Those who grew up in Nigeria between 2000 and 2010 already know this was the golden era of Nigerian pop music. Before the days of streaming algorithms, Apple Music, Spotify and TikTok, we were out here relying on Alaba mix CDs, infrared transfers and waiting for our favourite jams to play on Channel O or MTV Base.
For this list, I didn’t just pick the “best” songs from each year. We picked the songs that defined the year. The metrics used to select these specific heavyweights are cultural impact, street penetration, nostalgia value and unrivalled dominance.
Here are the Nigerian songs that defined every single year from 2000 to 2010. Let’s get into it.
2000: “Mathematics” — Sound Sultan
This is one of the earliest Nigerian pop songs to explore social commentary and bring it into the mainstream. Sound Sultan’s “Mathematics” uses humour, satire, pidgin, poking lyrics and arithmetic language to break down inflation, corruption and survival. More than two decades later, Nigerians still sing and quote lines from it.
2001: “My Car” — Tony Tetuila
“You don hit my car, oyinbo repete!” Tony Tetuila gave the perfect Nigerian soundtrack for everyday Lagos traffic. Fresh off his split from The Remedies, Tony Tetuila reinvented himself with a dramatic anthem different from almost everything dominating Nigerian radio at the time. The song’s conversational storytelling, memorable hook and street appeal made it a national obsession. It was played everywhere, from beer parlours to buses, and instantly transformed Tetuila from “former group member” into a solo star.
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2002: “Mr Lecturer” — Eedris Abdulkareem
“Mr Lecturer” became one of the most talked-about Nigerian songs of the early 2000s because it confronted sexual harassment in universities head-on. Eedris Abdulkareem approached the subject with the rawness and aggression that characterised much of his music, and Nigerians couldn’t stop talking about it. It cemented Eedris as one of the country’s loudest cultural voices.
2003: “Danfo Drivers” — Danfo Driver (Mad Melon & Mountain Black)
Were you even alive in Nigeria in 2003 if you didn’t do the Suo dance to this banger? Mad Melon and Mountain Black took the gritty, everyday reality of Lagos bus conductors and the humour of danfo culture and turned it into a national hit. It was so huge it even crossed over, and three years after release, it made the soundtrack of a Hollywood movie, Phat Girlz (2006).
2004: “African Queen” — 2Baba (FKA 2Face Idibia)
Released as part of 2Baba’s debut solo album Face 2 Face, the song became a continental hit thanks to its smooth songwriting and timeless romantic appeal. It helped Nigerian music gain international visibility at a time when global attention on it was still limited. More importantly, it established 2Baba as one of the defining stars of modern African pop music.
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2005: “Bizzy Body” — P-Square
By 2005, P-Square had figured out the formula for domination: infectious hooks, polished choreography and music videos Nigerians couldn’t stop replaying. “Bizzy Body” became one of the duo’s biggest breakthrough hits because it fused R&B melodies to fit the Nigerian party setting. The song took over clubs, weddings and TV countdown shows, while helping establish the pop-star model that many Afrobeats acts would later follow.
2006: “Ijoya” — Weird MC
Produced by Don Jazzy and JJC Skillz, “Ijoya” was a cultural shift. Weird MC fused hip-hop, Yorùbá folk influences and Fuji-inspired delivery into a record that completely exploded across the country. The song’s call-and-response hook made it impossible to avoid at parties. At a time when female rappers faced even tougher industry barriers, Weird MC delivered one of the biggest songs in the country with an iconic animated music video and forced everybody to pay attention.
2007: “Yahooze” — Olu Maintain
Love it or hate it, “Yahooze” completely owned 2007. It was the year of the two-finger salute. Olu Maintain created a flamboyant club anthem inspired by the flashy lifestyle associated with internet fraud culture, and Nigerians ran with it instantly. The dance became a nationwide craze, and celebrities publicly embraced it, including Colin Powell, the former US State Secretary.
2008: “Gongo Aso” — 9ice
“Gongo Aso” was both the title of his second album and its defining track. 9ice blends Yoruba proverbs, Fuji influences and street-hop swag into the song while keeping it fresh and modern. From the Alapomeji intro to the boastful chorus, this song was a big hit at every party, street carnival, club and local award show that year. It also helped push indigenous-language pop music further into the mainstream, as Nigerian pop was rapidly evolving.
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2009: “Bumper 2 Bumper” — Wande Coal
Wande Coal’s Mushin 2 Mo’Hits is arguably one of the greatest Nigerian albums of all time, and “Bumper 2 Bumper” was the crown jewel. It was released during his incredible run under Mo’Hits Records and it became one of the biggest club records in the country. It also reinforced Wande Coal’s reputation as one of the most naturally gifted hitmakers of his generation.
2010: “Oleku” — Ice Prince
Produced by Jesse Jagz, the song mixes rap, melody and sleek contemporary production together to make the flyest Nigerian song of that year. A rap song having this much mainstream pop dominance was rare, but Ice Prince and Brymo pulled it off effortlessly. Brymo’s legendary hook, combined with Ice Prince’s cool-kid verses, made this the most remixed and covered song of 2010. You couldn’t escape it even if you tried.




