The Prague Post - Afrobeats star Davido sees Nigeria's star rising

EUR -
AED 4.177613
AFN 80.776958
ALL 98.674291
AMD 442.254844
ANG 2.049839
AOA 1041.815217
ARS 1325.015571
AUD 1.77753
AWG 2.050078
AZN 1.930861
BAM 1.954283
BBD 2.277932
BDT 138.142794
BGN 1.956115
BHD 0.428723
BIF 3381.475805
BMD 1.137352
BND 1.489844
BOB 7.855869
BRL 6.392603
BSD 1.136928
BTN 96.840421
BWP 15.522091
BYN 3.720713
BYR 22292.106206
BZD 2.283828
CAD 1.574386
CDF 3273.299627
CHF 0.936661
CLF 0.028029
CLP 1075.582507
CNY 8.267979
CNH 8.266601
COP 4773.467844
CRC 574.769111
CUC 1.137352
CUP 30.139837
CVE 110.179011
CZK 24.924961
DJF 202.462879
DKK 7.464893
DOP 66.999772
DZD 150.740411
EGP 57.771771
ERN 17.060285
ETB 152.189631
FJD 2.605106
FKP 0.849211
GBP 0.849329
GEL 3.121981
GGP 0.849211
GHS 16.258311
GIP 0.849211
GMD 81.322521
GNF 9847.271442
GTQ 8.756166
GYD 238.573806
HKD 8.823421
HNL 29.504363
HRK 7.53724
HTG 148.764551
HUF 404.313979
IDR 19017.555034
ILS 4.12516
IMP 0.849211
INR 96.949905
IQD 1489.444117
IRR 47882.534347
ISK 146.081688
JEP 0.849211
JMD 180.101815
JOD 0.806612
JPY 161.979428
KES 146.946635
KGS 99.461261
KHR 4551.427846
KMF 491.620598
KPW 1023.732863
KRW 1625.236725
KWD 0.348326
KYD 0.947465
KZT 581.578666
LAK 24591.915438
LBP 101870.04373
LKR 340.575696
LRD 227.392532
LSL 21.096928
LTL 3.358306
LVL 0.687973
LYD 6.220173
MAD 10.546369
MDL 19.566815
MGA 5131.063151
MKD 61.575461
MMK 2388.195606
MNT 4063.055995
MOP 9.08475
MRU 45.011465
MUR 51.407236
MVR 17.515996
MWK 1971.487361
MXN 22.252725
MYR 4.908247
MZN 72.801774
NAD 21.096928
NGN 1821.492028
NIO 41.837532
NOK 11.805172
NPR 154.949838
NZD 1.9184
OMR 0.437884
PAB 1.136913
PEN 4.168365
PGK 4.710324
PHP 63.575149
PKR 319.398439
PLN 4.267346
PYG 9104.934114
QAR 4.144765
RON 4.977848
RSD 117.109117
RUB 93.263383
RWF 1625.253012
SAR 4.266304
SBD 9.509741
SCR 16.177403
SDG 682.98601
SEK 10.969993
SGD 1.48723
SHP 0.89378
SLE 25.875339
SLL 23849.691791
SOS 649.801435
SRD 41.911684
STD 23540.897494
SVC 9.94828
SYP 14787.811104
SZL 21.089819
THB 38.01543
TJS 12.005819
TMT 3.992107
TND 3.400946
TOP 2.663793
TRY 43.778882
TTD 7.714014
TWD 36.458396
TZS 3059.478312
UAH 47.234259
UGX 4166.748076
USD 1.137352
UYU 47.871797
UZS 14721.575318
VES 98.435697
VND 29576.848055
VUV 137.968789
WST 3.15057
XAF 655.454098
XAG 0.034511
XAU 0.000344
XCD 3.073752
XDR 0.815175
XOF 655.448339
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.708486
ZAR 21.117949
ZMK 10237.534291
ZMW 31.806317
ZWL 366.226995
  • SCS

    0.1500

    10.01

    +1.5%

  • NGG

    0.1900

    73.04

    +0.26%

  • GSK

    0.9100

    38.97

    +2.34%

  • BTI

    0.4700

    42.86

    +1.1%

  • BCC

    -0.8300

    94.5

    -0.88%

  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    22.24

    -0.36%

  • RBGPF

    -0.4500

    63

    -0.71%

  • AZN

    1.7800

    71.71

    +2.48%

  • RIO

    0.0100

    60.88

    +0.02%

  • BP

    -1.0600

    28.07

    -3.78%

  • JRI

    0.1300

    12.93

    +1.01%

  • CMSD

    -0.1300

    22.35

    -0.58%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1300

    10.12

    -1.28%

  • BCE

    0.1100

    21.92

    +0.5%

  • RELX

    0.4300

    53.79

    +0.8%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.58

    +0.1%

Afrobeats star Davido sees Nigeria's star rising
Afrobeats star Davido sees Nigeria's star rising / Photo: JOEL SAGET - AFP

Afrobeats star Davido sees Nigeria's star rising

The way Davido sees it, Nigerian culture is having a moment.

Text size:

"We're very popular, not only in music," the 32-year-old Afrobeats star told AFP during a recent interview in Paris, pointing to the film, food and fashion influence his country is increasingly exporting to the rest of the world.

Even amid criticism from some that American artists are starting to crib from Afrobeats' sound, his response is: "I like it."

And yet, the Nigerian-American artist -- a self-described citizen of the world -- sees the future of the continent tied to those who stay home, rather than its influential diaspora.

"Everybody always has the American dream," he told AFP. "Every kid that grows up in Africa wants to visit America. That's cool. It's okay to visit, but don't leave your people and go there."

Those might be tough words to swallow for his compatriots battling the worst economic crisis in a generation.

In recent years, "japa" -- the Yoruba word for "escape" -- has become country-wide slang for emigrating to greener, and richer pastures.

Davido, born David Adedeji Adeleke in Atlanta, in some ways straddles the tension between a growing, bustling Nigeria of more than 200 million people and a world that finally seems to be waking up to the so-called Giant of Africa.

Speaking to AFP ahead of the release of his new album, "5ive" -- out Friday -- he confidently says the record "is going to touch every part of the world."

"We have music for the French people. We have music for the Caribbean people. We have music for the Americans, Africans, everybody," he said.

"It's like a full, global package album."

- Eight million monthly listeners -

With some more than eight million monthly listeners -- including Britain's King Charles -- Davido is riding, and shaping, the global Afrobeats craze.

But Davido himself is also a product of African music.

"I grew up in an African household where we were always throwing parties, music was always playing in the house, going in the car to school, my parents playing music," he enthusiastically recalled.

As a teenager, a cousin in the industry took him to a studio, where "for the first time, I saw somebody create music... African music."

"That's when I fell in love with it," said Davido, spotting a grey conical woollen cap and jewellery dangling over a black T-shirt.

A few years later, he was mixing and mastering his own tunes by the age of 16, drawing inspiration from artists such as P-Square, a Nigerian duo that drew some of their hits from American influences such as Michael Jackson.

Davido now sees artists' musical influence flowing across the Atlantic in the other direction.

"It's a privilege for another culture to try to imitate what you're doing," he told AFP in response to a question about critics who accuse American artists of trying to mime Afrobeats' style.

"In Nigeria we do hip hop too. We have rappers that rap. We have people that do R&B."

"Music is a universal language. So I don't see any problem with that."

Davido counts among some of his popular tracks "Unavailable" and "Aye".

- 'African music has changed narrative' -

For all his worldly outlook, Davido said he hasn't lost focus on Nigeria.

"We've been going through hard times," he told AFP. "Nigeria is a very rich country with so much talent, so much grace, so much opportunity."

"I was asked a question saying, why don't we sing about (Nigeria's struggles) in our music?" he recalled. "I was like, man, that's not the type of music my people would really like to hear."

"I have sung about it in the past. But I'm very vocal about it more in Africa than in America."

As he prepares to embark on a world tour -- including stops in Paris, London, New York, Atlanta, and Los Angeles -- he knows where at least part of his success has come from.

"African music has changed the narrative of how Africans are looked at around the world."

G.Turek--TPP