I have no problem with Flavour –Seun Kuti
Seun Afro-beat singer, Seun Anikulapo-Kuti, speaks with CHUX OHAI about his career and the current anti-corruption campaign in the...
https://newshelmng.blogspot.com/2015/08/i-have-no-problem-with-flavour-seun-kuti.html
Afro-beat singer, Seun Anikulapo-Kuti, speaks with CHUX OHAI about his career and the current anti-corruption campaign in the country
A few days after he returned from yet
another playing tour of Europe that lasted several months – his 15th
official tour with a new album since 2007 – Afro-beat musician, Seun
Anikulapo-Kuti, has opened up on President Muhammadu Buhari’s
anti-corruption campaign.
“The fight against corruption ought to
be easy in Nigeria because there is corruption everywhere you go in the
country. But Nigerians have to realise that members of the political
class will never fight for us. Buhari will only fight those that he can
fight. That will be all,” he says, in an interview with our
correspondent.
The Afro-beat musician, who says he has
decided to give the President ‘100 days of grace’ in office to do the
needful, wants the government to remove certain incentives enjoyed by
those in positions of authority as the first step towards fighting
corruption effectively.
“The incentives are too much. For
instance, a local government chairman in Nigeria makes in a month more
money than what Obama makes in a year. Such an incentive has to be be
stopped,” he says.
Seun wonders why some people are
complaining that Buhari has not appointed his cabinet at a time
thousands of Nigerians have not been paid their salary arrears and many
more are jobless.
Jokingly describing himself and his
15-man Egypt ’80 band as ‘veterans’, the Afro-beat star says that every
of its trip in the past had always yielded something new and special.
One of the things he discovered during
his tours is that Afro-beat has won hundreds of thousands of fans across
the world. For this reason, he wishes that his late dad, Fela, had
lived long enough to witness the growth of the music style he created.
“Fela has opened up Afro-beat in a very
special way and, thus, given young people something to look up to. I
think he was taken away at the time that the world was beginning to
understand him and his music. There is no comparison to what he would
have been able to achieve by this time, if he had not transcended to
another realm of existence,” he says.
But when it comes to talking about how much money he has made from his many tours, Seun, often shies away.
“I don’t judge my work from the
financial returns. What makes me happy is the fact that I have 15
families who are depending on me for their upkeep. Also, the fact that I
am able to make ends meet for everyone and they are happy gives me
enough satisfaction. Under my supervision, members of the Egypt ’80 band
started becoming landlords in Lagos. This is my idea of success. It is
not really about what I make financially. The fact that the band is a
success also makes me a successful musician,” he says.
In 2014, he released his third album
titled ‘A Long Way to the Beginning’. Many months later, he sees the
album as a blessing to Egypt ’80 band and one that has brought a
different dimension to his work. “I worked with a great team on the
album and it took us about 10 days to record it. I feel that it is my
best work so far,” he says.
A few months ago, when popular musician,
Flavour, emerged winner of the 2014 MTV Music Awards in the Best Live
Act category, many people had interpreted Seun’s reaction to the news to
mean that he disapproved of it. But the Afro-beat star says his
response, via a message posted on Twitter, was directed at MTV and not
Flavour.
“My comment on Twitter had
nothing to do with Flavour. At my age, I am above such pettiness. I made
that comment because I felt that Afro-beat music was not getting the
recognition it deserves in Africa. Foreign music companies like MTV are
making it seem as if people don’t like Afro-beat. They don’t broadcast
our songs or videos. These organisations have come to hijack our music
in Africa and they are not encouraging music artistes in the continent
to mix,” he says.
Dismissing the insinuation that he is
not on speaking terms with Flavour, “I have no beef with Flavour. In
fact, we met some time ago in Paris. We were staying in the same hotel
and I saw him in an elevator. Afterwards we hung out together. So I have
no problem with him,” he says