₦airaland Forum

Welcome, Guest: RegisterLoginWith GoogleTrendingRecentNew

Stats: 3,330,557 members, 8,445,995 topics. Date: Wednesday, 15 July 2026 at 09:46 PM

Toggle theme

Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement - Celebrities - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumEntertainmentCelebritiesMusic Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement (12859 Views)

1 2 3 4 Reply (Go Down)

Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by Slytiger(op): 4:30am On Jan 30
Long crowned by his legion of fans as the king of Afrobeat, the late Fela Kuti is finally being recognised by the global music industry.

The Nigerian star will posthumously receive a Lifetime Achievement Award at the Grammys - almost three decades after his death at the age of 58.

"Fela has been in the hearts of the people for such a long time. Now the Grammys have acknowledged it, and it's a double victory," his musician son Seun Kuti tells the BBC.

"It's bringing balance to a Fela story," he adds.

Rikki Stein, a long-time friend and manager of the late musician, says the recognition by the Grammys is "better late than never".

"Africa hasn't in the past rated very highly in their interests. I think that's changing quite a bit of late," Stein tells the BBC.

Following the global success of Afrobeats, a genre inspired by Fela's sound, the Grammys introduced the category of Best African Performance in 2024.

This year, Nigerian superstar Burna Boy also has a nomination in the Best Global Music Album category.

But Fela Kuti will be the first African to receive a Lifetime Achievement Award, albeit posthumously. The award was first presented in 1963 to American singer and actor Bing Crosby.

Other musicians who will receive the award this year include Mexican-American guitarist Carlos Santana, Chaka Khan, the American singer known as the Queen of Funk, and Paul Simon.

Fela Kuti's family, as well friends and colleagues, will be attending the Grammys to receive his award.

"The global human tapestry needs this, not just because it's my father," Seun Kuti tells the BBC.

Stein says it is important to recognise Fela as a man who championed the cause of people who had "drawn life's short straw", adding that he "castigated any form of social injustice, corruption [and] mismanagement" in government.

"So it would be impossible to ignore that aspect of Fela's legacy," he tells the BBC.

For Fela Anikulapo Kuti was not simply a musician, but also a cultural theorist, political agitator and the undisputed architect of Afrobeat - which is distinct from, but ultimately led to, the modern sound of Afrobeats.

He pioneered the Afrobeat genre alongside drummer Tony Allen, blending West African rhythms, jazz, funk, highlife, extended improvisation, call-and-response vocals and politically charged lyricism.

Across a career spanning roughly three decades until his death in 1997, Fela Kuti released more than 50 albums and built a body of work that fused music with ideology, rhythm with resistance, and performance with protest.

His music incurred the wrath of Nigeria's then-military regimes.

In 1977, after the release of the album Zombie, which satirised government soldiers as obedient, brainless enforcers, his compound in the main city, Lagos, was raided.

Known as Kalakuta Republic, the property was burned, residents were brutalised, and his mother, Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti, later died from injuries sustained during the assault.

Rather than retreat, Fela Kuti responded through music and defiance. He took his mother's coffin to government offices and released the song Coffin for Head of State, turning grief into protest.

The musician's ideology was a blend of pan-Africanism, anti-imperialism, and African-rooted socialism.

Fela Kuti's mother was hugely influential in his life, helping shape his political consciousness, while the US-born singer and activist Sandra Izsadore helped sharpen his revolutionary outlook

He was born Olufela Olusegun Oludoton Ransome-Kuti, but dropped Ransome because of its Western roots.

In 1978, he married 27 women in a highly publicised ceremony, bringing together partners, performers, organisers and co-architects of the cultural and communal vision of Kalakuta Republic.

Fela Kuti endured repeated arrests, beatings, censorship and surveillance by the security forces. Yet repression only amplified his influence.

"He wasn't doing what he was doing to win awards. He was interested in liberation. Freeing the mind," Stein tells the BBC.

"He was fearless. He was determined."


Fela Kuti's musical evolution was shaped not only by Nigeria but also by Ghana. During the 1950s and 1960s, highlife music, pioneered by Ghanaian musicians such as ET Mensah, Ebo Taylor and Pat Thomas, became a defining sound across West Africa.

Its melodic guitar lines, horn sections, dance rhythms, and cosmopolitan identity deeply influenced Fela Kuti's early musical direction.

He spent time in Ghana absorbing highlife's structure, horn phrasing, and dance-oriented arrangements before fusing it with jazz, funk, the rhythms of his own Yoruba people, and political storytelling.

The DNA of highlife can be heard in Afrobeat's melodic sensibility and its balance between groove and sophistication.

In this sense, Afrobeat is not only Nigerian. It is West African, pan-African, and diasporic in origin, carrying Ghana's musical imprint at its foundation.

On stage, Fela Kuti cut an unmistakable figure. Often bare-chested or draped in the wax-printed fabric popular across West Africa, hair shaped into a crisp Afro, saxophone in hand, eyes alert with intensity, he commanded a large band of more than 20 musicians.

His performances at the Afrika Shrine in Lagos were legendary, part concert, part political rally, part spiritual ceremony.

Stein recalls that performances at the Shrine were immersive rather than conventional.

"When Fela played, nobody applauded," he tells the BBC. "The audience wasn't separate. They were part of it."

Music was not spectacle. It was communion.

Fela Kuti's visual identity was shaped in part by artist and designer Lemi Ghariokwu, who created 26 of his album covers between 1974 and 1993.

"Fela has been an ancestor for 28 years. His legacy is growing by the day. This is immortality," Ghariokwu tells the BBC, welcoming the posthumous award.

Today, Fela Kuti's music is still popular with millions around the world, and his influence is audible in modern artists such as Burna Boy, Kendrick Lamar and Sir Idris Elba.

Elba is a huge fan - the award-winning actor and DJ has curated an official vinyl box set, Fela Kuti Box Set 6, and has publicly compared him to icons such as Sade and Frank Sinatra to illustrate the point that Fela Kuti has his own unique sound.

Fela Kuti performed at major international festivals in Europe and North America, introducing global audiences to a bold and politically charged version of modern Africa.

Seun Kuti was just 14 when his father died.

"Fela never made me feel like I was a child," he recalls. "He didn't hide anything from me. He talked about everything openly."

There was no myth-building.

"I didn't even realise my dad was famous," he says. "That's credit to him. He kept me grounded."

What stayed with him most was not spectacle, but discipline, clarity and humanity.

"The human part of him, leadership, musicianship, fatherhood, that was the epitome of who he was."

One of Seun Kuti's most revealing reflections speaks to independence and identity.

"Fela was our dad, but you didn't own him. Fela belonged to himself. But we all belonged to him."

Fela Kuti insisted on being addressed by name, not by title, even by his children. Seun recalls having his pocket money docked after calling him "Pops", a moment that carried a lesson in respect.

"He always reminded us that he was in service to others more than himself."

That ethic shaped Seun's evolution from youthful ambition toward cultural responsibility.

"I used to make music to make money. But as I've grown, I lean more toward working for my people as well as my art."

Fela Kuti led multiple ensembles, most famously Africa 70 and later Egypt 80, the latter now carried forward by his son.

These were not conventional backing bands. They were musical militias, trained in discipline, endurance, and ideological purpose.

Stein recalls Fela Kuti's obsessive attention to detail.

"He tuned every instrument personally. Music wasn't entertainment to him. It was his mission."
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/czx1207757xo

Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by Switruth: 4:48am On Jan 30
Where is weedkid seems to the question baba was asking on his third pic. Hahahahaha
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by princeade86(m): 5:09am On Jan 30
Abami eda. Anikulapo Kuti himself. Rest on baba fela
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by Benbellamor: 5:18am On Jan 30
Imagine... Fela's song still winning Grammys after death
That's Quality ... just look at how well organized the band members are arranged on stage (2md picture) up there.... Dishing out raw music not DJ recorded.
Quality
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by Willy2025: 5:46am On Jan 30
It is an aberration and a sacrilege to mention Wizkid's name alongside that of Fela. Undoubtedly, Wizkid is a star, but Fela is a legend. He passed away about 30 years ago, when there was no Internet or YouTube in Nigeria and his works are still available and relevant. In 30 years to this time, nobody will remember Wizkid again. Can Wizkid do live performance with a band and the use of musical instruments without a DJ? Most of his hit songs are Fela's songs. The legend of Fela lives on.
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by manozento: 5:56am On Jan 30
Where is that little boy Wizkid? He should be advised to get some baby PAMPER.
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by HeroicMeastro: 6:01am On Jan 30
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by dam2000(m): 6:02am On Jan 30
See who that kwanshoko guy dey compete himself with
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by Exousiang01(m): 6:06am On Jan 30
Anikulapo Olufela Kuti
None ever like him again
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by SAMBARRY: 6:09am On Jan 30
Wizkid and their noisy fc followers now will be in sifia pains grin

They think ariwoni music.legend die he still dey collect lifetime awards, the musician that is still alive no even smell am why them no go over compensate with noise to disguise their painmemt grin
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by tydi(m): 6:10am On Jan 30
Fela is not just a musician he is the music
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by brain54(m): 6:11am On Jan 30
Fela is a legend...


Whether recognized by the Grammys or not. He doesn't need their validation. But it's good they acknowledged him.



Seun is probably fela's number 1 fan apart from being his child. He is so passionate about fela's music and life's work.

They is no time you would catch seun not promoting his dad's work and music one way or the other. Fella is almost his life. If he wasn't fela's son I would have called him a fanatic or obsessed fan!
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by tosyne2much(m): 6:13am On Jan 30
SAMBARRY:
Wizkid and their noisy fc followers now will be in sifia pains grin

They think ariwoni music.legend die he still dey collect lifetime awards, the musician that is still alive no even smell am why them no go over compensate with noise to disguise their painmemt grin
You didn't spell it well

"Sifia" pains cheesy
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by focus7: 6:15am On Jan 30
WizKid will never get this award, dead or alive.
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by everythingtall3:
Sleeping with all these his backup singers self is another kind of talent on it own grin... and he was still able to maintain peace in the band. how many women wizkid fit sleep with before internet bust. (Fela deserves another grammy on that one too cool)
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by Sirianese: 6:21am On Jan 30
In your face, Wiz Skink!!

In your face! 😈
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by Haydens: 6:21am On Jan 30
That baby that doesn't wanna grow up who calls himself WizKid at close to 40 years of his age he still attached kid to his name will now shut up his gutters.

Ordinary endsars we no see his face. He will not even see fellas footprint neither will he smoke what fella smoked in his entire life or else he go mad.

Fellas is bigger than Wizbaby's whole surname and generation any day anytime.
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by Kobicove(m): 6:22am On Jan 30
Why did they wait this long to give him the award?! undecided
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by b0rn2fuck(m): 6:23am On Jan 30
I respect fela as legend but I can assure you that he is incomparably, no one remember 2face songs of 10 years ago and even people praising wizkid hardly sing his song about even why he still alive , fela song while he was aliive goes about and even after death but the moment wizkid retire, he song retired with him because they have no value to the society
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by Kobicove(m): 6:23am On Jan 30
everythingtall3:
Sleeping with all these his backup singers self is another kind of specialties on its own grin... and he was still able to maintain peace in the band. how many women wizkid fit sleep with before internet bust. (Fela deserves another grammy on that one too cool)
How is this something to be proud of?
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by Omoawoke(m): 6:27am On Jan 30
The Greatest!

No Nigerian artist dead or alive can measure up to half
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by Omoawoke(m): 6:28am On Jan 30
Kobicove:
How is this something to be proud of?
But you are proud of Solomon

Black man
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by Omoawoke(m): 6:29am On Jan 30
Haydens:
That baby that doesn't wanna grow up who calls himself WizKid at close to 40 years of his age he still attached kid to his name will now shut up his gutters.

Ordinary endsars we no see his face. He will not even see fellas footprint neither will he smoke what fella smoked in his entire life or else he go mad.

Fellas is bigger than Wizbaby's whole surname and generation any day anytime.
You mean the dwarf music video twerker middle man Grammy winner
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by southsouthking(m): 6:33am On Jan 30
While one little boy from the street of surulere is claiming to be bigger than our own Fela.
What audacity.
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by LibertyRep: 6:35am On Jan 30
Na why e pained some neutrals when someone said he's bigger than this man.

He likely said that out of anger and frustration.
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by IT4U: 6:36am On Jan 30
Fela is a legend and no one comes close but I disagree that no one remembers Tuface's songs of 10 years ago. That's not true! Tuface's songs are evergreen and people remember and listen to them on daily basis.

b0rn2fuck:
I respect fela as legend but I can assure you that he is incomparably, no one remember 2face songs of 10 years ago and even people praising wizkid hardly sing his song about even why he still alive , fela song while he was aliive goes about and even after death but the moment wizkid retire, he song retired with him because they have no value to the society
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by Haydens: 6:36am On Jan 30
Omoawoke:
You mean the dwarf music video twerker middle man Grammy winner
grin grin

You gave him a very perfect qualification "middle man Grammy winner".
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by Predictor3: 6:37am On Jan 30
Omoawoke:
The Greatest!

No Nigerian artist dead or alive can measure up to half
The baba tried o. And he wasn't afraid of anybody, even soldiers.
Re: Music Legend Fela Kuti Becomes First African To Get Grammys Lifetime Achievement by Mirasteel: 6:50am On Jan 30
Fela is greater than wiz lineages, that's the truth.
1 2 3 4 Reply

Burna Boy’s Mother, Bose Ogulu Was A Dancer For Afrobeat Legend Fela KutiFela Kuti Married 27 Wives And Took Them To Ghana For Honeymoon (Throwback PhotoThrowback Photo Of Legend Fela, Elton John In UK In 1974234

Jim Iyke Is Virgin Atlantic Ambassador In N23m DealTimi Dakolo Sings As He Reacts To Elections Postponement(pics/video)Blord’s Lawyer Replies VDM: “I’m Too Learned To Drag Issues With A Layman”