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Afrobeats after Fela

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4 Mar 2026, 11:00 UTC
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Wizkid’s dispute with Seun Kuti and the release of his latest EP with Asake highlight the widening gap between Afrobeats’ commercial triumph and Fela Kuti’s political inheritance Screenshot from Wizkid on Instagram (Fair Use). A few weeks ago, some disturbing comments appeared on the official Instagram page of Wizkid, Africa’s most successful musician of the streaming era. The social media post, which tagged @bigbirdkuti, the official Instagram account of Seun Kuti—the controversial musician and son of Fela Kuti—was a frontal weigh-in on the recent back-and-forth between Seun Kuti and Wizkid FC, Wizkid’s fanbase. See the posts below for yourself: Perhaps Wizkid was euphoric about crossing Spotify’s 10 billion mark, or media-savvy enough to use this controversy to promote his latest project, REAL, Vol. 1. The jury is out on his intentions. But his actions left the Nigerian music community disappointed and somewhat concerned about the cultural legacy of Fela Kuti, a figure revered as the most influential African musician of the 20th century. Fela Kuti needs no introduction to lovers of Nigerian music. He recently received a posthumous Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, a first for an African musician. At the forefront of inventing Afrobeat, a fusion of highlife, funk, American Jazz and Yoruba music, Fela was also a countercultural figure and activist who was always in trouble with the government of the day. His activism and protest music made him, his family, his band members and his followers sitting ducks for successive military regimes. He was brutalized and jailed several times for his criticism. Following his death in 1997 at a relatively young age of 58 from an HIV-related ailment, his influence persisted in contemporary Nigerian music, now called Afrobeats. I belong to the school of thought that believes Fela’s youngest son and leader of Fela’s Egypt 80 Band, Seun Kuti, made himself vulnerable (and continues to do so) by acting like a social media influencer. He ought to find a more creative conduit for his inexplicable rage, lest he lapses into crime again. Perhaps consider retaining the services of a therapist or joining an anger management class. And Wizkid should rein in his fan club, Wizkid FC, as the Nigerian politician and presidential aspirant, Mr Peter Obi, ought to rein in his own netizen loyalists. Everyone should be more civil, more gracious, and more responsible. The Nigerian government should build lasting monuments around the legacies of unsung heroes like Fela Anikulapo-Kuti—but this is not the point of my piece. I am here to tell you about REAL, Vol. 1, the most elite Afrobeats release of 2026 so far. A 4-track extended play duet record with Asake, lasting ten minutes and produced almost entirely by Magicsticks. On the opening track, “Turbulence”, Magicsticks gets help from DJ Tunez, perhaps adding extra licks to the thumping bassline. Asake opens with his typical verse, which begins with dysphoria, offers some instructive street wisdom and ends with his inflated assessment of his sexual prowess. Wizkid takes that baton in his verse. Similarly, he starts with his happy family, offers advice about minding his own business (he would be wise to take his own advice), and ends by bragging about his lifestyle. What is “Turbulence” really about? References to turbulence are usually reserved for aviation, but Asake co-opts the term meaningfully for the chorus, “Turbulence, oh, turbulence, yeah I dey drop oh, turbulence.” That sharp drop from a high, either drug or ego-induced, deserves acknowledgement in transit from a popping party to a relatively quiet hotel room in the wee hours. Between the sombre brag and sober counsel, there is something vulnerable about ‘Turbulence,” perhaps because of the mood it evokes. You can’t knock off the preoccupation with the female body, but you can tell that it stands in for something dysphoric. Wizkid handles the hook on that Private School Amapiano bop, “Jogodo”, but this is hardly the song’s highlight. Either the early brass solo on the record or Asake’s indulgent verse stands out, but the mood on “Jogodo” is more luxuriant, gregarious and less vulnerable than “Turbulence.” In all, the song aligns with Amapiano’s ethos of letting the music—that generous measure of ambient synth and percussion—do the heavy lifting. “Iskolodo” is built on dreamy piano chords, a splatter of idiophonic percussion and a smattering of Spanish words. A delicate nod to Latin America is consistent with the Giran-Republic era, as well as Asake’s past life as a drummer. The music on “Iskolodo” is hypnotic on its own, almost ruined by the duo Wizkid and Asake’s inchoate lyrics, yet the music’s atmospheric mood is somehow preserved. “Alaye” is yet another Amapiano song. It is best to leave Amapiano pundits to determine what exact school of Amapiano Magicsticks appropriates on this record. Both Wizkid and Asake are in a jubilant mood, but paradoxically, they also obsess about time in their verses. Expectedly, as with most Afrobeats songs, they privilege feeling over thought, mood over meaning, and the kernel of an idea darting all over like the disappearing cursor of neonlight, chased by an obsessed reveler. A dear friend once said finding meaning in Afrobeats is as efficient as fetching water from a well with a basket. They are probably right. Somewhere between the brain rot that is the internet and social media, our short attention span, AI’s revolution and the goody bag swung around the drug dealer lurking outside the nightclub, Afrobeats is losing whatever is left of its lyrical armoury, relying entirely on the producer’s craft to do all the heavy lifting. I have always found Asake’s courtship with Wizkid rather curious. I have returned to his collaborations with Olamide. From the incredible, ceiling-shattering verse on “Amapiano” to the extremely melodic “New Religion,” Asake clearly makes better music with Olamide. Olamide, not Wizkid, helps Asake’s creativity attain magical alchemy. REAL Vol. I is the kind of record that would get better if you are hotboxing with your mates in a rented BnB. But I have one question for Wizkid: Was REAL Vol. 1 worth calling Fela’s name in vain?

Full Text

Wizkid’s dispute with Seun Kuti and the release of his latest EP with Asake highlight the widening gap between Afrobeats’ commercial triumph and Fela Kuti’s political inheritance Screenshot from Wizkid on Instagram (Fair Use). A few weeks ago, some disturbing comments appeared on the official Instagram page of Wizkid, Africa’s most successful musician of the streaming era. The social media post, which tagged @bigbirdkuti, the official Instagram account of Seun Kuti—the controversial musician and son of Fela Kuti—was a frontal weigh-in on the recent back-and-forth between Seun Kuti and Wizkid FC, Wizkid’s fanbase. See the posts below for yourself: Perhaps Wizkid was euphoric about crossing Spotify’s 10 billion mark, or media-savvy enough to use this controversy to promote his latest project, REAL, Vol. 1 . The jury is out on his intentions. But his actions left the Nigerian music community disappointed and somewhat concerned about the cultural legacy of Fela Kuti, a figure revered as the most influential African musician of the 20th century. Fela Kuti needs no introduction to lovers of Nigerian music. He recently received a posthumous Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, a first for an African musician. At the forefront of inventing Afrobeat, a fusion of highlife, funk, American Jazz and Yoruba music, Fela was also a countercultural figure and activist who was always in trouble with the government of the day. His activism and protest music made him, his family, his band members and his followers sitting ducks for successive military regimes. He was brutalized and jailed several times for his criticism. Following his death in 1997 at a relatively young age of 58 from an HIV-related ailment, his influence persisted in contemporary Nigerian music, now called Afrobeats. I belong to the school of thought that believes Fela’s youngest son and leader of Fela’s Egypt 80 Band, Seun Kuti, made himself vulnerable (and continues to do so) by acting like a social media influencer. He ought to find a more creative conduit for his inexplicable rage, lest he lapses into crime again. Perhaps consider retaining the services of a therapist or joining an anger management class. And Wizkid should rein in his fan club, Wizkid FC, as the Nigerian politician and presidential aspirant, Mr Peter Obi, ought to rein in his own netizen loyalists. Everyone should be more civil, more gracious, and more responsible. The Nigerian government should build lasting monuments around the legacies of unsung heroes like Fela Anikulapo-Kuti—but this is not the point of my piece. I am here to tell you about REAL, Vol. 1, the most elite Afrobeats release of 2026 so far. A 4-track extended play duet record with Asake, lasting ten minutes and produced almost entirely by Magicsticks. On the opening track, “Turbulence”, Magicsticks gets help from DJ Tunez, perhaps adding extra licks to the thumping bassline. Asake opens with his typical verse, which begins with dysphoria, offers some instructive street wisdom and ends with his inflated assessment of his sexual prowess. Wizkid takes that baton in his verse. Similarly, he starts with his happy family, offers advice about minding his own business (he would be wise to take his own advice), and ends by bragging about his lifestyle. What is “Turbulence” really about? References to turbulence are usually reserved for aviation, but Asake co-opts the term meaningfully for the chorus, “Turbulence, oh, turbulence, yeah I dey drop oh, turbulence.” That sharp drop from a high, either drug or ego-induced, deserves acknowledgement in transit from a popping party to a relatively quiet hotel room in the wee hours. Between the sombre brag and sober counsel, there is something vulnerable about ‘Turbulence,” perhaps because of the mood it evokes. You can’t knock off the preoccupation with the female body, but you can tell that it stands in for something dysphoric. Wizkid handles the hook on that Private School Amapiano bop, “Jogodo”, but this is hardly the song’s highlight. Either the early brass solo on the record or Asake’s indulgent verse stands out, but the mood on “Jogodo” is more luxuriant, gregarious and less vulnerable than “Turbulence.” In all, the song aligns with Amapiano’s ethos of letting the music—that generous measure of ambient synth and percussion—do the heavy lifting. “Iskolodo” is built on dreamy piano chords, a splatter of idiophonic percussion and a smattering of Spanish words. A delicate nod to Latin America is consistent with the Giran-Republic era, as well as Asake’s past life as a drummer. The music on “Iskolodo” is hypnotic on its own, almost ruined by the duo Wizkid and Asake’s inchoate lyrics, yet the music’s atmospheric mood is somehow preserved. “Alaye” is yet another Amapiano song. It is best to leave Amapiano pundits to determine what exact school of Amapiano Magicsticks appropriates on this record. Both Wizkid and Asake are in a jubilant mood, but paradoxically, they also obsess about time in their verses. Expectedly, as with most Afrobeats songs, they privilege feeling over thought, mood over meaning, and the kernel of an idea darting all over like the disappearing cursor of neonlight, chased by an obsessed reveler. A dear friend once said finding meaning in Afrobeats is as efficient as fetching water from a well with a basket. They are probably right. Somewhere between the brain rot that is the internet and social media, our short attention span, AI’s revolution and the goody bag swung around the drug dealer lurking outside the nightclub, Afrobeats is losing whatever is left of its lyrical armoury, relying entirely on the producer’s craft to do all the heavy lifting. I have always found Asake’s courtship with Wizkid rather curious. I have returned to his collaborations with Olamide. From the incredible, ceiling-shattering verse on “Amapiano” to the extremely melodic “New Religion,” Asake clearly makes better music with Olamide. Olamide, not Wizkid, helps Asake’s creativity attain magical alchemy. REAL Vol. I is the kind of record that would get better if you are hotboxing with your mates in a rented BnB. But I have one question for Wizkid: Was REAL Vol. 1 worth calling Fela’s name in vain?

AI Variants

news_brief

gpt-5.4

Wizkid-Seun Kuti dispute revives debate over Fela’s legacy as new EP draws praise and scrutiny

Short summary: A public clash involving Wizkid and Seun Kuti has renewed questions about how Afrobeats relates to Fela Kuti’s political and cultural legacy, while Wizkid’s new joint EP with Asake is being hailed as a polished early standout of 2026.

Long summary: Recent social media friction between Wizkid and Seun Kuti has stirred concern in Nigeria’s music community about respect for Fela Kuti’s legacy and the growing distance between Afrobeats’ commercial success and its protest roots. At the same time, Wizkid and Asake’s four-track EP REAL, Vol. 1 has drawn attention for its sleek Amapiano-leaning production, moody atmosphere and hitmaking ambition, even as critics question its lyrical depth and the wisdom of invoking Fela in a celebrity feud.

A recent dispute involving Wizkid, Seun Kuti and online fan communities has sparked broader discussion about the place of Fela Kuti’s legacy in today’s Afrobeats scene.

The debate comes as Wizkid and Asake release REAL, Vol. 1, a four-track EP produced largely by Magicsticks. The project has been described as one of the most refined Afrobeats releases of 2026 so far, with tracks such as “Turbulence,” “Jogodo,” “Iskolodo” and “Alaye” leaning into Amapiano textures, hypnotic percussion and mood-driven songwriting.

The wider argument centers on contrast: Fela Kuti is remembered not only as the pioneer of Afrobeat, but as a political dissenter whose activism brought repeated harassment, imprisonment and violence under military rule. His influence remains immense in modern Nigerian music, yet critics argue contemporary Afrobeats often privileges vibe, luxury and production polish over political substance and lyrical sharpness.

Within that tension, REAL, Vol. 1 is praised for atmosphere and craftsmanship, especially Magicsticks’ production and the chemistry of its two stars, while also facing criticism for thin lyrical ideas. The release has therefore become part of a bigger cultural conversation about whether commercial Afrobeats is drifting further from the radical inheritance associated with Fela Kuti.

Tags: Afrobeats, Wizkid, Asake, Fela Kuti, Seun Kuti, Nigerian music, REAL Vol. 1, Amapiano, culture

Hashtags: #Afrobeats, #Wizkid, #Asake, #FelaKuti, #SeunKuti, #NigerianMusic

social

gpt-5.4

Why Wizkid’s clash with Seun Kuti is bigger than celebrity drama

Short summary: A public dispute between Wizkid and Seun Kuti has sparked a wider debate about Fela Kuti’s legacy, just as Wizkid and Asake’s REAL, Vol. 1 gains momentum as one of 2026’s most talked-about Afrobeats releases.

Long summary: The conversation around Wizkid and Seun Kuti is no longer just about online insults. It has become a referendum on how today’s Afrobeats scene engages with Fela Kuti’s legacy of activism, resistance and artistic seriousness. That debate now surrounds REAL, Vol. 1, Wizkid’s new collaboration with Asake, a short but polished project praised for its production and mood while criticized as another example of a genre leaning more on vibe than lyrical substance.

Wizkid’s latest online clash with Seun Kuti has touched a nerve far beyond fan wars.

At the center of the reaction is Fela Kuti’s legacy: a towering history of musical innovation, political defiance and personal sacrifice that many feel deserves more care than social media sparring allows.

The timing matters. The controversy has unfolded alongside the release of REAL, Vol. 1, Wizkid’s four-track collaboration with Asake. The EP is already being praised as a sleek, high-level Afrobeats release, driven by Magicsticks’ production, Amapiano-inflected rhythms and a strong sense of atmosphere.

Songs like “Turbulence,” “Jogodo,” “Iskolodo” and “Alaye” highlight the strengths of today’s mainstream sound: immersive beats, melodic confidence and star power. But they also feed a deeper critique that modern Afrobeats often favors mood, flexing and replay value over lyrical depth or social urgency.

That is why this moment resonates. Fela helped build a musical language tied to resistance. Afrobeats has turned that inheritance into a global pop engine. The question many are now asking is whether the genre can celebrate Fela’s name while moving ever further from the values that made him iconic.

Tags: Wizkid, Seun Kuti, Fela Kuti, Afrobeats, Asake, REAL Vol. 1, music debate, culture

Hashtags: #Wizkid, #SeunKuti, #FelaKuti, #Afrobeats, #Asake, #REALVol1, #NigerianMusic

web

gpt-5.4

Afrobeats after Fela: Wizkid, Seun Kuti and the cultural argument behind REAL, Vol. 1

Short summary: The fallout between Wizkid and Seun Kuti has opened a wider conversation about whether Afrobeats’ global success still carries any of Fela Kuti’s political spirit. That debate now shadows the release of Wizkid and Asake’s new EP, REAL, Vol. 1.

Long summary: Wizkid’s online clash with Seun Kuti has become more than a celebrity dispute, turning into a pointed cultural debate over what remains of Fela Kuti’s influence in the age of streaming-era Afrobeats. As Nigeria’s pop scene celebrates another major release in Wizkid and Asake’s REAL, Vol. 1, critics are weighing the project’s polished production and strong mood against a broader concern: that contemporary Afrobeats has grown commercially dominant while shedding much of the lyrical urgency and political conviction associated with Fela’s legacy.

A social media dispute involving Wizkid and Seun Kuti has reignited one of the oldest questions in Nigerian popular music: what, if anything, of Fela Kuti still lives inside modern Afrobeats?

The latest flashpoint came after inflammatory comments linked to Wizkid’s official Instagram account drew attention to tensions between the singer, Seun Kuti and online fan communities. While the exact intentions behind the post remain open to interpretation, the reaction was immediate. For many observers, the episode felt larger than routine celebrity provocation. It raised concern about how casually the name and legacy of Fela Kuti can be pulled into present-day music feuds.

That concern lands heavily because Fela occupies a singular place in African cultural history. He was the architect of Afrobeat, blending highlife, jazz, funk and Yoruba musical traditions into a sound inseparable from political dissent. He was jailed, brutalized and repeatedly targeted for confronting state power. His legacy was not only musical, but ideological.

In contrast, contemporary Afrobeats has become one of Africa’s most successful global pop exports, powered by streaming numbers, celebrity branding and international visibility. The tension between those two worlds is now hard to ignore: one rooted in resistance and sharp political critique, the other often centered on lifestyle, mood and market appeal.

That is the atmosphere surrounding REAL, Vol. 1, the new four-track collaboration between Wizkid and Asake. Produced almost entirely by Magicsticks, the EP runs for about ten minutes and presents a tight, polished fusion of Afrobeats and Amapiano elements.

Its opener, “Turbulence,” stands out for its heavy bass, moody energy and a chorus that hints at emotional descent beneath party bravado. “Jogodo” pushes a more expansive and luxurious mood, with percussion and brass helping carry the record’s momentum. “Iskolodo” drifts into dreamy piano lines and atmospheric textures, while “Alaye” closes the set in a jubilant but still time-conscious register.

Across the EP, production does much of the storytelling. The music is immersive, sleek and engineered for replay value. Yet that same strength also underlines a common criticism of current Afrobeats: that producers increasingly bear the burden once carried by lyricists. Feeling often outruns meaning. Vibe can eclipse message.

That does not make REAL, Vol. 1 insignificant. On the contrary, it is being framed as one of the year’s strongest Afrobeats releases so far, especially for listeners drawn to refined sonics, star chemistry and contemporary club textures. But it also arrives as a case study in the genre’s current crossroads.

For some critics, the issue is not whether Afrobeats must imitate Fela’s politics. It is whether the genre can continue invoking his stature while drifting ever further from the courage, discipline and lyrical force that defined his work. In that sense, the argument around Wizkid, Seun Kuti and REAL, Vol. 1 is not just about one feud or one EP. It is about the widening distance between inheritance and industry.

Tags: Afrobeats, Wizkid, Asake, Fela Kuti, Seun Kuti, REAL Vol. 1, Magicsticks, Amapiano, streaming era, music culture

Hashtags: #Afrobeats, #Wizkid, #Asake, #FelaKuti, #SeunKuti, #REALVol1, #NigerianMusic, #Amapiano

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