Archive for entertainment

Journey through the mind

Journey through the mind

In his third solo
exhibition titled “Epiphany”, which opened on May 28 at the Signature
Art and Interior Gallery, Ikoyi, the Port Harcourt-based self-taught
artist, Segun Aiyesan, teaches the values of time.

Using mix media as
his expression in the 38 works on display, Aiyesan sets the stage to
bring his ideas to life. The works which he creates by experimenting
with sculpting, acrylic, sand, fabric, rope and even cane are done on
canvas and wooden boxes, and have their messages represented in a well
documented brochure that explains the body of work especially the
abstracts, which make a larger percentage of the art pieces.

“Epiphany”, which
exhibits Aiyesan’s latest works done in 2009 and 2010, did not require
an elaborate opening as a prelude to the show, as the works seem to
already herald themselves. All that is required of the art patron is to
interact with the works and the viewers in the art space.

“It’s a matter of
choice; they are hosting us, and they have their way of doing things.
Having an opening ceremony is not definite. The last show I had in Eko
Hotel, there was an elaborate ceremony unlike this one,” the artist
said emphatically.

Aiyesan who loves
to feel the texture of the works on canvas, uses sculpting to create
three dimensional pieces like “History on Slates”, “Earth Song-Stanza
4”, “Edge of Rubicon” and “The Passage”. He explained, “I have been
playing with the concept of giving the viewer the chance to interact
with the work. I like the fact that one can go around the work. It’s an
aspect other artists can explore.”

The Engineer turned artist

Aiyesan, who last exhibited in Lagos seven years ago, explained why he gave up engineering for his first love.

“For me, I think
art is something that is inborn. I never thought I would become a
professional artist, when I started out it was for the fun of it. It
was after I realised that I could not be the artist I wanted to be if I
was an engineer that I knew that this serious hobby could be a means of
livelihood. I have never felt happier doing it (art)” he explained.

Asked if his
engineering qualification is relevant to his art, he replied, “It’s my
engineering background that makes me organise structures better”

Epiphany

Through the
trickles of visitors to and from the venue, the works on the wall play
between abstract and realism with the use of symbols that complete the
vibrant assembly. Being a self taught artist gives Aiyesan the ability
to explore -without worrying about being limited to thinking like
products of an art school – which he does well with a style that has
the colour vibrancy famous with the Auchi School and symbols that echo
the Uli and Nsibidi art movements; there is also realism in his works,
which artists from the Yaba art school are popular for.

In all this,
Aiyesan never loses his unique style and personal creativity. The
works, which include “Red Landscape”, “Casualties of War”, “The
Emissaries” and “The Things That Bind Us” have themes on environmental
degradation, national development, slavery, peace and insincerity. They
also show Aiyesan’s love for the use of human figures and masks in his
works. Only the piece, “Grey Moment” depicts a cityscape.

Art for the times

The only way to
understand Aiyesan’s works is to experience it. The large size of a
number of the works makes their prices (ranging from N30,000 to
N60,000) a good bargain. Even if visitors did not leave with Aiyesan’s
work under their arm, at least they would leave with invaluable lessons.

Segun Aiyesan’s solo exhibition, ‘Epiphany’, was on display at the Signature Gallery in Lagos till June 10.

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Art for Mother Goddesses

Art for Mother Goddesses

Pinar Yolacan found
her muse from reading art magazines. The then 13-year-old used to
follow her elder sister studying Graphic Design to the university
library in Ankara, Turkey, where she became fascinated with art
magazines. What Yolacan saw in the magazines fired her creativity and
she started out working with vegetables and plant skins to make
sculptures. Her art has since grown to include photography, clothing,
and sculpting. Her ‘Maria’ series, large photographs showing black
women dressed in clothes with animal entrails sewn on them, was
displayed at a recent exhibition held at the Centre for Contemporary
Art (CCA), Yaba, Lagos.

One of many arts

I do not consider
myself a photographer, I only use it as a medium to express an idea,
the way I use clothes in my works. It’s just one departure. When I have
an idea, every other thing revolves around it. Photography is just [a]
medium, it’s not like I walk around taking photographs of people. I
like faces, they strike me so anytime I go to a new country, I like to
follow their lives. Apart from ‘Maria Series’, I also have
‘Perishables’ of which ‘Maria Series’ is an extension.

In 2009, I did a
new body of work called ’Mother Goddess’ where ladies wore jumpsuits
that covered them from head to toe. The women looked like sculptures; I
had the idea while I was in Turkey. I heard about some excavation sites
where they were digging up stone sculptures and this was similar to my
idea. I picked up on that, so I used women from distant villages and
put them in thick fabric jumpsuits. They looked like sculptures the way
the fabric handled their flesh.

Eclectic works

My work is a
combination of a lot of things, clothing, photography and sculpture.
That’s what makes it contemporary art because it’s trying to convey an
idea using different elements. I think the people in the fashion
industry understand my work a little better than a lot of contemporary
art critics. I don’t think they are contemporary enough. Sometimes, I
think they believe that you have to read 10 books before you understand
what the work is saying. I think the people in the fashion industry
understand the process that I go through to get my work done.

Building trust

In getting the job
done in ‘Maria’ series for example, I try to build a trust relationship
with my subject. I try to tell them where the pictures will end up. I
try to explain to them what the idea is more or less. I paid them
because they are poor people but if they don’t feel comfortable with it
or don’t want to do it, they won’t do it. One needs to have a sense of
legitimacy to do these things. Apart from the fact that they have to
wear meat, the art of taking someone’s portrait is a very intimate
thing. It is not every day that they have a dress made for them. It is
not every day that someone asks them to sit down for a portrait.

When the subjects
see their picture in a book cover or learn about their pictures being
exhibited, some of them like it, but it’s not all of them that know
where the works end up since I am not in touch with all of them. Those
that see it get to know about them through newspapers and magazines.

I actually started
‘Maria’ series when I was in New York. Then I got a scholarship to go
and do a residency in Bahia, Brazil. When I got there, I did not know
what I was getting into because I did not know how I was going to
communicate to people. I was not sure who would want to participate,
but eventually I met some amazing people. I mean, people who were
willing to help me. The idea of ‘Maria’ Series had to do with culture,
and their African heritage, mainly from Nigeria, because they have a
lot of Yoruba traditional practices there.

One of the women
whose picture I had taken, Celine, she works in construction and has
nine children. So, these women have normal lives, they are just simple
everyday people.

‘Perishables’ is
the one exhibition that got me major exposure and ‘Maria’ series is
just an extension of it. I think it is because it was well executed.

Inspiring city

I am inspired by
people and my experiences. I love artists like Chris Ofili, Marina
Abramovic and Charles Atlas. I love Lee Barry, he is a drag queen; I
like the way he makes the clothing by himself, I love musicians too.

I am fascinated by the way people dress here (Lagos), I love the way
people buy the fabric and sew the clothes. The way they dress is
amazing and gorgeous. It’s like everybody is going to the prom.

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Orlando Julius and Afrobeat revisited

Orlando Julius and Afrobeat revisited

It was one of those
unexplainable impulses that made me linger longer than planned at an
Ikoyi hangout for all shades and ages of creative people.

In walked Basil
Okafor, graphic artist/journalist, culture connoisseur and activist
and, of course, we had to shoot the breeze and reminisce. He was happy
that he had caught the musical act at the Lagos Black Heritage Festival
that featured heavyweights Hugh Masekela, Orlando Julius, and Femi
Kuti.

I chipped in that
Masekela omitted the very important name of Peter King when he
announced at the concert that Nigeria had produced two world-class
musicians in Fela Anikulapo Kuti and Orlando Julius. Incredibly, a few
seconds after, in walks Orlando Julius himself with his
extraordinarily-talented dancer/singer African-American wife, Latoya
Aduke.

Naturally, we all
went through a session of oohs and aahs at this unplanned reunion. I
told Orlando that I assumed he was still in Ghana, where he had
relocated to years after we had met in Lagos after his second long
sojourn in America. He surprised me by informing me that he had been
back in Nigeria for over two years, in Osogbo, where he had set-up a
sound and visual studio and was running a television programme
featuring musical acts. It made sense in that in the 80s when we had
re-established contact, he proudly told me that he had graduated from a
filmmaking course in Berkeley, California, after a
music-and-further-education trip to America.

Who created Afrobeat?

I asked Orlando
about some of his key band members who had helped create his unique and
pioneering sound of Afro-Soul-Beat as from the late 60s. He sadly
informed me that my favourites like drummer, Moses Akanbi, and baritone
saxophonist, Big Joe, were dead. Of course, this was depressing news.
In a brilliant and soothing public relations gesture, his wife then
offered me a new CD release of Orlando Julius’ compilation of master
compositions and old hits, ‘Orlando Julius and his Afro Sounders:
Orlando’s Afro Ideas 1969-72’. In many ways, this CD is a fitting
tribute to these great musicians and concrete documentary evidence on
how what is now defined as Afrobeat developed in Nigeria.

I have deliberately
refused, since the 70s, to be drawn into the simplistic argument of who
created and, is therefore, the father of Afrobeat. It is a spurious
argument, much like asking who created Jazz; whilst unquestionably
accepting that Jazz is Black/African-American music. In the same vein,
Afrobeat is Nigerian-created music, period!

Yes, it is an
offshoot and extension of the West African popular music Highlife, but
it was made and shaped in Nigeria. Interestingly, Afrobeat’s different
versions and flavours were created by well-schooled and experienced
Nigerian musicians, which explains why like Jazz, Reggae, Rhythm &
Blues, Soul, and now Rap and Hip-Hop, it is a distinct and universally
accepted form of popular music.

It is safe,
sensible, and factually logical to state that Afrobeat and its various
flavours were created by Nigerian musicians who were interested in
expanding the tonal and rhythmic frontiers of Nigerian Highlife music.
It must be accepted and recognised that Nigerian musicians, like Rex
Lawson in particular, Celestine Ukwu, Victor Olaiya, Eddie Okonta, Bill
Friday, and later Victor Uwaifo, had incorporated their ‘tribal’
musical elements to create a distinct Nigerian Highlife flavour;
different from Ghanaian and Sierra Leone Highlife. It is from this
distinct and unique Nigerian Highlife flavour that the various
inflections of Afrobeat evolved through assimilation, experimentation,
cross-fertilisation, and individual musical innovation.

Laying the foundations

It will be fair, on
recorded evidence, to say that the trio of musicians who laid the basic
foundations and charted the path of what is now broadly classified as
Afrobeat music are Chris Ajilo, Orlando Julius Ekemode, and Fela
Ransome-Kuti, in that chronological order.

Simplistically,
they respectively explored, experimented, and emphasised the expansion
of the horn-ensemble complexities, soul-and-Yoruba traditional
rhythms-marriage and Jazz riffs compositional structure and
multi-rhythms of Nigerian Highlife music to create their brands of
Afrobeat music.

It is, however,
both Orlando Julius and Fela Anikulapo Kuti who performed live for many
decades, with many recorded samples of their music over these decades,
that best give a history of the development and growth of Afrobeat
music. In this respect, Orlando Julius’ ‘Afro Ideas 1969-72’ is an
extremely important CD and musical document that illuminates the early
history and foundation of Afrobeat music.

Jagua Nana

Orlando, unlike
Fela, had gone through the mill in Nigerian popular music. He started
off in the late 60s as a drummer and flautist, and then took lessons on
the alto saxophone. He began working with Highlife bands in 1961,
playing with the Flamingo Dandies, I.K. Dairo’s Blue Spots, and Eddie
Okonta’s band. He formed his own band, The Modern Aces, in 1964.

In 1965, he
released his debut single, ‘Jagua Nana’, on the Philips West Africa
label. It was a big hit because it was new. Orlando described it as
“modern Highlife,” and essentially it was Highlife in a fast tempo and
infused with rhythmic arrangements borrowed from Black American Rhythm
& Blues and Soul music.

OJ and the Modern
Aces released the landmark long-playing album, Super Afro Soul, in
1966. This was the official recorded announcement of the arrival of
Orlando Julius’ Afro music in Nigeria. It was innovative and fresh;
giving hints of greater musical things to come from him!

With a band now
called Afro Sounders, Orlando Julius set out to develop and distinctly
establish his own brand of Afrobeat music. As composer, singer,
electric organ player, and tenor saxophonist, he led a band that
explored depths of rhythmic structures, a seamless blend of
Yoruba/African rhythms and Black American R’n’B/Soul. With the fiery
Moses Akanbi on drums playing mostly on the high-hat and snares,
dexterous shekere rhythms, crisp clave beats, congas, and snappy guitar
riffs (from his brother, Niyi), OJ created his rhythmic definition of
Afro-beat. It is a skippy rhythm, with his peculiar horn arrangements
as embellishments to create his Afrobeat sound.

OJ’s rhythms

‘Mura Sise’ and
‘New Apala Afro’ are classic examples of OJ’ rhythms and on other
compositions like ‘Home Sweet Home’, ‘Esamei Sate’, ‘Alo Mi Alo’,
‘Ketekete Koro’ and ‘Igbehin Adara’, he sings in Yoruba urging
self-empowerment, good morals, fair-play in polygamous homes, and
keeping faith with culture. Then there are the instrumental Psychedelic
Afro-Shop and a welcome song ‘James Brown Ride On’, both recorded in
1970.

Orlando Julius’
compositions ‘Asiko’ and ‘Going Back to My Roots’ became hits for Hugh
Masekela and Lamont Dozier respectively, in America in the late 70s. In
the early 80s, he released the LP Dance Afro-Beat in America.

It’s been four decades since ‘Jagua Nana’, and OJ and his Afrobeat are still alive and, as Monk will say, ‘rhythmning!’

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Nigerian women in film

Nigerian women in film

Watching the BBC
documentary Welcome to Lagos has been a more revealing look at the
dynamics between male and female relationships in Nigeria than all the
Nollywood movies I have watched. For me Welcome to Lagos was a profound
commentary on the state of marital relationships in Nigeria today. In
the face of profound changes in how Nigerians live, we still cling
stubbornly to traditional notions of marriage and family without any
serious attempt at adaptation. Anecdotally, I would venture to say that
a significant number of Nigerian marriages are highly stressed as a
result.

The cemetery of
our marriages is at that messy junction where tradition meets modernity
or some would say reality. Increasingly, women work outside the house
and they also manage the household. In Welcome to Lagos, Esther lives
in a shanty on a beach. There is a moving scene where Esther becomes
emotional as she describes her love for her husband. A few scenes
later, Esther is seen dumping the man’s belongings on the beach. It
appears that the husband is also in the habit of also loving other
women.

Despite Nigerian
“democracy” whole swathes of communities have become slums and shanties
where our own women and children are literally living and dying in
their own filth. Where is the outrage? No wonder children are literally
flying out of Africa’s windows fleeing a perverse culture that only
comforts men. As the documentary shows, religion seems to exist in
Nigeria to dull the senses and keep women and men in bondage as
thieving pastors exhort the faithful to be bound by the strictures of
what passes for tradition.

The BBC
documentary showcases Esther and her friends bound by a sorority that
is steeped in unnecessary suffering. Esther is friends with Blessing
and Victoria, two mothers with young children who were born at the
beach. Blessing is pregnant and all three are looking at a Western
brochure on pregnancy and parenting titled Welcome to Mothercare. The
models are white. The women all coo at the pretty pictures of pregnant
white women and one of them observes wistfully: “Most of our Nigerian
women, they will look ugly when they are pregnant! They won’t wear the
correct cloth, they will just wear buba and sokoto!” Here are three
beautiful women filled with self loathing because every day life for
them is honestly ugly. They marvel at a picture of a man carrying his
baby. Their jaws drop in wonder and the commentary is telling: “In this
kind of country [Nigeria] you can’t expect your husband to carry your
child! They will blackmail you that you have turned your husband to a
woman. Nobody will dare that in this country…” They really do not ask
for much.

These are not new
issues. Buchi Emecheta has been harping on this dysfunction for over
five decades, almost to the point of obsession. The good news is that
there are new warriors on the stage. In many ways, they have built on
the work of Emecheta. Names like Ngozi Chimamanda Adichie, Chika
Unigwe, Unoma Azuah, Lola Shoneyin, Sarah Manyika, Sefi Atta, Molara
Wood, etc, are the public faces of young Turks quietly determined to
change the status quo through their literary works. In my personal
opinion, their works are more robust conversations about the complex
relationship between the men and the women. One detects a fuller
exploration of sexuality and relationships than what understandably
preoccupied the mostly male writers before them. I do not see much in
terms of a dialogue between these writers and Nollywood for instance.
That ought to be the next step. Let me also observe that there is a
reason why most of these writers ply their trade in the West and we
must agree that their views and attitudes have been shaped by their
life’s journeys in the West. But I would argue that societies that
thrive do not live in the past, they also tend to model wholesome
behaviors from other societies.

In the absence of laws, and compassionate caring responsible
leaders, patriarchy threatens everything we hold dear. Nigerian women
in the corridors of power should be inspired by their own successes to
make a difference in the millions of Esthers toiling out there for
pennies. Our women in power should strive for more substantive
involvement in the politics and governance of Nigeria. We see a vivid
example in what I call a tale of two first ladies. There is Mrs.
Michelle Obama, the First Lady of the United States, as she is simply
called. And then there is Her Excellency, the First Lady of the Federal
Republic of Nigeria, Dame Patience Goodluck Jonathan. One protects the
dignity of her office with substantive policy work, while the other
seems to revel in a caricature. Mrs. Obama goes to an elementary school
to have a genuine conversation about the perils of childhood obesity
and manages to spark a national conversation about immigration. The
other apparently sparks a conversation about visiting Dubai of all
places and buying gold. We have our work cut out for us.

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Moments in Artsville

Moments in Artsville

(For Toyin Akinoso at 50)

Along with my pair of rims, I’m one in a million

of the imbibers that weekly and perennially scan

cues and moments like a residency in Artsville-

tit-bits at sunrise in a column enough to scale

Lethe’s alphabets into portals of awareness

Golden and jubilant, you are the Artsville’s

lord- purveyor of wrangling dreams and ideals

posted on page, stage and canvas from Lagos

to Cairo to Jo’bourg, as well as the yet unposted-

drummings, strummings, trumpetings

scribblings, sculptings, sightings

chatterings, mongerings, seethings

dispatches that are torch and tune ample to power

a plaza of ideas to mean more than an altar’s wafer.

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Orlando Julius and Afrobeat revisited

Orlando Julius and Afrobeat revisited

It was one of those
unexplainable impulses that made me linger longer than planned at an
Ikoyi hangout for all shades and ages of creative people.

In walked Basil
Okafor, graphic artist/journalist, culture connoisseur and activist
and, of course, we had to shoot the breeze and reminisce. He was happy
that he had caught the musical act at the Lagos Black Heritage Festival
that featured heavyweights Hugh Masekela, Orlando Julius, and Femi
Kuti.

I chipped in that
Masekela omitted the very important name of Peter King when he
announced at the concert that Nigeria had produced two world-class
musicians in Fela Anikulapo Kuti and Orlando Julius. Incredibly, a few
seconds after, in walks Orlando Julius himself with his
extraordinarily-talented dancer/singer African-American wife, Latoya
Aduke.

Naturally, we all
went through a session of oohs and aahs at this unplanned reunion. I
told Orlando that I assumed he was still in Ghana, where he had
relocated to years after we had met in Lagos after his second long
sojourn in America. He surprised me by informing me that he had been
back in Nigeria for over two years, in Osogbo, where he had set-up a
sound and visual studio and was running a television programme
featuring musical acts. It made sense in that in the 80s when we had
re-established contact, he proudly told me that he had graduated from a
filmmaking course in Berkeley, California, after a
music-and-further-education trip to America.

Who created Afrobeat?

I asked Orlando
about some of his key band members who had helped create his unique and
pioneering sound of Afro-Soul-Beat as from the late 60s. He sadly
informed me that my favourites like drummer, Moses Akanbi, and baritone
saxophonist, Big Joe, were dead. Of course, this was depressing news.
In a brilliant and soothing public relations gesture, his wife then
offered me a new CD release of Orlando Julius’ compilation of master
compositions and old hits, ‘Orlando Julius and his Afro Sounders:
Orlando’s Afro Ideas 1969-72’. In many ways, this CD is a fitting
tribute to these great musicians and concrete documentary evidence on
how what is now defined as Afrobeat developed in Nigeria.

I have deliberately
refused, since the 70s, to be drawn into the simplistic argument of who
created and, is therefore, the father of Afrobeat. It is a spurious
argument, much like asking who created Jazz; whilst unquestionably
accepting that Jazz is Black/African-American music. In the same vein,
Afrobeat is Nigerian-created music, period!

Yes, it is an
offshoot and extension of the West African popular music Highlife, but
it was made and shaped in Nigeria. Interestingly, Afrobeat’s different
versions and flavours were created by well-schooled and experienced
Nigerian musicians, which explains why like Jazz, Reggae, Rhythm &
Blues, Soul, and now Rap and Hip-Hop, it is a distinct and universally
accepted form of popular music.

It is safe,
sensible, and factually logical to state that Afrobeat and its various
flavours were created by Nigerian musicians who were interested in
expanding the tonal and rhythmic frontiers of Nigerian Highlife music.
It must be accepted and recognised that Nigerian musicians, like Rex
Lawson in particular, Celestine Ukwu, Victor Olaiya, Eddie Okonta, Bill
Friday, and later Victor Uwaifo, had incorporated their ‘tribal’
musical elements to create a distinct Nigerian Highlife flavour;
different from Ghanaian and Sierra Leone Highlife. It is from this
distinct and unique Nigerian Highlife flavour that the various
inflections of Afrobeat evolved through assimilation, experimentation,
cross-fertilisation, and individual musical innovation.

Laying the foundations

It will be fair, on
recorded evidence, to say that the trio of musicians who laid the basic
foundations and charted the path of what is now broadly classified as
Afrobeat music are Chris Ajilo, Orlando Julius Ekemode, and Fela
Ransome-Kuti, in that chronological order.

Simplistically,
they respectively explored, experimented, and emphasised the expansion
of the horn-ensemble complexities, soul-and-Yoruba traditional
rhythms-marriage and Jazz riffs compositional structure and
multi-rhythms of Nigerian Highlife music to create their brands of
Afrobeat music.

It is, however,
both Orlando Julius and Fela Anikulapo Kuti who performed live for many
decades, with many recorded samples of their music over these decades,
that best give a history of the development and growth of Afrobeat
music. In this respect, Orlando Julius’ ‘Afro Ideas 1969-72’ is an
extremely important CD and musical document that illuminates the early
history and foundation of Afrobeat music.

Jagua Nana

Orlando, unlike
Fela, had gone through the mill in Nigerian popular music. He started
off in the late 60s as a drummer and flautist, and then took lessons on
the alto saxophone. He began working with Highlife bands in 1961,
playing with the Flamingo Dandies, I.K. Dairo’s Blue Spots, and Eddie
Okonta’s band. He formed his own band, The Modern Aces, in 1964.

In 1965, he
released his debut single, ‘Jagua Nana’, on the Philips West Africa
label. It was a big hit because it was new. Orlando described it as
“modern Highlife,” and essentially it was Highlife in a fast tempo and
infused with rhythmic arrangements borrowed from Black American Rhythm
& Blues and Soul music.

OJ and the Modern
Aces released the landmark long-playing album, Super Afro Soul, in
1966. This was the official recorded announcement of the arrival of
Orlando Julius’ Afro music in Nigeria. It was innovative and fresh;
giving hints of greater musical things to come from him!

With a band now
called Afro Sounders, Orlando Julius set out to develop and distinctly
establish his own brand of Afrobeat music. As composer, singer,
electric organ player, and tenor saxophonist, he led a band that
explored depths of rhythmic structures, a seamless blend of
Yoruba/African rhythms and Black American R’n’B/Soul. With the fiery
Moses Akanbi on drums playing mostly on the high-hat and snares,
dexterous shekere rhythms, crisp clave beats, congas, and snappy guitar
riffs (from his brother, Niyi), OJ created his rhythmic definition of
Afro-beat. It is a skippy rhythm, with his peculiar horn arrangements
as embellishments to create his Afrobeat sound.

OJ’s rhythms

‘Mura Sise’ and
‘New Apala Afro’ are classic examples of OJ’ rhythms and on other
compositions like ‘Home Sweet Home’, ‘Esamei Sate’, ‘Alo Mi Alo’,
‘Ketekete Koro’ and ‘Igbehin Adara’, he sings in Yoruba urging
self-empowerment, good morals, fair-play in polygamous homes, and
keeping faith with culture. Then there are the instrumental Psychedelic
Afro-Shop and a welcome song ‘James Brown Ride On’, both recorded in
1970.

Orlando Julius’
compositions ‘Asiko’ and ‘Going Back to My Roots’ became hits for Hugh
Masekela and Lamont Dozier respectively, in America in the late 70s. In
the early 80s, he released the LP Dance Afro-Beat in America.

It’s been four decades since ‘Jagua Nana’, and OJ and his Afrobeat are still alive and, as Monk will say, ‘rhythmning!’

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Keziah Jones brings home the Blufunk

Keziah Jones brings home the Blufunk

The parallels
between the lives of Femi Sanyaolu and Fela Kuti are startling. Born 30
years apart to illustrious Egba families from Abeokuta, Ogun State,
both were sent off to England to study, by parents who dreamed of their
sons returning to Nigeria with degrees in medicine. Both men had other
ideas, and rebelled against the wishes of their parents. In England
both turned their attention to music. In the course of their careers
both men would go on to create musical genres that fused African and
Western influences: Fela’s ‘Afrobeat’; Femi’s ‘Blufunk’ (blues + funk).

And, quite
remarkably, both men would go on to change their names. Fela (born
Olufela Ransome-Kuti), after a period of immersion in the black
consciousness philosophy, transformed into Fela Anikulapo-Kuti. Decades
later Femi Sanyaolu moved in the opposite direction, embracing the
anglicization that Fela spurned, emerging as ‘Keziah Jones.’

Jones has a ready
explanation for his curious decision to jettison his Yoruba name for an
English-sounding one. It’s an intriguing one, revealing a sense of
mischief. “I’m playing a kind of game, where you go to a record shop
and see ‘Keziah Jones’, you buy it, and think, aha, I recognise the
funk and the rock and the blues and the jazz, but it’s African, and
he’s called Keziah. I’ve got you already. And then you come to the
concert – it’s all over. That’s why I did it.” (The raison d’être for
‘Keziah Jones’ – he could have settled for any other Western-sounding
name – is even more intriguing: “Mr. Jones is like Everyman, but Keziah
Jones is a certain type of Everyman”).

He has no apologies
for the kind of expedient thinking that produced ‘Keziah Jones’. It’s a
win-win scenario for him: a change of name but with no underlying
change in artistic consciousness means that he can escape being crammed
into an ethnic niche on account of his name, while still retaining the
freedom to do the kind of music he wants to do. “It’s a different way
of doing the same thing; I’m still talking about Africa and Nigeria and
identity, but basically my music is available all over the world, in
the biggest markets,” he says.

Six albums later,
it’s clear that his strategy has worked for him. His debut single,
‘Rhythm is Love’ was a worldwide hit; albums Black Orpheus (2003) and
Nigerian Wood (2008), spent 63 and 43 weeks respectively on the French
charts.

Deal or no deal

Despite the
parallels between the path that he and Fela traced, Jones is eager to
highlight – and emphasise – the fact that they belong to different
generations. While one person witnessed the age of Independence, and
the accompanying hope; all that the other saw was a country of broken
dreams. “I was born in a different time, I wasn’t born in Fela’s time,”
Jones says. For him Fela’s era was one of “looking from the inside
out”, while his was the reverse.

Born during the
Nigerian Civil War, Jones left Nigeria for England when he was eight.
It was around that time that he discovered music. For the next decade
hobby (music) and obligation (school) contended for his attention.
School eventually lost out, just after his A-levels. Also to taste
defeat was the genteel upbringing that was a product of his
aristocratic background (a father who was a wealthy businessman and a
high ranking chief of the Egba kingdom): the guitar-wielding Jones
spent his days busking in the streets of London.

Somehow he managed
to strike a deal with his father. “Give me two years. If I don’t make
it in two years I’ll come back and work for you,” he told the old man.
In 1991 he left London for Paris by ferry, guitar in tow. The busking
continued. Much of his time was spent in and around the Paris Metro.
One day, outside a café, a stranger walked up to him and asked if he
had a demo tape. He didn’t. The man took him to a studio and helped him
record one. Soon after Jones returned to London. The two years were
almost up. He got a manager, who recorded a video that, by a stroke of
serendipity, came to the notice of the Parisian who had months earlier
helped him make a demo tape. By this time the Parisian owned a record
label.

Still only in his
early twenties, the prodigal son returned to Nigeria. Only, in this
case, not to beg for forgiveness, but to say ‘I told you so!’ Not only
did he have his debut album in hand, there was also a small fortune (a
six-figure sum in pounds sterling) to go with it. “The kind of money I
was given, [my father] just couldn’t argue,” he tells me.

Jones hasn’t looked
back since then. Roughly every four years since then, he has released a
new album. His most recent, ‘Nigerian Wood, appeared in 2008. Its title
track is an inventive reinterpretation of the Beatles 70s hit,
‘Norwegian Wood’. While the older song hints of a quiet sexual
restraint, the newer one seethes with sexual energy, playing on the
phallic associations of “wood”, “timber”, “teak” and “mahogany”. “We
don’t have the same type of fetishisation of the body that the
Europeans have, especially with the black male,” Jones says.
“Everything is seen in sexual terms if you’re a black male. So I play
on that, very much so.”

So, like the name
“Keziah Jones”, the song “Nigerian Wood” is another loaded joke. But
sometimes people don’t ‘get’ jokes. “My English friends got it, and it
was funny, but in France where they don’t have the same play on words,
they totally missed the joke,” he tells me, laughing.

The overt sexuality
of that track leads me to interrogate him about his ‘shirtlessness’ –
Keziah Jones often performs shirtless, and over the years the Western
media has come to elevate that into a Jonesian motif of sorts. Jones
protests. “You know Europeans man, when you see a black dude with no
shirt it becomes more important than the music. That was not my plan.
When I play… I’m very intense; I get very hot so I take my shirt off.
And I don’t think anything about it… Fela plays with his shirt off, no
one says anything, Femi does that, Seun does that, punk guys do that,
it’s not a big deal.”

Big Bang

Today there is a
recognisable movement of ‘indie music’ talents of Nigerian origin
(Jones describes it as a “big explosion”) – think Siji and Asa and
Wunmi and Nneka. (Jones adds a couple of Diaspora-based names to the
list: US-based Tunde Adebimpe, UK-based Kele Okereke and Dizzee
Rascal).

It would not be an
exaggeration to proclaim Keziah Jones a pioneering force in this
movement. “When I started, in 1992, the only other Nigerian that came
out at that time was Seal, and he did not emphasise the Nigerian aspect
of himself at all,” he says. Before Seal, there had been Sade, also
marketed as a British talent.

“It was sort of a
very unusual thing to be coming out as a person saying I’m Nigerian,
and I’m taking back all the funk and blues and jazz, and I’m going to
say it in every interview [and] talk about Nigeria and Abeokuta and
Fela. There was nobody else around me doing that… so when I saw [others
emerge], 15 years later, I said to myself, yeah man, this is perfect.”

Jones is quick to
acknowledge that a lot has changed in those intervening years. “It’s an
easier struggle for [the new talent]… they can get deals easier, they
don’t have to explain their Nigerianness anymore.”

And the future
excites him. “What the next level would be is actually Nigerian
home-grown music having access to the massive international market, to
be sold on the same level, instead of being only known in Nigeria…
It’ll get to a level when, the next generation after D’Banj, or two
generations later, their music will also be sold all over the world,
and they’ll be known all over the world – [and] not as world music.”

Jones keeps a keen
eye on the Nigerian music industry. “I’ve got lots of nephews and
nieces who are 18, 19, 20, so I hear all the music that’s going on –
9ice, D’banj … even this guy that died, Dagrin, he was doing an early
level of what the future might hold, which is like Yoruba spoken as
poetry, but as hip-hop.” He is impressed by the overall quality of
production, and of music videos, but thinks the industry is still
marked by a penchant for “copying”.

Bending it like Keziah

Jones’ life is
littered with the sacrifices – mostly of relationships – that come with
an unwavering devotion to music. He met Akure Wall, a British-Nigerian
poet, musician, and model one day while playing on the streets of New
York. They got married in 1994. The marriage lasted only two years.
“I’m touring all the time, I was never around, I think she really
wanted a proper married life,” he reminisces. “Music to me is my main
thing, it’s my first thing. And [it’s] what I’ve always done.”

But the two have
remained friends. I ask him if he’ll ever be walking down that aisle
again. “Well, my mum’s on my case,” he laughs. “I imagine maybe one
day, but right now, my music is my main thing, and if it happens it
happens.”

Because he’s been
based abroad all these years, his father – who died in 1996 – never saw
him perform. Even his mother didn’t get firsthand experience of her
son’s music until a few years ago, when he performed at the MUSON
Center in Lagos. Now he has plans to perform in the country more often.
Before now, his albums were not marketed in Nigeria. But in his latest
deal, he’s kept Nigerian and South African rights, which means his
forthcoming album will now also be released in both countries,
“independently from the European thing”.

Apart from the
obvious influences like Fela (posing as a journalist Jones met and
interviewed Fela in Lagos months before Abami Eda passed on) and Jimi
Hendrix, Keziah Jones is a product of an eclectic array of subtler
influences; he lists Langston Hughes, Christopher Okigbo, Wole Soyinka,
Odia Ofeimun, Gil Scott-Heron and Saul Williams as favourite poets /
poet-musicians. He has also been deeply influenced by the cities he’s
lived and loved in: Lagos, New York, London and Paris. And of course,
his hometown, Abeokuta. Our extended riff on the city animates him; his
eyes light up as memories of the ‘rock-city’ invade his consciousness.
“Abeokuta’s a heavy place,” he says.

Language is another
major influence. He is fluent in three: English, French, and his native
Yoruba. But it is clearly the latter that is the biggest influence.
Every now and then during our conversation (from the moment I answer in
the affirmative to his “Se Yoruba ni iwo na”?) he breaks into the
language. It is in Yoruba that he tells me: “I understand Yoruba, it’s
what we speak at home. When I was young you couldn’t but speak Yoruba
in my home.”

Underpinning his
music is a desire to translate a Yoruba sensibility into a modern
idiom. “[Yoruba] really informs my music… I can say things in Yoruba
that I can’t say in English, so I bend English to fit the Yoruba
meaning.”

Then I realise that all his life Keziah Jones has been bending
stuff: bending English into Yoruba, bending Western sounds – and an
English name – into the service of his cherished culture; even
succeeding in bending ‘Norwegian Wood’ till it becomes recognisably
Nigerian. Still very much in the thick of his career, it doesn’t seem
like he’ll be running out of things to bend anytime soon.

Go to Source

A cruise in the night

A cruise in the night

You don’t always get the chance to sail the Durban Harbour at
night. When officials of South African Tourism (SAT), announce a boat cruise
for hosted media and trade partners from South, West and East Africa on our way
back to the hotel after the day’s activities at the International Convention
Centre, Durban, venue of the 2010 INDABA, my colleagues and I needed no prompting
to be part of the trip.

Some hours later, we are on our way to the world’s ninth largest
harbour and popular holiday resort for foreign yachts in great spirits.
Legendary explorer, Vasco da Gama, reportedly sighted the Bay on Christmas Day,
1497, when he anchored off the bluff and named the lush area Natal. The name
was later changed to Durban in 1835 after the first British governor of the
Cape Colony, Benjamin D’Urban.

Our specific destination is Wilson’s Wharf, one of the three
marinas on the harbour fed by several streams and where the Allen Gardiner, a
20 metre wooden boat built during World War 11 is berthed. It is a merry group
of over 50 people that attempted to board the boat named after Captain Allen
Gardiner who, in 1835, called the first public meeting in Natal. Sadly, all of
us could not because the cruise which operates all year round, including
Christmas day, doesn’t take more than 45 passengers on its deck and in its
dining room. A quick consultation and some officials of SAT give up their
space. Some of us then appropriate the saloon while we (the three Nigerian
journalists) and others settle for the deck.

Fun sailing

It is a clear, starry night as Mark Folucle, the boat driver who
has been at the trade for five years, fires the engine. One of his assistants
tells us the course on the public address system and assures that dinner and
drinks would be served. He urges us to relax and enjoy the cruise.

It is fun sailing the busiest port in the Southern Hemisphere.
We cruise the calm waters of the harbour along the Maydon Channel (one-time
landing strip for the UK Royal Mail flying boats); the Silt Canal, past the
protected conservation mangrove swamps and Pelican Island, turning where the
Silt Canal ends at the Bluff. We pass several towering vessels bathed in light
and anchored in the bay where other recreational activities including canoeing
and kayaking, parasailing, fishing from boats and bird watching are carried
out.

The almost three hours we spend on the cruise is like an hour
with the informative commentary by the crew, drinks, dinner and the lively
conversation. National boundaries are broken as all of us (Nigerians, Kenyans,
Batswana, Malawians, South Africans) discuss almost every subject-politics,
religion, economy, the World Cup and relationships. Though Phumi Dhlomo,
Regional Director, Africa and Domestic Markets, South African Tourism and
leader of the tour, tries to raise ‘Shosholoza’ the traditional South African
folk song sung in a call and response style, people appear more interested in
the discussions. Only a few people respond before returning to their
conversations.

Worthwhile experience

Folucle, the boat driver, is a widely travelled sailor who has
been to most of the countries in Southern and Eastern Africa. “It has been good
driving a boat,” he tells my colleague and I when we join him at the wheels. “I
enjoy doing it but I won’t use the word exciting. I enjoy especially now that I
am taking a group on tour.” He takes people on the boat cruise everyday but
relaxes when he is not cruising. “One of my favourite sports is sailing and
when I am not driving a boat, I am sailing.”

Dhlomo also explains the objective of the night cruise. “We
organised the boat cruise so that people can have a good view of Durban. Most
people who visit Durban only see the city during the day, they do not see what
the city has to offer at night. Hence the boat cruise offers the perfect
opportunity for people to have a good view of the city at night from the
Lagoon.

“We also want our trade partners to have a taste of what their
customers stand to gain and see when they go on a boat cruise like this so that
when they market Durban, they will be able to tell their story from experience
and be able to sell the city as a good tourist destination in South Africa.
Durban has a lot to offer. There is a clean and interesting beach here, good
hotels and the food is also tasty.” He couldn’t have put it better, Durban is
as he says.

Go to Source

Literature in the Federal Capital Territory

Literature in the Federal Capital Territory

Abuja
has in times past been referred to as an art-starved and soulless civil
servant city, among other unflattering descriptions. But things are
changing.

The month of May
ended up being probably the busiest so far in the Federal Capital
Territory, as far as literary, education and cultural activities are
concerned. These are some of the activities that took place in Abuja
last month.

US Embassy/Abuja Writer’s Forum

Award winning
Nigerian author of ‘Purple Hibiscus,’ ‘Half of a Yellow Sun’ and ‘The
Thing Around Your Neck’, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie was in Abuja between
May 15 and 17, conducting a writing workshop with 25 budding writers.

Organised by the
Public Affairs Section of the United States Embassy and facilitated by
the Abuja Writers Forum (AWF), the workshop also included an Open Mic
Session hosted by the FCT Social Development Secretariat.

The AWF also
brought to town for its Guest Writers’ Session, one of Nigeria’s master
poets, Tanure Ojaide, who led a creative writing session on May 29 and
then read to the literary community in Abuja at the Pen and Pages
Bookshop.

Abuja Literary Society

The ALS has carved a niche for itself in Abuja with its weekly literary readings, held since 1998.

On May 21, at the
Zamziba Food and Wine, Asokoro, the newly re-packaged ALS Book Club
hosted Wale Okediran’s Tenant of the House as the book of the month.

The Write Squad

Young book lovers
were not left out of May’s bumper package of literary activities. 80
students from eight schools across the FCT participated in an
interactive reading session tagged, ‘My Book & I’. Session Three
featured Sade Adeniran’s novel, ‘Imagine This’. The author and other
guests marveled the level of understanding displayed by the
participating students.

Professor Tunde
Adeniran, who hosted the session, recommended that the initiative be
replicated in other states of the federation. He also advised that the
participating schools not be limited to schools in the metropolis but
to reach out to schools in rural localities.

Infusion

Chika Onigwe and
her novel, ‘On Black Sister’s Street’ took centre stage on May 26 at
the JB Grills, Maitama Amusement Park in Abuja under the umbrella of
Lola Shoneyin’s Infusion. It was an inspiring evening of the best of
literature spiced with poetry performances.

It was the second
outing of Infusion which debuted earlier in February with Shoneyin
herself. Answering questions from the audience, Chika Unigwe revealed
that in writing her book, she had to disguise as a prostitute in the
street of Antwerp, with her husband posing as a bodyguard. “I had
direct contact with some of the principal characters. I studied and
interacted with them,” she explained.

Cassava Republic Press

Next on the bill
was the Acacia A meeting room of Ladi Kwali Conference Hall at the
Sheraton Hotel and Towers, on May 27 where Sade Adeniran and Shoneyin
thrilled Abuja literati to readings from their works.

Organised by Abuja
based publisher, Cassava Republic, the reading, tagged ‘Prose meets
Poetry’ was part of a promotional reading tour for Adeniran’s ‘Imagine
This’, which won the 2008 Commonwealth Prize for Best First Book
(African Region), after readings in Lagos, Ogun and Oyo.

It was a quality
time spent as Sade’s sing-song voice reading from her book combined
with Shoneyin’s usually enthralling performance style to such a
successful degree that the audience from other events within the Ladi
Kwali started to trickle in to hear to the two ladies.

There was also a
storytelling session during which audience members exhibited their
storytelling skills. Felix Abrahams Obi got the Acacia A room vibrating
with laughter as he told his story with an Igbo laden accent about a
container on the sea, his dreams, aspiration and challenges of life.

Earlier that day,
Ms Adeniran read to the University community at the University of
Abuja. Some of the students followed her down to the later reading at
Sheraton.

Association of Nigerian Authors

Weeklong activities
by the Abuja chapter of the Association of Nigeria Authors, kicked off
May 22 with the Special Guest Session which featured US based poet and
scholar, Chimalum Nwankwo who read from his latest collection …

On May 27, the
group commenced a 4-day event tagged ‘For You To Read,’ in
collaboration with the French Cultural Centre in Abuja. Being the
Childrens’ Day, Four FCT primary schools were engaged in an interactive
session with childrens author, Ameh Teresa who read her book, ‘Anty
Talatu,’ to the pupils.

The Authors Forum
on May 28 featured four writers, Ahmed Maiwada, Eugenia Abu, Denja
Abdullahii, Patrick Oguejiofor and Lebanese Mohammed Tann. All read
from their works before the discussion session which was anchored by
Seyi Adigun and Joan Orji. The interactive session dwelled primarily on
the writing process, publishing, marketing and promotion of books.

Writers, scholars,
journalists, students of Nassarawa State University and the French
Cultural Centre had one of the most intellectual literary discourse on
May 28 as they gathered for the round table session on Chinua Achebe’s
Things Fall Apart. The round table session was preceded by the viewing
of the movie adaptation of TFA with Professor Umelo Ojimma of Nassarawa
State University as the lead discussant. Others include Prof. Isaac
Shuabu and Dr. Felix Amoah, Patrick Jude-Otteh, Ahmed Maiwada and Marc
Fenoli of the French Cultural Centre.

The discussion
ranged from participants wanting to know the inspiration behind
Achebe’s writing of the novel, the secret behind its universality and
worldwide acceptance, which has resulted in translations into over 50
languages.

There couldn’t have
been a better way to end these week-long activities but with a picnic.
The association of Nigerian Authors, French Cultural Centre, Nassarawa
State University, their friends, families and invited guests gathered
at the French Centre for the fourth day in a stretch but this time for
a literary picnic.

It was also an
opportunity to review the four-day event, with a view to making the
subsequent edition better and richer for the good of literature
development in Nigeria.

Tagged My Favourite
Book, members of the audience had the opportunity to share their
Favourite Book with one another, while French Students from Nassarawa
State University presented a short drama in French.

From May to June

If the month of May
is anything to go by, June will be just as vibrant on the Abuja
literary scene. Events for this month started on June 7 at the
Transcorp Hilton Hotel, where the Abuja Literary Society hosted Uwem
Akpan, winner of the 2009 Commonwealth Writers Prize, to a reading form
his awarding winning short story collection, ‘Say You Are One of Them’,
which was also an Oprah’s Book Club pick.

Go to Source

‘I’ve published less than I would have wished’

‘I’ve published less than I would have wished’

Ama Ata Aidoo is in
her hotel room in Lagos, talking about the night before, when she had
been a special guest at the Farafina Trust literary evening. “I had
forgotten how well received I am in this country… how well Nigerians
have always kind of taken me and my work. It was so wonderful.” It is
her first visit in many years, and she declares herself impressed by
changes on the landscape of Lagos, as well as the vibrant art scene.

Asked about the
literary in her country, Ghana, the author of ‘Our Sister Killjoy’,
‘Changes’ and ‘An Angry Letter in January’, says things are looking up.
“ A couple of years back the scene was dry and I would have hesitated a
little more. But we definitely have a crop of really talented writers
coming up.” She names young Ghanaian writers including Mohammed Ali
Naseehu, Ayesha Haruna-Atta and Yaba Badoe. “It’s beginning to look a
whole lot more encouraging than it’s been for a long time,” Aidoo
affirms.

Spirit of the sixties

Like Achebe,
Soyinka and Ngugi, Ama Ata Aidoo came to literary prominence in the
sixties, writing her now classic play, ‘The Dilemma of a Ghost’ at age
23. Asked what led to so many great works by would be giants of African
literature around this period, Aidoo gives her own take on the issue.
“I suspect [it has to do with] the whole idea of independence – some of
these African countries had just emerged from open, or formal
colonialism – and I think the sheer wonder, the enthusiasm, the
expectations that it’s going to be a new world, must have been quite
inspirational for us.” She also believes that economic and other social
realities were less harsh in the 60s. “And then there is also the whole
question of the grip of the writer on the English language. We just
felt like writing and the language was not a problem. I think that
language has [now] become… part of the problem,” she says.

On the suggestion
that the language problem may be due to a decline in educational
standards, Aidoo – once Minister of Education in Jerry Rawlings’
government – agrees, saying, “This has been true of Ghana, and I am not
too sure I can honestly say that we’ve recovered.” She admits to
finding the issue “stressful” and alludes to ideas she had for
education once, which “caused so much controversy in Ghana.” But then
she checks herself, saying, “I think it’s a bit arrogant to say that
because you couldn’t get your ideas through some 20, 25 years ago, that
nobody or group of people are capable of helping things to improve. I
think I should let go because any aspect of a country’s development
cannot come out of the mind or activism of one person. There has always
to be a collective move.”

The African Diaspora

Ama Ata Aidoo’s
play, ‘The Dilemma of a Ghost’ (1965) was performed in Accra in 2007 to
mark 50 years of Ghana’s independence. It was staged later in the same
year at the Africa Centre in London to mark 200 years of the abolition
of the Transatlantic Slave Trade. 2007 also saw the production of the
play in Dublin, Ireland, by a Nigerian theatre director, Bisi Adigun.
Did Aidoo know in the 60s that her play would go this far? “No,” she
replies. “I couldn’t possibly have imagined it, no way. First, I was
that young. I just wanted to write a play, frankly. I didn’t think it
would get this far.”

In ‘Dilemma of a
Ghost’, an African American female marries a Ghanaian and comes back
with him to “the source”. The play captures the exuberance of the heady
60s when African Americans and Caribbeans came to the newly independent
country, wanting to be part of the spirit of Nkrumah’s Ghana. The
author says the phenomenon has never really waned. “As far as Diasporan
Africans are concerned, that feeling of wanting to be part of some
African thing stayed. [It] has remained through all these years of
disenchantment and more physical manifestations of disillusionment
because – maybe because of the (slave) forts – we in Ghana still get
some substantial volume of movement from both the Caribbean and the USA
and around the African world; Europe also,” she says.

“And of course,
with Obama coming to Accra recently, that must also have kind of
kindled a new wave. There were people who were coming in the 60s, 70s,
the 80s – who still come.” Aidoo cites the recent funeral of Naa Morkor
Busia (widow of former Ghanaian prime minister Kofi Abrefa Busia), at
which Stevie Wonder sang. Also in attendance was director John
Singleton (ex-husband of actress Akosua Busia). Aidoo also mentions
Rita Marley, who spends half the year in Ghana; and Anne Adams who left
her job at a US university to direct the W.E.B Dubois Memorial Centre
for Pan-African Culture in Accra. “She is still very much part of
Ghanaian academic and intellectual life,” says the writer. It occurs to
her to differentiate between the Diaspora sprung from slavery (what she
calls “traditional Disporans”) and Africans who have lived in places
like London for two years. “We must have some way of differentiating
between the two streams,” she explains.

But is there a need
in a Post-Obama world for African Americans and Caribbeans to return to
an ancestral homeland? Aidoo suggests the question of how relevant
Africa is to the African Diasporan, is for them to answer. “How the
traditional Diaspora relates to Africa has a whole lot more to do with
themselves, rather than us. Of course, we could help by getting
ourselves a little better in organised. It must be kind of reassuring
for one to go to one’s ancestral home and see that things are working.”

The writer as a young girl

Ama Ata Aidoo
decided to become a writer at the age of 15, having grown up in an
environment where storytelling was part of daily life. Her village had
some kind of official storyteller whose job it was to spin tales. Aidoo
also had a headmaster in primary school who delighted in getting the
children to tell stories to themselves; and on some weekends he hauled
them around surrounding villages, doing the same. The young Aidoo also
loved reading. Looking back now, the author recognises that all these
lit the imaginative fire in her, preparing her for a life of writing.

Efua Sutherland

As a young
graduate, Aidoo came under the influence of Efua Sutherland (author of
‘The Marriage of Anansewa’), while serving as a Junior Research Fellow
in the Institute of African Studies in Accra. “I worked directly under
her, transcribing some of the stories she had collected. Unfortunately,
I don’t know what happened to that collection, but generally, working
with her was wonderful,” recalls Aidoo, who calls the late Sutherland
“an enabler.” Reflecting further, she says, “I think I was so lucky to
fall into the hands of someone like Efua Sutherland. She was very much
committed to the arts. She wrote poetry, she wrote plays, she produced,
directed and so on.”

One of the
performers of in the 2007 production of ‘The Dilemma of a Ghost’ in
London’s Africa Centre was Adeline Ama Buabeng, who was raised by
Sutherland. Aidoo says of Buabeng, “She has been one of the people who
have literally lived in such a way that their whole life is literally a
manifestation of what [Sutherland] did, like a tribute, because she has
stayed in the arts. Frankly, one of the reasons why I’ve always felt
good about that London production of ‘The Dilemma of a Ghost’ was
precisely the fact that someone like Ama had the chance to be in it.”

Fiction, drama and poetry

Aidoo’s favourite
genre used to be poetry, which is the least known of her writing. Now,
she favours the short story genre. “With a short story, one doesn’t
have to spin as many words as for the novel. I like reading short
stories and I’ve felt rather good that I’ve turned out some good short
stories and hope to continue.”

Her play, ‘Anowa’,
was only produced after it had been published and so could not be
amended during production. “I myself killed my dramatic impulses
because I swore never to write [another] play unless I had a group to
work with.” Now she wonders why she had been so “traumatised” when she
should have been feeling good. “To be honest with you, ‘Anowa’ seems to
have made its own life as a really viable piece of theatre, so I can’t
continue to mourn the fact that I hadn’t seen a production of it before
it was published.”

On the gender
concerns of her books, Aidoo insists the issues have not gone away and
there is much for female writers to tackle still. “It’s like women are
even less exuberant or independent. Unfortunately, women in their 20s,
especially from the universities, are becoming a lot more timid than we
were.” These days, Aidoo teaches for half of the year at Brown
University in the US and spends the rest of the time in Ghana. She is
active in MBASEEM, a group set up to support women writers in Ghana.

Influences

Aidoo believes the
issue of influences is for the critics to determine. Nonetheless, she
declares that every writer she has ever read, taught her something. “In
terms of William Shakespeare, bless his heart, wherever he is – he must
have influenced me as a dramatist because I realised that, for
instance, until I consciously changed the format of ‘Anowa’, ‘Dilemma…’
had acts, like Shakespeare.” She wrote her own plays before ‘Death and
the King’s Horseman’, and so could not have been influenced by it, but
she cannot praise Soyinka’s masterpiece enough. “That play, for me,
defines the best in drama and certainly the best in African drama.
Incredible work,” she enthuses.

The publication of
Achebe’s ‘Things Fall Apart’ was a watershed for Aidoo, fresh from the
English Department of the University of Ghana Legon, decades back.
“Having this novel come out probably reinforced me in a way that I was
not aware of at the time. We were so busy doing the English tradition.
Before Achebe I hadn’t even been aware that an African can write a
novel that the English Department can have us read as recommended text.
That must have influenced me.”

African love stories

Aidoo edited
‘African Love Stories’ (Ayebia, UK), an anthology that produced the
2007 Caine winning story by Monica Arac de Nyeko. “When Ayebia asked me
whether I would edit this, I didn’t express my reluctance, but
definitely with myself I was a bit iffy.” Then she got the manuscript
and felt privileged to be associated with it, “because it’s such a
wonderful collection.”

Favourite reads

She is currently
reading the “big, fat” Booker Prize winning novel by Hilary Mantel,
‘Wolf Hall’. “Isn’t that something? I couldn’t put this book down. I’ve
enjoyed it enormously.” She gasps when talking about ‘The Known World’
by Edward P. Jones; she has just finished his short story collection,
‘Lost in the City’. Aidoo also loves new writings by Ghanaian writers.

Going on

Ama Ata Aidoo intends to keep on writing. She is working on a novel
and has just finished what she hopes will be her third collection of
short stories. “I’ve published less than I would have wished. And so,
if I still have the energy and maybe the tendency to write, I better
just shut up and write.”

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