Tiwa Savage |
The 80’s and
early portions of the 90’s saw Nigerians rocking to the groovy tunes of Onyeka Onwenu,
Christy Igbokwe and Evi Edna Ogholi. What these women had in common were their
effortless ability to create music that was easily identified with by the
Nigerian populace, their grace as female singers and mostly by the message
behind their songs. They touched on certain vital social issues as love, peace
and unity, and also served as a form of female empowerment in their limited
capacity; instantly gaining an enviable status as female role models in the
society. Asides all these, they possessed the vocal ability to perform to a
live crowd, and also, were huge commercial and critical successes in their
respective genres of music.
Onyeka |
Essien |
Edna |
The mid 90’s
and early 2000’s saw a sharp decline in the quality and number of female artistes
in the Nigerian music industry, a few solo female acts strove and were
constantly faced with anti-feminist behaviors from producers and skeptic
sponsors alike.
Female performers like
Sasha P, Waje and Weird MC were the few reckoned acts of the late 90’s and
early 2000’s – more or less as sidekick to the ever revered male acts. Mostly
starting off as a singular female (first lady) to an all-male group, or lending
vocals to other male stars or a just a simple case of a comeback to the music
scene.
Only a
handful of female artistes – like Tiwa – have been able to launch a successful
solo debut career in Nigeria. She stormed the music scene in 2010 with her
infectious hit ‘Kele Kele Love,’ and ever since, she has kept the hits coming.
Tiwa has managed to creep into the heart of many Nigerian with her eclectic
oeuvre of hit songs fashioned for just about anyone. In a male dominated
industry, she has managed to clinch major endorsement deals, won major awards
and wowed thousands with her sweet melodies; a rare quality she shares with the
vocal trinity of the 80’s (Onyeka, Christy and Evi)
Few months
ago, Tiwa, accompanied by Don Jazzy, embarked on a trip to New York in a bid to
conclude talks on signing her to Jay Z’s label; Roc Nation. The label houses
stars like J. Cole, T.I, Emeli Sande and Shakira.
Jay Z, Tiwa and Jazzy |
Following the launch of the rebranded music streaming site TIDAL
in 2015 (Jay Z as major shareholder), Jay Z initiated the hunt for an African
presence on the platform. Tidal faces strong challenges from giant streaming
music sites like Spotify and Apple music; in an effort to increase subscriber
base, he at the time commissioned his cousin to carry out the feasibility
studies in Nigeria. To this effect, Tidal also pulled the ‘exclusivity’ card; a
move that has greatly impaired first week album sales projections of big stars
like Rihanna (Roc Nation) and Kanye West (G.O.O.D. Music) – both co-owners.
Rihanna,
Alicia Keys, Madonna and Beyonce at the Tidal Launch Event In 2015
|
But like other
internationally signed local acts, of what impact is this contract?
D’banj, formerly signed to the now defunct Mo’hit records,
enjoyed little to no career advancement after signing to G.O.O.D music. The
signing of D’banj to G.O.O.D music followed his not so amicable departure from
mo’hit. In order to avoid law suits as D’banj was a co-founder, Don Jazzy
established Mavins records which absorbed Tiwa as its first lady.
Tiwa getting signed on this massive platform sure opens
doors for other female acts in the game. It also creates an imaginary line
drawn to vividly differentiate her meticulously curated brand from other upcoming
and few established local acts and mostly room for up-and-comers to thrive
without sensing any immediate pressure.
Exposure is one thing Tiwa will experience: Gaining access
to be opening acts for the likes of Alicia Key or perhaps Beyonce would be a
huge milestone in her career. As a gifted songwriter, she would have many
artistes trying to work with her. Who knows? She might get one of her old songs
sampled as in the case of Rita Ora sampling Nneka’s song on her ‘RIP’ track.
Also, one can only wonder why Tiwa wants to get signed off
Mavins to Roc Nation. Could it be due to her failed marriage? Avenue to grow as an artiste? Or just for the
fame and attention it creates? Following trends, most artistes who formerly
were popular seem to be in a limbo after being signed to an international
label. Notable acts includes B.O.U.Q.U.I. (Xist Records USA) and Brymo (Tate
Music Group USA)
B.O.U.Q.U.I, D’banj and Brymo |
Tiwa, arguably the ‘Beyonce’ of the Nigerian music
industry although she faces subtle competition from the likes Yemi Alade and
Seyi Shay; Would signing this record deal draw her closer to the Nigerian
audience who already identifies with her style of music, thus maintaining her
relevance? Would it help her to
flawlessly fuse Nigerian music genres and western influences to create a global
appeal and put Nigerian music on the map? Or simply put her off as faking her
artistry and being overzealous?
Many have threaded this path and have fantastically failed
for the simple fact that Nigerians only identifies with one’s first art work
(in this case, a singer), expects you to grow but never to CHANGE (a word we
are struggling to get used to currently).
Another question to be asked is why Roc Nation really wants
Tiwa signed. Scouting so hard to pick our very best, but to what end? The
founder of Roc Nation is a major player in Tidal music streaming services and
is more than eager to expand his subscriber base. Handpicking Tiwa who we already
identify as a music goddess would be ‘Perfect Avenue’ to lure African
subscribers. How does this work one may ask? If Tiwa releases an album under
Roc Nation, it becomes a ‘Tidal Exclusive,’ forcing loyal fans to join the
Tidal platform, in effect increasing subscriber base. If Tiwa fails to pull the
African audience to the tidal platform, will it lead to dropping her?
Tiwa is a household name in Nigeria and known in select
African countries, so would exclusivity do the trick? It’s more like a
limitation to her from this standpoint. Another problem here is; how many
Nigerians would be willing to subscribe to Tidal? Nigerian in this era of free
music downloads barely buy albums and when they do, it ends up as a bootlegged
version.
The rate of piracy may spell doom for Tiwa; physical forms
could be bought and then multiplied by a music pirate thus flooding the market
with cheap illegal copies, also, free music sites in a bid to increase traffic
to their sites will not hesitate uploading her entire catalogue for free
download, thus resulting in poor sales for Tiwa in her home country. Her work
at Roc Nation might be of critical success (undoubtedly), but when sales
figures come in low; that translates into failure. Failure to impress the Roc Nation/Tidal family
may leave Tiwa’s contract terminated. Do you think she would deliver on the
global scene based on sales?
Could have
Seyi Shay or Yemi Alade been a better option? Tiwa has international exposure
as backup singer to stars like Whitney Houston but so does Seyi Shay who played
lead vocalist to the now defunct British girl group ‘From Above,’ assembled by
Mathew Knowles. Yemi might not have adequate international exposure as the
former two, but sure has a stronger presence and mostly accoladed for her
depiction of ‘African influences’ in her songs. Did Tidal consider these
options?
Shay, Savage and Alade |
The struggle by international acts to churn out albums is
real. Rihanna under Def Jam record released seven albums within a very short
period of time in order to renew her lopsided contract. Chances are, Tiwa could be able to replicate
such success owing to her strong track records and milestones achieved, and
chances are that she might flop.
Comments
Post a Comment