• In 2017, when Nigerian street music switched from the fast-paced, dance-ready “Shaku Shaku”, the “Zanku” sound was introduced, and Zlatan spear-headed the movement. 

    Since then, he’s released at least two songs and several guest features that’ve kept him relevant. Fast forward to 2024, and Zlatan’s career has climbed up the ranks to place as one of Nigeria’s best.

    These eight songs in particular are what got him there.

    My Body — Zlatan ft. Olamide

    Zlatan was a seasoned underground artist way before he bagged his first hit with My Body in 2017 — an upbeat street banger about clubbing and debauchery. Between the first and third verse, he hops from party silliness, to being so drunk he can’t feel his face, to trying to leave an impression on women with his money. Olamide took the chorus, effectively directing mainstream attention to an interesting new act. 

    Killin Dem — Zlatan and Burna Boy 

    In a move that had his Zanku sound dominating Shaku Shaku — the preceding street sound — Zlatan joined forces with Burna Boy on this 2019 hit track. With his memorable verse, he declared it was his time, and it was indeed. From its infectious beat and melody to its jerky moonwalk and kung-fu kick dance, Killin Dem wasn’t just on repeat across clubs and parties, it propelled Zlatan to a large international audience. The song later appeared on Burna’s Grammy-nominated African Giant album (2019).

    Gelato — DJ Cuppy ft. Zlatan

    No one could hide the radiance of Zanku in 2019. Even the bubbly, ultra-rich Afropop of DJ Cuppy flirted with it that year. And who did she call on to make the fusion work? 

    It was a surprise collaboration that didn’t seem possible at the time because no one thought the streets and the 1% could mix, but Zlatan carried Gelato from what could’ve been whining about ice-cream to a universal metaphor for enjoyment. A memorable part of the song is the “Who’s your daddy?” call-and-response that had Zlatan and Cuppy proudly claiming their family names.

    Cash App — Bella Shmurda ft. Zlatan & Lincoln

    Shortly before #EndSARS happened in 2020, Cash App came out and went viral, sealing Bella Shmurda’s break into the music industry. He had Zlatan on the hit song that referenced a money transaction app that’s commonly used for cybercrime. It gained so much attention that a section of the internet petitioned the Nigerian Broadcasting Commission (NBC) to take down the song for its yahoo-yahoo promotion.

    Hallelu — Masterkraft ft. Zlatan & Bella Shmurda

    Zlatan and Bella Shmurda teamed up again on a Masterkraft song titled Hallelu. Zlatan delivered his motivational, grass-to-grace and braggadocious style of rap on the first and second verses. This jam owned all the December raves in 2020.

    Money — Zlatan ft. Davido

    One thing Zlatan will always sing about is cash and the importance of its abundance. Whether it rolls off his tongue like broken-shaming or motivational yarns, his gospel to trenches kids will always revolve around money. The song features Davido, who added his hitmaker flavour, but Zlatan’s solid chorus and melodic verse carried the jam.

    Elon Musk Remix — Shallipopi ft. Zlatan & Fireboy DML

    Although Elon Musk was already a hit, 2023’s breakout star, Shallipopi, employed Zlatan’s assistance as a street-pop general to take the music to the grassroots with this remix. 

    IDK — Wizkid ft. Zlatan

    Zlatan still has an amazing run as one of the sought-after collaborators in Nigerian music. His latest feature was Wizkid’s IDK off of his S2 EP that dropped in December 2023. The rapper used the second verse of the song to reiterate the importance of money, especially the role it plays in modern relationships. Zlatan’s bars reinforce the famous saying that “Love is sweet when there’s money.”

    Zlatan has come a long way since the viral Am I A Yahoo Boy and Eye Boyfriend era of 2019, to supporting new acts like Shallipopi and Ayox, to featuring with the Big Three — Wizkid, Davido and Burna. Nothing screams “king of the streets” more than this.

    Hear The Young Voices of the Trenches

  • Contrary to what the internet will have you believe, you don’t have to break the bank before you can afford intentional and thoughtful gifts. We’ll help you figure out some ideas for the categories of people in your life.

    Nine-to-fiver

    If the recipient is a guy with a 9-5 corporate shirts, ties, shoes, belts, cufflinks, socks will do. For babes, work clothes, a pair of cute slippers, notepads or journals are intentional gifts. Every time they wear and use these things, they’ll think of you.

    What a belt!

    Content creator

    If they create content, buy them studio props and decors and book an aesthetic studio for them to shoot their content. 

    You can also consider giving them a gimbal, phone vlog video kit, ring light, lapel mic, tripod, drone and 99 other equipment options.

    Additionally, paying the subscriptions for the work apps they use like CapCut, PremierePro, Da Vinci Resolve e.t.c. is such an intentional move.

    Entrepreneur

    If you’re looking to excite an entrepreneur with gifts, acquire a business registration form from CAC to surprise them (if they don’t have it). You can also make their business logo, fliers, business card or pay for their business merch. Branding and sponsored ads are great gifts that’ll boost their business too. They’ll love it.

    Reader

    A Kindle book is to a reader what a laptop is to a tech-bro. It’s a wireless, electronic reading device with access to more than three million books. As the saying goes, a reader is a leader. Invest in making your loved one a better leader today.

    Gym rat

    Get them gym wear, running shoes, dumbbells, etc. For more privacy, set up a home gym. Now they can work out any time they like. 

    Additionally, leave a 12-month down payment at their favourite fruits store or seller to cover their fruit supplies. Do this and you and their smoothie will be their favourites.

    Can You Guess What Gift Will You Get on Valentine’s Day?

  • If you know nothing about romance, this quiz may seems like a personal attack. Step aside and let the romantic ones do their thing.

    Take quiz:

    “I return my pen into the basket of love” means what?

  • It’s 2024. Why are you still going to Google for generic love messages to send to the LOYL, when Afrobeats stars have dedicated their lives and discography to expressing love in innovative ways?

    If you don’t know where to start, we’ve dug through your favourite hits for the very best lines.

    “My baby, my Valentine / Girl, na you dey make my temperature dey rise”

    This opening line of CKay’s Love Nwantiti straight-up makes it clear how perfect it is for Valentine’s Day. After expressing how your lover’s love keeps you warm in this cold world, the song goes on to say, “If you leave me, I go die, I swear / You’re like the oxygen I need to survive.” But this only works for people you love to death.

    “Na you I wan retire with, my love”

    Oxlade composed Ku Lo Sa for long-distance relationship folks. But this is a straightforward yet sexy line anyone can use to say they want to grow old together with their babe.

    “You are my woman / My perfect human / You make my world feel so right even sometimes when I’m wrong”

    What else articulates everything a person should be to their lover more than these lines from Asake’s Mogbe?

    Source: Spotify

    “You’re the one I want o / Before my liver start to fail”

    Davido goes on to say that if he ever leaves his babe, water should sweep him away, then declares that his babe’s love is so sweet, he must experience it even if it won’t be for long. Listen to Davido’s Assurance for more inspiration on how to show devotion to your babe.

    “They say love is blind, but I dey see am for your eyes”

    Use this to appreciate your lover’s ever-present love. Nothing says, “I see the depth of your feelings towards me” more than this. Thank Davido for this line from Aye.

    “Nothing fit distract me for Lagos / For January, I give you my money / Ego oyibo, ego oyibo, ego oyibo /For February, I put you my baby”

    In four bars, Chike’s Ego Oyibo will help you assure your lover that your bond is stronger than Lagos babes, and all your foreign currency is for them every day of the month.

    “I know say you be my healer / Nobody t’ole yawa”

    If your babe heals your soul and no one can put an asunder between the two of you, this line from Seyi Vibez’s Cana is how you let them know. 

    “Uloma, I dey on my ten toe”

    This is a declaration that you’re fully committed, grounded and loyal to your babe’s government. Only they can make you feel this way, according to Young Jonn on Xtra Cool.

    “The way you do fantastic / Have to put on glasses / Make you no blind me with this your body”

    What you’ll be saying with this text from Burna’s Tested, Approved & Trusted is that the beauty of your lover is new every morning, like the sunrise. As it should be.

    “It must mean I’m on your case, for me to come out / It must mean I’m at the door / I want to show you my world”

    Do like Tems on Me & U and send this to your lover with a plane ticket to a cool baeacation spot. If not, which world do you want to show them?

    Your Babe Won’t Live by Messages Alone, Get these 7 Practical Valentine’s Day Gifts for Them Too

  • This quiz is for the people who listened to their grandparents’ music collections. Are you one of them?

    Take quiz:

    One of them was a guitarist.

  • January is usually a slow month for music releases. Artists are planning calendars and directions for their music. As the first month of 2024 ends, more artists are back in the field. So what can we expect in 2024?

    We asked some industry players to share their views on Afrobeats’ growth last year and what they’ll like to see in the industry this year.

    Adeayo Akinbiyi, music writer and journalist (PulseNg)

    My favourite thing about the industry last year was its continuous growth. We’ve always wanted to see Afrobeats grow and propel universally, and we sustained that through the works of  our artists on the global front. Asake and Rema come to mind here. 

    The breakout of new stars like Shallipopi is also a sign of the industry’s sustainability, especially during this period when many, including the U.S. market, are finding it hard to break out artists.

    In 2024, I predict continuous growth for the Afrobeats movement; more artists on international stages, new breakout stars, and street-pop music will keep expanding and influencing the soundscape.

    I also hope to see more street artists operating on the same level as other pop stars. There’s a strong street marker underlying our music, and I want it to manifest in 2024. I hope for more female stars because we didn’t see any last year.

    We’ve always discussed structure as part of Afrobeats’ lack. In 2024, I hope more attention will be on how we build and operate locally. Labels, stars and stakeholders should leverage their powers and funding to build locally. They should collaborate with the government and private sector to build entertainment infrastructures and ecosystems. 

    Of course, more funding and grants must come into the system and impact burgeoning creators and media guys who are amplifying the music, documenting the culture and taking it to the consumers. We need to empower people who’ll document the sonics of our country, those making them and how they’re impacting people and the nation as a whole.

    Tope Agbeyo, Comms. & PR expert (Mavin)

    Subgenres like emo-afrobeats and afro-rave got more expansive last year. The successes of Omah Lay, Shallipopi and Odumodublvck will incentivise people with niché sounds to go for originality —no need to try to be like anyone. In 2023, I observed that people willingly listened to what they liked without minding the sonic leanings. I believe that the capacity of the average Nigerian listener to have a palate for different sounds is one of our most significant assets. The streaming audience is not large enough to support niche listenership. We thrive because we don’t have just one artist we like. I’m glad last year proved that again. 

    The live shows were mostly a mess, though. We must work on that in 2024 — from the infrastructure to promoters to organisers to artists to engineers, event planners and designers. Everything needs so much work. Live concert-goers deserve so much more. I mean, Afronation even had to dip. That’s a bad look. 

    No music market is genuinely sustainable without a healthy live scene, so I expect that the stakeholders involved will do better this year. We can’t afford to disappoint so many people year after year.

    Dami Ajayi, Culture/music writer

    The Elele single, a minor resurgence of Oritsefemi featuring Qdot, was my favourite thing in Afrobeats last year. Street music generally, I want folks to pay more attention to the audience of street pop; they need pampering.

    I also want respect for journalists, and for journalists to pay more attention to the music and less to the lifestyle and grimy gossip. I’d like to see producers get their day in the sun with publishing rights and cheques because expectations are sandcastles and a step beyond dreaming.

    Lola Oyedele, Entertainment & IP lawyer 

    I love that many women —  Qing Madi, Bloody Civilian, SGawd, and so on — blew up in the music industry last year. We also had so much music to listen to across different genres, and many Afrobeats artists sold out venues in different countries. The globalisation of Afrobeats is exciting. The things that we used to dream about are happening very regularly.

    This year, I’m rooting for professionals. We’ve always been behind the scenes working tirelessly to make the stars shine.

    I’m rooting primarily for women because we need to change the 7:1 ratio of women to men in the entertainment industry, and I can tell you the girlies are on fire.

    2024 is also the year we need to get some things right: build at home and from home. Be a global sensation and develop a sustainable industry accommodating all creators and professionals. I expect that the government will also take the creative industry seriously and make stringent laws to protect intellectual property.

    We need more spaces for shows — not just in Lagos, but other parts of Nigeria. I don’t want it to be a story of reggae and different genres that the West listens to and drops after they have milked the value out of them. Afrobeats should continue to grow. It’s a marathon, not a sprint.

    Chike San — Indie music producer, singer

    In 2023, our pop music enjoyed acceptance worldwide. In 2024, I’d like to see more innovation, creativity and experimentation because it’s clear the audience is open to hearing new sounds due to the range of music Nigerians gravitated towards. 

    That said, another thing is I think we need to chill on seeking external validation and chasing acceptance from the West. I understand it’s what’s best for business, but we can do that without soiling ourselves.

    Anyways Some Things Have Been Set in Stone for the Nigerian Entertainment Industry in 2024

  • A new year means a new direction for many believers. 

    For those who’ve set goals to express more gratitude, Spotify has crafted playlists with songs that express the essence of salvation. If you’re trying to be more prayerful, these playlists will ignite the prayer warrior in you too.

    Praise and Worship

    This playlist is 80 songs long, featuring Nigerian artists like Kent Edunjobi, South Africa’s Christina Shusho and the U.S’s Maverick City Music. A perfect balance of home and abroad gospel jams.

    On Bended Knees

    This playlist is long enough to take you through a five-hour prayer session. May the good Lord answer our prayers.

    Aseda

    Before the Yorùbá in you translates “aseda” to mean “creator”, know that it also means “gratitude” in Twi, a language spoken by the Ashanti in Ghana. That’s what this playlist is about. It’s made for you if you’re looking to explore gospel music from the Gold Coast.

    Redeemed

    A mixed all-African playlist featuring gospel artists like Lanre Teriba (Nigeria) and Malcom Rue (Uganda) and secular acts like Mr Eazi (Nigeria) and Khaligraph Jones (Kenya). This playlist recognises the faith-based perspectives of everyone; it’s a proper deception of “everyone is welcome to the fold.”


    Rediscover 12 Nigerian Gospel Songs that Shaped Our Childhood

  • Were you the best Fine Arts student in your school or you think fine art is simpler than science? Show us your workings.

    Take quiz:

    ROYGBIV belongs under which colour wheel?

  • If you make music and it’s hard to get your Nigerian parents to become your fan or dance to your tune, it’s either your work isn’t impressive or you haven’t consulted us yet. Everyone knows we have the best solution to all problems.

    Make a song for them

    If you’re serious about converting your parents into your music stans, make a song for them. It may be about their love life, how they make sacrifices for the family, how you want to be like them when you grow up or just a song hailing them from top to bottom. Their heads will swell, and they’ll throw all their weight behind you instantly.

    Host “throwback music” sessions 

    Make it your job to host these sessions every weekend. Play them their favourite childhood songs then throw your music in the mix to gradually indoctrinate them. This can be a slow process, but you’ll laugh last.

    Promise eternal youth

    Let your folks know that listening and dancing to young people’s music is the secret to staying forever young. Then convince them your music is most potent for them because you’re their blood.

    Coolest parents award

    One major prerequisite to becoming cool parents is to be your kids’ number one fan. Convince them not to miss this prestigious award this year.

    Sing and cry

    When you shed a few crocodile tears while performing a song, they’ll think music has possessed you and you’re actually made for it. You might even get them teary too. A little in-house emotional performance may be all you need to make them your music stans.

    Impress them with stats

    Tell them your music travels without a visa. Imagine the curiosity on your parents’ faces when you tell them you have hundreds of streams from listeners in different parts of the world.

    Play your music around them non-stop

    Always keep your music playing around them. They’ll eventually love it or they’ll send you out of their house. Anyways, no gree for anybody.


    We Also Have Tips On How to Support Your Friend When They Make Trash Music

  • A nonprofit’s board supplies the governing framework that sets its direction and ensures the organization is normally operating ethically, legally, and with integrity. In addition, they provide oversight to help manage risk, generate economical decisions, and offer strategic application of means. A nonprofit is unlikely to flourish without a high-functioning board that is fully engaged in its mission.

    One of the most crucial roles of the nonprofit’s aboard is to give financial oversight. This involves making sure the organization comes with the funding Board Portal it needs to undertake its interpersonal good desired goals. This is a vital role, and the board ought to carefully assessment budgets and monitor spending throughout the year to ensure that the organization is on track to satisfy its desired goals.

    In addition to reviewing plans, the board need to be involved in fundraising. It should help with the exec director to build up strategies for nurturing funds, and members can be expected to use their very own professional sites (and also their personal wealth) to compliment the organization. In addition , the plank should enhance the organization to local organization leaders and community organizations to help build its awareness.

    When taking notes for a charitable board appointment, it is best to stick towards the facts and prevent injecting personal opinions or perhaps bias into the documentation. To take standout short minutes, try to record each action as it is proposed and the very best on, recording who produced the proposal, exactly who seconded this, and the reaction to the have your vote. You should also incorporate any papers or handouts that were utilized during the achieving in your last copy. Lastly, it’s vital that you review and proofread your minutes ahead of sharing these to ensure that they may be clear, concise, and appropriate. Having a third party read your minutes may help to identify any kind of errors or perhaps inconsistencies that must be addressed.