeria-born South Africa-based ace guitarist, Kunle Ayo, also an award-winning music star, will be making what is his own second appearance. Jazz and Afro pop singer, Judith Sephuma who is also coming from South Africa will also make her second appearance in a star-studded list of performers that include fast rising star, Waje.
In truth, the inclusion of Waje, born Aituaje Iruobe to thi9s exclusive list of performers would surprise many, maybe even lead them into wondering if there are not many others that should be in the Kenny G-headlined concert. Taking time to listen to any song in which Waje, whose stage name is drawn from a kind of motto: “Words aren’t just enough” would reveal her true depth. She is described as “an incredible Nigerian songstress whose vocal range covers three octaves” as well as one of the reasons the Okoye twins, known as P-Square, enjoy much acceptance. The duo’s “Omoge Mi”, “Do Me” and Banky W’s "Thief my Kele" are all down to her impressive delivery and this is not to leave out her impeccably gripping vocals in M.I’s “One Naira.”
Waje is always ready to tell whoever cares to listen that all the levels of her education were done without a cost to her parents due to her singing ability which got late Bishop Benson Idahosa interested in her from childhood. And since she burst on the stage professionally in 2005 while she was still a student of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, her rise has been steady and unhindered.
Waje took part in the Zain/MTV Africa's Advance Warning competition in 2008, ending up in the top three, after which she released a single, “Somewhere” which got a Hip Hop World Award nomination for Best Vocal Performance (Female) while “Kolo” got her a nomination at the Nigeria Music Video Awards for Best New Video and it remains to be seen how she will unveil her musical prowess on a stage which is not for those who only mime their songs and lip-synch all the way through a performance.
Mike Aremu, who said Sax Appeal started as a vision sometime back and it is meant to get bigger as time goes on. Mainly without any kind of sponsorship for at least the last two editions, the saxophone genius said the situation has not changed much although he acknowledged the support of Lagos State Government and the state’s signage agency, LASAA. Others who are providing some sort of support include The Beat FM, Naija FM, Eko Hotel and Suites, Inspiro Productions, Avis, KFC, Event Secure, BHM GROUP, the Radisson Blu Anchorage Hotel aside Classic FM with which a collaboration on the event is in place.
Other additions to year’s event is the inclusion of the sax appeal weekend package at the Radisson Blu Anchorage Hotel from July 1 to 3 where each evening will have snippets of live jazz from other friends of Mike Aremu performing and guests having a foretaste of what to expect at the mega Sax Appeal 3 to begin by 6pm on July 3.
Although the price of tickets to the event, put at N10,000 for regular and N20,000 for the VIP section, Mike said the dose of fun and excellent music that would be on display is priceless. Even with the corporate tables of N1 million and N500, 000 available, one cannot agree more with the young man who started back in the early 90s and has not looked back on his journey to greatness in music and all that comes with it.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Funke Akindele lives as an Omo Getto



By Adedayo Odulaja

A first glance at the cover jacket of the movie, Omo Getto, what would probably come to your mind, especially if you are a follower of the Yoruba section of Nollywood, is “another lavish photo shoot cover with the real content lacking the appreciable intensity of a creative effort.” If that is your line of thought, then you are dead wrong as many have discovered after checking out the content of the movie.
Omo Getto presents a spectacle, the rawness of which one might struggle to cope with and what is more than a movie that hits you from the very first blast with raw action? The movie opens on a set of young, rough women who are being chased around by another set made up of a couple of guys and a young woman. We are soon made to know that the lady’s piece of jewellery has just been snatched, hence her attempt to retrieve it. On getting to a spot however, the pursuit ends suddenly and roles are reversed because the place is a kind of boundary. The next scene reveals a man known in his area as Baba oni baba (Adebayo Salami) effortlessly reeling off the songs of great musicians like Fela, Ajadi Lawal, Ayinla Omoruwa and Ebenezer Obey, much to the amusement of some younger folks.
The progression continues as light beams on Ayomide (Funke Akindele) and Yanju (Taiwo Ibikunle), two people in love but whose relationship is constantly threatened by the volatile anger of Ayomide. This is brought into sharp focus when, as a result of calling Yanju without answers, Ayomide smashes her phone to the ground. And just after her latest rush of uncontained anger, Yanju walks in to explain that his reason for not picking the calls is down to being very close to her house already. As further development comes to the theme through the relationship between Ayomide and Yanju, much against the approval of his mother, who has witnessed flashes of Ayomide’s anger, Yanju is bent on continuing with Ayomide. But his resolve is tested when Ayomide attempts to help stabilise the relationship of her friend, Kanyisola (Shola Asedeko). After having urged the said Tunde to be good to her friend by putting an end to his philandering attitude, Ayomide is appalled when the guy hugs and kisses another lady in her presence, the fire of her anger again rages again and she lands a stinging slap on Tunde’s cheeks. The move lands her to the hospital as she is thoroughly beaten by Tunde, the first time anyone would reprimand her. Ayomide’s mother (Peju Omobolanle) is forced to seek spiritual answers to the problem but Yanju still assures her of his undying love demonstrated through his unconditional care and kind words.
But soon after recovering from the incident and back home, a suggestion by Yanju that Ayomide should probably beg his sister so as to mend fences, sparks another round of fury in Ayomide. Not even the persuasion by Yanju to forget the issue could have any effect on her and she goes on until she smashes a bottle on her fiancĂ©’s head, sending him into a coma and running away on realising the gravity of what she has done.
Two months later, the page is turned to the other side of town and life if you care, as life in the slum, which is the major thematic preoccupation of the movie, takes centre stage. Activities of certain people in a slum said to be Ebute Metta and Badia in Lagos, where crime, drugs and immoral acts go hand-in-hand and dreams are hardly ever realised. Here, Shalewa, who is also known as Lefty, again played by Funke Akindele, is the ring leader of a group of girls who hold sway in the slum and one of the most daring moves of the group of young women occur after a party that has become one of their regular hang outs with some local music stars. Some rich girls take over the stage with plenty of cash to spend, disgracing the ghetto girls in the process and to revenge, they later go out of their ways after this to consume all sorts of concoctions and ending in the toilet to pass out the waste. With a high stake mischief up their sleeves, the ladies bring the waste together, making it very watery and eventually pouring it on the ‘forming’ ladies who are too unprepared and destabilised to fight back.
Another powerful feature of this area of the society is the regular match up of voices, the type called ‘the battle’ in America and which you have in the film, 8 Mile, featuring Eminem although that is for rap while this is just to twist words, use anecdotes to win the admiration of bystanders or spectators. It is about representatives of groups who are nominated to challenge in a battle of wits and abuses in a session of a large crowd anchored by Ronke Ojo also known as Ronke Oshodi Oke. The scene is packed with abundant excitement as Lefty tears the representative of the males she encounters to shreds with her biting tongue.
During one of their sessions at a rendezvous point, Lefty is told that her boyfriend is with another girl and after confirming the authenticity of the information and finding out where the lady in question stays, off they go to attack her hood. It is while they are on their way to the lady’s location that they have another collision with a car that lands them at the police station.
Meanwhile, the long search for Ayomide, who has been on the run since the unfortunate incident regarding Yanju, is getting tiring for Yanju’s family and the police officers but on sighting Lefty, they all take it that she is the same as the Ayomide they seek. Despite how vehemently she says she is not Ayomide, nobody believes her except that her wild manners of speaking and acting confuses her mother and friend that something is amiss. While at the station, Kanyisola receives a call from Ayomide and when they meet, Kanyisola, her friend, accuses her of having been at the station which she denies. That moment however sets up the process of unraveling the truth.
One can say the movie, in terms of the resolution of conflict heightened by the intensity of the situations, is given a soft landing with the explanation that Ayomide and Lefty, notorious with such girls like Data, Busty and other members of her group, are twins. One of them is however later handed out to Ayomide’s mother for cash as a result of financial issues and their flashes of uncontrollable anger is due to a warning their mother refuse to heed while they were children. Another area of error is that the acting of Ireti Osayemi does not convince anyone she belongs to the ghetto, maybe a place among the rich girls would have been apt for her.
But in spite of this, it must be said that Omo Getto is a fantastic movie that combines the serious with the humourous, while not leaving out didactic punch lines for the society to learn. Funke Akindele has been down this road of acclaim before, with her chart-bursting exploits in celebrated Jenifa even if it doesn not make much sense. And this latest effort increases her stature as an actress, script writer and producer, one that movie followers can rely on to deliver the goods anytime if you don’t care about the controversies surrounding her.
The intriguing and arresting acting skills displayed by Adebayo Salami who is more popularly known as Oga Bello, in his role as Baba oni baba, is what one can describe as a piece of magical delivery in a role. The directorial ingenuity of Abiodun Olanrewaju, the director, also comes to the fore in one of the early scenes where a drop of the bottle of stout by Baba oni baba continues with the crashing of the flower vase on the floor by Ayomide in almost the same sequence. It is an interchange of scene continuity that is very impressive and rare, just like the flashback technique put in place when Ayomide’s mother narrates the story of the twins at birth to the lawyer. The conventional style of the total scene complete with the audio is not the case here; rather, there is a juggling of the voice matching the actions of the past.
How best does one illustrate the magnificence in the portrayal of Funke Akindele especially as Shalewa (Lefty) in the ghetto? It is one that stands up there with the best and is ultimately so convincing that it is breathtaking in its very essence. With a star-studded cast of names like Taiwo Ibikunle, Taiwo Hassan, Yinka Quadri, Racheal Oniga, Peju Omobolanle, Ireti Osayemi and Eniola Badmus who became popular for her ‘bigz girl’ role in Jenifa and Funke Akindele herself among others, many in the Yoruba movie terrain, especially the complacent ones, would have released anything to the market with the cast. But Funke Akindele is different and far better than that and any of the movies she has produced, like Ekuro, Awa Obinrin, Ojo Ketala, Agbefo and others is a valid statement in that direction. No wonder Omo Getto is enjoying so much popularity in town right now.