• If at the start of his career, you placed a bet on Portable, born Habeeb Okikiola Badmus, somehow always finding himself in trouble, you’d be swimming in a pool of cash right now. On Tuesday, the Ogun State Police Command announced that the musician is wanted for assaulting members of the state’s Planning and Development Permit Authority.

    The self-proclaimed ”King of the Street” is always caught up in strings of alleged controversies, which makes me wonder, why always him?

    From slapping pastors to alleged beatdowns, Portable has been at the center of some pretty wild drama since his breakthrough into the mainstream. Here’s the tea on his chaotic timeline — from his “ZaZoo Zehh” hit in 2021 to present day.

    June 2022: Portable attacks DJ Chicken

    Portable and DJ Chicken were once associates who occasionally promoted each other’s music. After a falling out, they resorted to throwing jabs at each other online, especially on their Instagram stories.

    Tensions escalated when DJ Chicken was lured to what he believed was a call for truce, only to meet a trap. Portable instructed a group of guys to beat up DJ Chicken and record the assault. The DJ was severely injured, leading to more public scrutiny of Portable’s actions and behaviour.


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    July 2022: Portable declares himself a cult leader 

    After Portable got nominated for ‘Rookie of the Year’ and ‘Best Street-Hop Artist’ at The Headies in 2022, the singer took to his IG story to threaten to harm other nominees if he didn’t win the awards.

    Then in July 2022, Portable declared himself the founder of a notorious cult group known as One Million Boys. In response, The Headies immediately disqualified him from all categories.

    March 2023: Portable fights his apprentice and ignores a police ultimatum

    After beating up his apprentice, Portable was reported to the police. In a viral video, Portable claimed his apprentice, whom he referred to as an internet fraudster, sent the police to harass him at his Odogwu Bar. He claimed the altercation happened after he advised the apprentice to quit Yahoo-Yahoo.

    Portable said it was a personal issue that shouldn’t involve the police, so he didn’t cooperate with them. The police then invited him to the station and gave him a 72-hour ultimatum to show up. He failed to go. This led to his arrest and detention at the Police Command Headquarters at Eleweran, Ogun State.

    April 2023: Portable faces seven charges and a trial

    Portable also faced trial for assaulting a studio owner who reported him to the police. According to a statement by the Police Public Relation Officer (PPRO), the singer had six additional charges filed against him.

    Following his release on bail, he went viral with his song, “Am Not A Prison”.


    READ: Subs, Gold Teeth & G-Wagons: Seyi Vibez vs Zino vs Portable


    May 2024: Portable is arrested…again

    The operatives of the Lagos State Police Command went after Portable, following a complaint filed by a car dealer that the singer owed money. Portable had purchased a ₦27 million car, paid ₦13 million, and then refused to settle the balance, alleging that the car was faulty.

    A viral video captured the chaotic moment when Portable jumped over a fence to evade arrest. He was eventually caught and taken into police custody.

    September 2024: Portable slaps a pastor and beats up a car dealer

    On September 9, 2024, Portable slapped a pastor who had come to preach at his Odogwu Bar. Portable claimed he didn’t believe he was a real man of God and slapped him because he suspected the pastor had come to harm him spiritually.

    Two days after the incident, Portable struck again. Frustrated that his new car hadn’t been delivered two weeks after their agreement, he accused the dealer of being a scammer and instructed thugs to beat up the dealer. The dealer cried out, “I didn’t take your car”, while he sat on the floor, distressed and pleading. Of course, Portable recorded for the Gram as they bruised up the man. Later, he went to apologise to the pastor, shedding tears.

    October 2024: Portable beats promoter at Felabration

    During Felabration in 2024, show promoter Alhaji Don Shi was beaten up by Portable. According to Don Shi, they were once friends until their relationship soured after the singer took on two female managers. 

    Don claimed that this was not the first time Portable had laid hands on his former show promoter. According to him, the singer had locked him up at One Eleven Hotel in Abule Egba two years earlier and beaten him for three hours.

    February 2025: Portable is wanted by the Ogun State Police

    On February 5, 2025, Portable and his associates beat up some Ota Zonal officers of the Ministry of Physical Planning and Urban Development for conducting an inspection at his bar. He has since been on a run to evade arrest and questioning by the police.

    On February 17, the Ogun State Police Force declared Portable a wanted man. He is wanted for “conspiracy, serious assault, going armed, breach of public leave and attempted murder by recruiting armed thugs.”

    On February 18, Portable finally broke his silence. He declared himself a mentally unstable man undergoing treatment at the Federal Neuropsychiatric Hospital, Aro, Abeokuta.


    ALSO READ: Portable’s Evolution From Sango Ota to International Shows

  • For nearly two decades, Vector tha Viper has rapped each verse like he’s brightening a dull room, transferring his wit and coolness before charmingly bursting into a thousand volts of energy at the song’s end.

    Whether subbing record labels that pressure him to spit in “vernacular” (as he called Yoruba in his song “Kilode”) to sell, or boasting about being a better version of what everyone assumes is the best, there’s a self-consciousness and intentional energy to Vector’s rap style that sets him apart. From Sarkodie to Reminisce, M.I Abaga, Jesse Jagz, Show Dem Camp, and many more, Vector has consistently held his place as one of West Africa’s finest.

    At this point in his career, Vector could focus solely on his mid-range medleys, expressing how he feels, and his legacy would remain intact. On his sixth studio album, Teslim: A Lover Boy PTSD, the Lafiaji rapper embraces his transition into a lover boy. Following the evolution of his “Teslim” persona and earlier instalments in his discography, this new album extensively explores his romantic and experimental sides.

    What is the inspiration for this album?

    “A Lover Boy’s PTSD” is how the average man would claim they feel about expressing love. Though it’s not just referring to the men: it’s both sexes. But because I’m male and my pronouns are he and him, it had to be a lover stating the fact that he’s a lover boy. The PTSD is the reason why he can’t really show it too much. So, this album is dedicated to the women getting a little good out of lover boys’ PTSD.

    You sing a lot in this album, which reminds me of “Early Momo,” as opposed to rapping. Why?

    I wasn’t trying to put a certain targeted sound together just to achieve something. I was just making music, and it all came together as such. It’s not something that came from the “Early Momo” wave. As a matter of fact, “Early Momo” rode on a couple of others.

    Music can’t be defined whether in creation or after creation, meaning whether in process or success, you still can’t define it. So for what it’s worth, I didn’t make this album targeting any particular thing. It’s just a series of moments where music was made. For example, “Can’t Come Close” is a real life situation happening every other day. The older you get in your journey, the more you have time to maybe address musically some other things that you’ve experienced and one for me would be a whole lot of women.

    Knowing that I’ve had many interactions with women and noticing that my pops loved many women, too, I can see how that energy could be transferred.

    But this music (singing) is just one of those things that happen as you explore your talent more.

    Any fear of giving people what they aren’t used to?

    No, never. The only problem I’ve had is people trying to direct my artistry. I’ve always been a mad scientist type of artist, a choir boy.

    Yeah, you seem like one, but the rap image has stuck with many people

    I know. I’m a rapper, too. It’s both simultaneously well balanced. I’ve never solely made myself a rap image. Probably growing up in the barracks and Lagos Island has shaped how people identify with my artistry, because a lot of rappers build a tough guy persona.

    The time people got a lot of raps was its own time. It doesn’t change the fact that I’ve always been a simultaneous artist. I probably may have struggled with it because when I came into the music setting, I often heard that if you’re a dope rapper and you can also sing,  you sound like a sissy. I don’t know what that means, but the older you grow, you realize that, for example, in Africa, if rap is “Rhythm and Poetry,” what then is rhythm? It’s melodies. So, the older I got on my journey with music, I realized that you can be dynamically gifted and express those dynamic gifts. I don’t care whether I’m singing or whether it’s rap time; I’m whooping your ass, AKA “I’m just doing me.”

    The album is complimented by more singers. Tell me about the collaborations on the new album

    The thing about collaboration is I let the music lead. For example, the record with Bella Shmurda existed before he dropped “Cash App.” Destiny never lies when it comes to talent.

    You could tell the energy once it comes to your head. You can tell it’s not just about what’s popping or who is ringing. You can tell the appropriate energy for a record. I always go with energy, and the energy can come from anywhere. With “Iya Nla Nla” featuring Niniola, we had met, and we said we were going to make a record together and we just made it. The record with Tiwa Savage was supposed to be “My Dada” with Emmsong and Top Adlerman, but she ended up on “Repay Your Part.”

    My brother Kane facilitated the foreign collaborations. Madame Betty, a longtime friend, introduced us to some artists around the time Kane went to Colombia and met their Vice President to discuss the arts, especially the relationship of Yoruba culture in their regions. That was how collaborators like Jossman and Scridge came into the picture. Kane pulled it off, but it’s all just from relationships that we’ve built in the music industry years over.

    So, there was no intention to assemble the Justice League, if you know what I mean. The music just needed to honestly be of interest to the collaborators.

    How do you maintain total creativity and ownership in the room?

    At some point, you speak to execs or people who intend to run management or do things, and everybody just has the same statement: “If there’s money now, we’ll do this.” I understand the place of money in all these things or in achieving stuff in the world. But what about the artists that don’t have money? Does that mean they will not do anything? So, when I heard that a lot, I was like, “Okay, maybe it’s not a wrong thing. Perhaps it’s just not for me. I’ve played that card before, and I don’t know what the structuring is, but there’s just a lot going on that’s straightforward on paper but not in reality.

    I personally don’t know how to dwell in that vicinity, so I removed myself from that conversation about people interfering in the arts process a long time ago. One thing I realised as well is that once an artist does this, they start to see less of the artist in a lot of places. The product from the artist is public consumption, but not the artist, like the art.

    There was a time when we were up and coming, you always had to be in the club to show that you’re an artist. I felt that was a bit awkward, but who am I to judge a multitude of people doing the same thing? But at some point, you see that being at the club every time doesn’t do anything for your music other than maybe inspire you to make the same type of club music. That’s not the alpha and omega of artistry. I knew that that wasn’t a thing for me. So, I just kind of left it. I didn’t argue with it. I didn’t fight it. I just left it because it’s not a thing for me.

    You were in London for the first time this year. How was that?

    It was my first time in London this year. I performed my music to people, it was good. It’s one of my moves to take my music around globally and meet fans. The move is also part of artistic liberation because we’re open to going out there and just creating more opportunities for artists from Africa or Nigeria or anybody close to us. 

    I’m not saying it was intentionally curated for African nationals. I just wanted to get my tour up and be able to see if it was doable. And since it’s doable, let every other interested person come and get it done with us. But it’s definitely about to be more reaching out to the fans because we’ve built over the years.

    In recent times, your music has pointed to the idea of a higher self. Is there a spiritual connection to your music?

    It’s just a peaceful expression. To put it in simple terms: I can express more peacefully within the confines of music than I could trying to explain anything to anybody in a conversation. But that’s also a function of spirit, I want to believe that talent is a function of spirit. If that’s so, that means every time talent is being shown, spirituality is happening. Again, spirit lies within. We can’t escape staying in the spirit. It’s also how you tell when an energy is around you. Music has to be one of the most fluid expressions of spirituality.

    How do you feel about the idea of legacy? Are you concerned about legacy?

    No, I’m not concerned about legacy. You can’t really plan a legacy. Are you trying to tell me that the intention of Equatorial Guinea’s Baltasar Engonga was to be known for his 400 leaked sex tapes?

    So, I’m not bothered about legacy because you can’t be bothered about the outcome of something you are busy creating. You’re busy with that and you don’t even know what issue you’d meet on that road. I can’t tell you how to see me now and it’s legacy not by the perception of everybody. For a lot of people, the stories they’ve built about me in their heads are different, and they’d spin these stories in different circles that I would never know.

    How do you slow yourself down in this fast world we live in now?

    I tell myself, “Calm down. Calm down.” But honestly, the only thing to use to slow down a fast-paced world is self-honesty because with honesty to the self, you tell yourself you’re not as fast as the world, and then you run at your pace. I learned to be brutally honest with myself, and that helped me slow down. For instance, at the passing of my dad, I was brutally honest to myself that I had to embrace death because everybody does it. One lives a better life when one embraces death in everyday thoughts.

    Is there anything about yourself, old or new, that you see in the new generation of artists?

    Have you heard the amount of people that sample “King Kong”? When I see people trying to recreate what I’ve made or my style, I’m proud. You don’t get angry at the fact that you set the trend. You should actually be glad that you were able to set trends. But at the same time, when I hear something that I want to believe is me musically, I just don’t care about it because who am I to say that person is copying from me? What if it’s something else that inspired them as such?

    I’m even proud to see the new generation of rappers who can sing or rap.

    What lessons have learnt from working with creatives?

    I’ve learned how the Nigerian situation stifles creativity because you can’t just get up and go and create. There are so many factors affecting that. Just accommodating expressions from different creatives isn’t easy. Plus, art must be allowed to be done freely.

    But the general idea around where we make art is that things can’t even be freely done. So, how can one achieve the highest point of artistic collaboration? Amenities that make things easy for artists are non-existent. That makes them lose their spark. We’re now forced to this cutthroat mentality of, “You better do it how it’s going to bring money or go that place wey things go work o.”

    “People Still Like Me This Much?” — Reminisce Celebrates Fan Response to “Alaye Toh Se Gogo”

  • Being in the right rooms or getting mentioned in them can be the game-changer your career needs to scale up. Just ask KvngVidarr, a former songwriter for hire. His big break came when a music producer recommended him to Joeboy. What started as a writing session evolved into conversations about joining Young Legend LTD, Joeboy’s newly launched music company, as a recording artist.

    Since KvngVidarr was announced as the latest artist on Young Legend’s roster in 2024, the singer-songwriter has released four singles and one EP. This week, he had a chat with us about his budding music career, song inspiration, new life and future expectations.

    How did you discover music?

    KvngVidarr: I think music found me first. I’ve been surrounded by it for as long as I can remember. I grew up with it.

    Your music is laidback, almost the opposite of the mainstream trend. Who did you grow up listening to?

    KvngVidarr: I really enjoyed listening to the one best boy bands ever, Westlife group and also Nigerian legends like 2Baba and P-Square. My dad enjoyed a lot of Chief Dr. Orlando Owoh’s music — I listened to him a lot too.

    When did you decide to go pro with it?

    KingVidarr: Nothing beats passion. I found myself going to the studio more often than I went about any other thing. I found peace and comfort in making and being around music. I started working on my music in 2015 at the Doc Side Theatre Studio on June 12, a popular complex at the University of Benin. I put out two EPs, one in 2019, PROJECT FREESTYLE — and another in 2020, Vibes, Palm Trees & Chill. The reception I got from these works gave me a reinforced feeling that I could do more. It was in those moments that I knew that I’d go pro. With the projects, I was trying hard to see ways that I could learn and leverage that knowledge to level up my music.

    Then, earlier this year, myself and other talented musicians collaborated with Music Business Africa on a body of work called Pepple Street. I knew I was ready.

    Seeing as your songs on Spotify and other DSPs are all 2024 releases under Young Legend LTD, I assume you used to go by a different name.

    KvngVidarr: I used to go by different names. First, it was just Vidarr. Other times, Ro1lmijay and Valorthegreat. But none actually stuck as hard as KvngVidarr.

    What had to halt when you became KvngVidarr?

    KvngVidarr: It’s songwriting. I used it as a means to hustle, to learn the game and mechanics of the industry at the most basic level. For me, right now, with all the love and support I’m receiving, I’m trying to put out the music I create as opposed to selling it out to other artists to use for their own songs.

    How did you get signed to Joeboy’s Young Legend LTD?

    KvngVidarr: It was through a mutual friend, a producer who got me into one of Pon Deck’s [Joeboy] writing camps. It’s been upward since then. Shoutout to BeatsbyKo. He is the man.

    Has getting signed changed your perspective of music, the business and the industry in any way?

    KvngVidarr: Yes, definitely. The endless possibilities and partnerships. Understanding music as an actual superpower that can do wonders when properly wielded. Learning never stops and I’m trying to learn as much as possible.

    Is anything new you’re getting adjusted to?

    KvngVidarr: I’m getting used to not taking the bus anymore. I particularly loved using my BRT card to go around Lagos if I was having a bad day. Those times were fun.

    As for the music, I truly feel that it’ll only get better with time and hard work.

    For now I feel okay. I’m in a good place, setting up my content creation tools. It’s a new level and it’s a new life with its own unique challenges. I’m adjusting to this new level to better understand how best I can work towards positioning myself for the opportunities that are coming in this industry. I like to be at the ready in order to take advantage of these opportunities.

    What do you want people to take away from this album?

    KvngVidarr: I want people to listen to my works and feel seen, heard, and understood. Emotions drive my music, and I know that too many of us suffer from hidden feelings and pent-up anger. This is where my music comes in for us all —providing a safe space for all emotions to express themselves.

    Where do you see yourself in 5 years?

    KvngVidarr: I see myself achieving global recognition for my work, contributions and accomplishments. I can see it, but all that’s left is the work, and I’m ready to do that.

  • Every time KCee picks up a thought or answers my question, compelling attentiveness logs in the air. It’s not that he’s hosting a masterclass, but he has stories for days. I imagine books and self-recorded audiobooks about older Nigerian music artists, unravelling their biographies and career stories. He speaks with detailed experience and assured conviction, humbly discussing timelines and moments of his life and career in an exciting tone.

    This same excitement is present and intact on “Mr. Versatile”, the Ajegunle-bred singer’s latest album. Every melody and production in his 20-track “Mr. Versatile” is an exhilarating gyration. KCee’s having fun with his sonic experimentation, a cross-pollination of traditional African sounds and contemporary pop. It almost sounds neo-cultural.

    The album marks KCee’s 25th year as a career musician. Over two decades, he has created a catalogue of sonically diverse albums. He’s been there and done that, from a talent show discovery to a hot-demand artist to a Southeast cultural icon and veteran who reinvents himself almost every year. KCee’s career is fascinating. To a generation, he’s the guy from the KC Presh group. To another, he’s the Limpopo guy. To a younger generation, he’s the Ojapiano man. He ticked OG status boxes: longevity, commercial success and relevancy.

    We connected over Google Meet a week after the release of his new album, Mr. Versatile, and talked about the new record, his sounds experiments, Ojapiano’s success, his hit-making ability and renewed passion for making music on a global level, and more.

    “Mr. Versatile” is a widely diverse album in terms of production and guest features. It’s also your first album in three years, acclaimed for its creativity and flexibility. I’m curious how this album came together.

    KCee: I spent time thinking about my journey as an artist and performer in the last twenty-five years, listened to my older music, and felt that my versatility and adaptability with the ever-changing sound wave was overlooked. This (process) birthed the album idea. 

    I developed it, focusing on the sounds I can comfortably engage and finesse. The album’s experience is executed and curated in a way the listeners quickly recognise, even down to the features,and that’s why it’s titled “Mr. Versatile.”

    Yeah, you went as far as India and featured Kanika Kapoor

    KCee: Yeah. The success of Ojapiano created that pathway. After its release and a study of my music distribution and streaming numbers on the backend, it became clear that most of my fanbase and streams come from Asia, particularly India. My team and I also received messages from fans, listeners and musicians from that part, curious about Ojapiano. I began making friends with some of these guys, and one of the relationships even birthed an Ojapiano Indian remix that couldn’t make my album’s final tracklist due to a long-drawn-out paperwork process. The song and video are ready; it’ll be out soon.

    Interesting. Tell me about the Ojapiano remix with One Republic. How did it come about?

    KCee: Interestingly, One Republic reached out to me. Ojapiano was viral and trending heavily in Africa in 2023. They were with TikTok’s owners and had talked about my song. My conversation with the TikTok folks and One Republic eventually became a linkup. They wanted to see me. I was also in the US, so I flew from Houston to Los Angeles. We headed to the studio. It was an out-of-body experience. I thought, “Yooo, white bands are on our wave right now.” In fact, I’m on their forthcoming album.

    That’s beautiful. From your recent hits and the music you’ve released in the last four years, you have fully embraced the Igbo culture and African traditional sound into a fusion. What was the major shift?

    KCee: In 2017, I thought of reinventing myself, different from the sound I was known for. I decided to pick up the Nigerian Highlife sound. When I had an idea of how I’d execute it, I headed to Onitsha to spend months working with its local artists and sounds to make an album titled “Eastern Conference” (2019). It wasn’t commercially successful, but it’s important because it marks the learning process in my current sound. I took everything I learned from it to “Cultural Praise”, the album that followed in 2021. For “Cultural Praise”, I avoided digital sound and made almost the whole album as local and live as possible.

    On the album, I executed my vision to make contemporary gyration music. The songs on the album played in nightclubs, strip clubs, events, radio, and streets. I performed the songs across the country. People danced to the music regardless of tribe or culture. Later, in November 2021, I released “Cultural Vibes”, an EP where I reworked songs from older Igbo musicians like Oliver D’Coque, Chief Stephen Osita Osadebe, and Gentleman Mike Ejeagha, whom I met in 2018, and sampled his Ka Esi Le Onye Isi Oche song.

    During my 2022 Thanksgiving Concert in Eko Hotel, after I had performed old hits like Limpopo, the audience’s energy multiplied when songs from “Cultural Praise” came on. My wife called my attention to the crowd’s reactions and told me to never stop. Right there, I was convinced I had hacked the sound. 2023 came, and I locked in and made Ojapiano. Everyone in the studio had goosebumps when we finished the record. From there, the funky masquerade dressing style came to me. I thought of infusing masquerades into it, too.

    During research into African musical instruments, I discovered that flutes and sounds similar to the Oja flute are across other African countries like Tanzania. So, I must take African sounds into the unfamiliar realms and create magic. Staying true to culture has opened more doors for me. Now, there’s no week I’m not travelling worldwide to perform these songs. I aim to take them to international stages like Coachella and  Wireless. I want to see white folks jump around to my music.

    You were sure you had a hit when you made Ojapiano. What does it take to recognise a hit?

    KCee: It came from having a DJ dad. My dad’s record store was in front of our house, and he played hit songs that drove customers to our store all day. I consumed all of them. When my brother E-Money and I became teenagers, we had access to his DJ equipment and began to play at parties. So, when I’m in the studio making my music, there’s no sentiment — I’m questioning why I think people would listen a song, why it even works for me. Even almost all the producers and writers I have worked with, I directed them. I still do it.

    Young KCee

    So, your dad influenced you to become an artist?

    KCee: Nah, it’s quite the opposite. My dad DJ’d, but he never wanted any of his kids to do music due to the archaic belief that it wasn’t lucrative enough to give the best life and musicians were wayward. Aside from playing the DJ set and performing with our church choir, music was restricted. Football was my dream. I played professionally for Puma Football Club. I was a footballer when the music dream finally joined. During that time, I was a member of an HIV awareness group and had gone to NTA for an HIV awareness presentation. After my presentation, comedian Julius Agwu saw me and approached me to say that the song I had composed for my presentation was nice. He told me the condom brand Golden Circle was on tour, and he played my music for them. They liked it and put me on board with Presh, my former music group member. We toured the whole 36 states in Nigeria. That was the beginning of my journey to becoming KCee.

    What about your strict dad?

    KCee: Man, I returned from that tour with almost 50,000 every week. That was our annual house rent back then. Imagine coming home with that sum every week throughout the tour period. My father saw the light and allowed me to do my thing.

    Was touring with a big brand easy back then?

    KCee: I won’t say it was. I was just lucky to meet Julius Agwu. Getting with Golden Circle formed my KCPresh group with Presh. During the tour, I met the younger 2Face, Blackface, and Eedris AbdulKareem, who informed me about an upcoming talent show called Star Quest and encouraged me to enter the competition.

    So, music made you kick football to the curb?

    KCee: I played football while I was doing my music, too. But one day, during the Star Quest show, I limped throughout a performance due to an ankle injury I picked up in a football match. Presh was unhappy with it, so he challenged me and said I needed to pick one: football or music. I played for Puma Football Club and had even travelled to South Africa for matches. But music was paying me more and slowly coming into major focus, so I picked it and left football. 

    You were there before Afrobeats travelled the world and are still active now that it’s everywhere. How does it feel to watch its evolution over the years and share in its current success?

    KCee: I’m grateful to be alive to make music, witness the transformation and be part of the recent successes the movement has produced. I’m proud of the young headliners who’re taking music around the world. I was at the last Grammys, and it was great to watch Burna Boy perform live. I also saw people open up to Nigerian artists immediately after they say they make Afrobeats music. It’s exciting. The growth is almost unbelievable compared to the 2014 Grammy event I attended with Harrysongz, Kennis Music and Ayo Animashaun (CEO, HipTV). We held each other, hyped, screamed and emphatically asked when it’d be Nigeria’s turn. Now, it’s here, sooner than I thought it’d take.

    While most of the folks I started with have left the music scene, I’m still here, making music right now. I was there when it all started, and I paid my dues. I’m determined to do my best, make the most of Afrobeats’ big trajectory, and be intentional about it.

    What’s next for KCee?

    KCee: There’s a whole lot, and everything’s in order. I have a lot of music coming, and I’m excited for the new generation of kids who’ll know my music. Even now, I’m working on another record incorporating another local Nigerian instrument. If that works out, Nigeria and the whole of Asia will feel it.


  • On her debut album, “Born in the Wild,” Tems pays tribute to herself and to her previous state of being. “Wild” suggests a Wild Wild West, perhaps an interpretation of Nigeria, rarely a place for dreamers. But Tems made it out. This album is her musings and good time draped in warm guitar strings, energetic summer vibes, hopeless romantic lyrics, and some busy music.

    Tems opens the album with the titular folk ballad Born In the Wild. Coming from a place where showing emotions is usually and unfortunately taken for weakness, she peels back on the trauma endured.

    Crazy and wild things may happen, but Tems sees them through to the end. On Special Baby (Interlude), her mum encourages her to continue to find succour in the strength of her name, Temilade (the crown is mine). I hear a mother’s prayer manifestation and moral support. You hear a reiteration of the Temilade Interlude from her 2020 EP, “For Broken Ears.” 

    The actualisation of one’s dreams and the juicy fast life of celebrity birthed one of Biggie Smalls’ most iconic lines, “It was all a dream.” A sentiment Tems shares about fulfilment on Burning. It soon flips into a brood about human inescapable suffering that’s susceptible to all regardless of fame and wealth. She choruses “Guess we are all burning,” interpretable to “Me sef I be human being o” in simpler language. Tems’ at her best here. I guess uncomplicated, ambivalent subject matters can be blissful and sufferable feelings are convertible to ethereal.

    The music gets busy on the next three tracks. The bounce is as alive as her confidence on Wickedest. But the Magic System’s 1er Gaou sample fails to magnify the song. Perhaps that’s owed to the jumble recapture of the Makossa spirit and its tale of betrayal and ironies of success for a bouncy, braggart bop.

    Her complete reimagining of Seyi Sodimu’s Love Me Jeje follows before Get It Right (featuring Asake) cues in. They’re party-ready. An adventurous Tems invites Asake into the familiar territory of Fuji-Amapiano-pop.

    On Ready, Tems continues her search for higher frequency like a fiend relentlessly finds their high. “No fear in my mind, it’s a new story” and “All grass does is grow, don’t you think so?” are her declarations that she won’t hide anymore. In one word, her new story is “fearless”. She’s a bad girl in need of a badass partner — the persona she embodies in Gangsta, which interpolates Diana King’s L-L-Lies. But in Unfortunate, one can learn from Tems that to be gangsta isn’t throwing fits up and down; it’s detaching from situations where other parties can’t be trusted. She congratulates herself for avoiding an unfortunate issue; that’s gangsta enough.

    But this gangsta soon surrenders at the helm of love matters. Boy O Boy puts Tems through a scorned love for a despised lover. Forever burns with the same attitude but funkier. It makes juice out of the ex’s desperation. On Free Fall, Tems finds love again. But one can tell it’s just a forlorn hope robbing her heart. J. Cole’s verse, cute though not striking, doubles down that love experiences calm as much storm.

    It gets clinical on the next interlude, Voices in My Head, as Tec — Show Dem Camp member and one of Tems’ managers — offers knowledge about experience, truth, love and motivation as tools to move through life.

    The celebration continues on Turn Me Up and T-Unit, which puts Tems in her rap bag and gives a specific nod to 50 Cent’s Candy Shop. Me & U plays next and throws Tems in an upbeat soliloquy about finding faith, the god of self and connecting to the higher being. But looking back at when we first heard this as the lead single in October 2023, it’s more comfortable as an album track than the perfect album taster. 

    The vibe extends to You In My Face, which speaks to her inner child, a song to go to when everything’s falling apart. The album wraps up in optimism with the closing track. Even when the ship batters, the anchor can still hold. That’s the message Hold On holds onto. It’s giving modern-day negro spiritual with hip-hop and calypso twists.

    As tone-setting conversations about Tems’ musical style continue, more critics agree that she’s excused herself from Afrobeats for a larger U.S. audience. But this is an effect of sticking every Nigerian contemporary singer to Afropop, a genre, as opposed to Afrobeats, an umbrella for popular music and culture out of Nigeria.

    Released a week apart from Ayra Starr’s applauded sophomore release, “Born In the Wild” may be another cautious win for Afrobeats. It’s vintage R&B and neo-soul adorned in an African night of merriment. It’s enjoyable, and so is its mix. Its production, done majorly by Tems and GuiltyBeatz, is endurable. The lyricism is one-dimensional. 

    Without the snappy production, it sounds more like a genius’s ramblings, hard to listen to. This is nothing more writers in the room can’t solve. Due to its non-conformity to the Nigerian mainstream sound, the music is understandably unfamiliar — a dilemma homegrown listeners may struggle with. It sounds like a Siamese twin EPs, yoked by Tems’ high-pitched soprano. It can do without some tracks.

    Is “Born in the Wild” a flawless album?

    A flawless album is loosely defined as a body of work of a captivating and geographic cocktail of shape-shifting songs. By this definition, the answer to Tems’ preoccupation about her debut is in the affirmative: No, it’s not a flawless album. But perfection is subject to different ears. 

    If this is Tems’ music aftermath coming on top of personal woes, it’s an acceptable offering. She made it through the wild, and this is her post-trauma self-celebration.

    Tems Is the Leading Vibe, and We Ranked 8 of Her Best Features

  • Zoro’s 042 music video was playing on Soundcity. I watched him rap across Coal City, recreating rapper gestures to match his rhymes. It wasn’t the most captivating music video, but I admired his swag. It was 2014, and I was an SS3 student trying to rap and look fly like Zoro appeared back then.

    Zoro’s entry into the popular Nigerian music scene was promising. Not only did I find his music accessible, but I also believed he was primed to be South East’s next rap superstar after N.I.G.G.A. Raw, ILLBliss, Phyno. He dropped a series of notable singles, like Ogene featuring Flavour (2016), and received a Next Rated nomination at the 2018 Headies Awards. A debut album seemed the natural progression. But we got more singles instead.

    I talked to Zoro, born Owoh Chimaobi Chrismathner, about getting into music as a teenager, his admiration for local culture and all the hard lessons his experience in the music industry has taught him.

    First, I have to ask. Why “Zoro”?

    Around 2007, I rapped for vibes and went by Zoro Machine Gun Perenre. I got Zoro from the popular “Zorro” movie franchise. The “Machine Gun” part was me just being quirky. I wasn’t sure music would be a full-blown thing for me, but my friends encouraged me to write more rhymes. 

    When did it become a full-blown thing for you?

    The first time I recorded a rap. I went from Onitsha to Enugu to record two verses, one in Igbo, the other in English. My friends liked both, but particularly the Igbo version.

    Three months later, the late DJ Real, the engineer who recorded that studio session, told me he played the song for Wizboyy, and the man wanted to work with me. His song was supposed to feature N.I.G.G.A. Raw, but he wasn’t around, and Wizboyy needed to submit it to his management ASAP. I wasted no time and travelled to Enugu to record a feature on Owu Sa Gi off his 2008 “New Face of My Story” album. 

    I was 16 years old, and that was my second time in a recording studio. It’s a special moment I look back on whenever I second guess whether I’m in the right profession.

    What was it like in the studio with Wizboyy?

    I was nervous, but he acknowledged my recording was nice and kept it moving. He already had hits like Screensaver, but our jam did better and sealed his street credibility. After that, I became his backup artist and hype man. 

    Owu Sa Gi gave me a soft landing in the music industry. Without it, it’d have been more challenging.

    How soft?

    Well, I moved to Lagos in 2014 to live with Wizboyy and get closer to the music industry. Then a guy signed me on a five-year record deal, and I moved in with him. My focus shifted from balancing music with everything from marketing to content creation to fully recording music. He and the rest of the team handled the business side.

    My name and music entered the mainstream through cosigns from Flavour and Phyno. That would’ve been the best time to make a debut album. But I parted ways with the label after a year and went back to dropping songs on my own.  

    What happened?

    Some people wanted to invest in my music, but the founder/CEO who signed me didn’t like the deal. I didn’t present us as a team to the investors. Later, I realised I should’ve made it clear I was already signed. But I was young, impatient and carried away by the sway of the investors.

    The problem I had with the label guy was he never shared his plans with me. I couldn’t sign with the investors because the label’s lawyers were after me. For the next three years, I fought the situation with the Holy Spirit, fasting and prayers, while my manager handled all future contracts. The whole thing gave me anxiety and PTSD.

    What did you do after?

    I dropped Ogene featuring Flavour (2016), and it became my first big song. Then I contacted the former label to see if we could take it from where we left off, but that conversation didn’t go far. He wanted a cut of my royalties for the rest of my career. I got the vibe that working with him again would be stressful, so I let it go. 

    Photo by @samuelnnaji_ (IG)

    Did you consider making an album after the success of “Ogene”?

    No. I focused on putting out more singles to keep up the momentum. The second time I tried to make an album was in 2019, but I had another blocker. I started smoking, and it affected my vocals. When it was time to record, I had to do multiple takes. I went to an ENT (Ears, Nose & Throat) hospital, but the doctor said nothing was wrong. I went to see another health professional and paid for treatment but didn’t get better.

    Ahh. What did you do in the end?

    I had to be patient with my voice. I’d take a verse a couple of times, and if it wasn’t giving me what I wanted, I left it and did something else.

    I’m curious how you became a smoker

    One of my friends always wanted me to smoke with him, but I declined until one day in 2018. I had a flight to catch and needed to quickly figure out the intro for Stainless before heading to the airport. Nothing hit. The friend was there, and he persuaded me to smoke first. I took two puffs and recorded the thing sharply. It became a thing I did whenever I wanted to record. 

    But now, it’s a once-in-a-while recreational thing.

    When were you able to get back on track?

    By 2022, it hit me that I still didn’t have an album. I looked back at all my years in the game. No body of work, just singles. 

    I had to make an album, and it had to be something different. Most of my early songs are up-tempo and fast-paced. I decided to make calmer songs to show another part of myself, and the producers were in sync. Features from Mayorkun, Chike and Mohbad came easily, so it took two months to get the album ready. 

    My first album, Sound Check, dropped in 2023, 17 years after I entered the music scene. But I’m proud I could finally pull it off.

    Photo: @waleadebisiphotography

    Then you dropped an EP right after

    A few weeks after the album came out in 2023, someone heard Medicine After Death, which featured Mohbad, and commented that it was the last time we’d hear Mohbad. It was a sad and painful comment that hit me hard. So I announced a challenge to get music producers to drop their remixes. We compiled the best entries into an EP and released it in December.

    A new listener may find the title intriguing, but it’s a love song. I wrote and recorded the hook first but didn’t like how it sounded, so I sent it to Mohbad. We’d been talking about creating together for a while. He liked it, and we recorded the song the same way I wrote it.

    What’s happening in Ibadan? You’ve shot a lot of content there recently

    Ibadan is one of the most respected cities in the Southwest. But I hadn’t been there before. I visited to connect with its people and get familiar with the city. And I realised I could be myself there the same way I’d be in the East. I was able to make content for a song called Gangan, a fusion of talking drum beats and amapiano. It’s coming soon.

    You have an open closeness with fellow artists — Falz, Mayorkun — that’s rare among Nigerian musicians

    I pay attention to personality. It’s easier to connect with genuine people that way. Getting close to Mayorkun took a while. He’s the type to take his time, but once he connects with you, he’s your guy 100%. I like Falz because he tries to be on the side of what’s right. Ephemerals like money and clout don’t have a hold on him. That’s a great thing.

    When should we expect the next album?

    My sophomore album is ready. I have three projects coming out this year: Pressure, Black Pink and Six Pack

    After that, I want to work on something more detailed and personal: a story about my origin and journey. I want to channel the same energy into my stagecraft. I want it to be as great as my songs, powerfully capturing their essence. I also plan to explore my fashion side with some merch in the works.

    Which artists are you feeling right now?

    Ratty, Kolaboy, Laxxy, Hugo P, Ugoccie, Paragon Qtm, BeePee and Bkay! I like Jeriq too. He makes himself available for meaningful collaborations and is always on the move. I respect that. 

    These guys have enjoyable flow and delivery. These are qualities those on the come-up can emulate. Not every listener understands your language, but they’ll connect to it based on how you present it. You have to be intentional.

    Read Next: “People Still Like Me This Much?” — Reminisce Celebrates Fan Response to “Alaye Toh Se Gogo”

  • If you asked teenage me who Reminisce was, he’d recite: “How far, how far? 1827765. Report your location. Sarz on the beat, AKA Knackdemus. O ja?!” — Reminisce, Kako bi Chicken (2012).

    I got into the veteran rapper’s music in 2013, and he’s never let me run out of cool slang to recite with my friends. First, it was Hurricane, a song he dropped as a warm-up to his sophomore album, Alaga Ibile. Beyond the unmatched thrill of bursting out “bai” at the end of each bar, Hurricane introduced me to my current favourite rapper, PayBac iBoro, who Reminisce met at music producer, Sossick’s studio and gave a chance to take the second verse. 

    A decade later, Alaye To Se Gogo (ATSG), Reminisce’s latest body of work, shows remarkable evolution — his testimony as a street conqueror. With this album, he’s pushed through the ranks and sits in the upper echelon of the game. I sat down with the 42-year-old rapper and had him share the inspiration behind Alaye To Se Gogo, its significance and what he’s learned in his 20-year career. 

    What inspired Alaye Toh Se Gogo Volume 1?

    Reminisce: The will to make music for people who still want to listen to me. 

    Before I returned to the studio, I asked my team if people genuinely wanted my new album; making music is expensive. I wasn’t sure I cared about making an album, but they convinced me that the request was high and we put it out. Since then, I’ve been extremely surprised. A lot of folks are listening to the album and talking about it. I actually have a huge, loyal following. 

    People still like me this much? It’s great. I appreciate it. This album came from a place of love and passion.

    What was the creation process like?

    Reminisce: I like to sit in my home studio, listen to music and do my thing. I prefer to write to the beat. It’s easier because I don’t have to adjust anything after. It’s plug-and-play; I load the beat and write on my phone. 

    What’s a day in your life like?

    Reminisce: I typically wake up around 12 p.m. or 1 p.m., brush my teeth and sneak in one or two smokes to start my day. I go through my emails and digital numbers on Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube, etc. I check my socials to see who’s banting who — I love Twitter so much.

    If I have work to do, I get to it. If travelling is involved, I’m up in the morning and on my journey. Whether by road or plane, I try to make it early and get to wherever I’m going by 4 p.m. at most. On days I have music to make, I get in my home booth and record. Or play my video games, if I’m less busy. 

    Around mid-afternoon, my daughters are back from school, so I spend an hour or two with them, go back to my studio to watch evening football matches, listen to music, watch podcasts, whatever. My day is basically about me, my work, my kids and my family.

    Are you ever worried about ageism in the Nigerian hip-hop industry?

    Reminisce: No. It’s almost as if people don’t want to see older artists who’ve donned stages and mics for years keep going. But everyone has their audience. People who grew up listening to my music and are still alive, so I have to serve them. 

    All the online reaction to Alaye Toh See Gogo has been from a certain demographic: people who’ve listened to my music since secondary school or uni and have grown up. They feel like they grew up with me and my music.

    Who influenced your music growing up?

    Reminisce: Snoop Dogg, Tha Dogg Pound crew and Dr. Dre were huge influences. But the overall impact was Michael Jackson. I can sing 20 Michael Jackson songs right now. My favourite is Billie Jean. MJ was my eldest brother’s age-mate, and they shared the same birthday. So, my admiration is also a bit personal. I was sad when he passed away. 

    MJ was the first celebrity I recognised before falling in love with hip-hop. Then in secondary school, there was the Snoop Dogg and Juice and Gin period, and there was Biggie and 2Pac. I used to mime all their lyrics. Nas and Jay-Z came into the picture, and their music finished work on me. I preferred Nas; I respect money-making talk and all, but I’m for lyricism.

    [ad]

    But everything you’ve heard in my music so far is about my own life. I lived with my mum growing up. After she passed, I shuffled between my step-mum and grandmother. This was a bit of an eye-opener for me: understanding different people, perspectives and polygamy. 

    I grew up in a liberal Islamic home. We performed duties and rites as Muslims, but my dad never pressed us to be religious. When success came, and my life changed, I started trying to be a proper Muslim. I make more time for my children and my relationship with my creator. I don’t want my kids to see me as a pagan. I want them to identify me as Muslim. I’m still liberal, but I practise Islam as a way of life beyond prayers and fasting.

    What’s one thing you still aspire towards?

    Reminisce: Nothing. All I’ll ask for is a long life. Anything material or career-related? No. I don’t make demands on myself because I understand what will be will be. I only need the will to do things I want to do. Suppose I want to put out an album. I’ll ensure the standard is good enough for anything that wants to happen from there. Anything besides that is pressure, and I’m done with that.

    I once saw a photo of you with your head buried in a book, and my takeaway was you’re a book lover. Am I right?

    Reminisce: Yes. 

    My favourite book is Sir Alex Ferguson’s “Just Champion!” Growing up, we watched Manchester United all the time. Sir Alex was Michael Jackson standard to me — untouchable. His first book came, and I had access to his life story, dressing room issues and many backstories. The book touched me. I read it five times. It was emotional, and it’s still on my shelf.

    It could’ve been football over music?

    Reminisce: I no too sabi like that. I played for my secondary school twice. The two times, they fired me. I have friends who forced themselves to play but didn’t make it. I knew football wouldn’t work for me; I was honest with myself. But rap? There was no doubt it was my thing.

    How did you know you were a good enough rapper?

    Reminisce: As a teenager, I was doing it for fun, but people listened and showed support every time. When I asked my sister if I was excellent, she’d acknowledge me and boost my confidence. So I was sure about it. But for football, I was like Wan-Bissaka or Harry Maguire — average. If you put me inside a team, nothing would show. Football fans would liken me to Kalvin Phillips — nothing exceptional on the pitch.

    What was your early experience as a rapper?

    Reminisce: I had the worst experience with rejection. 

    In the early days, I was the radio station DJs’ joke material. They used to call me “The King of Promo CDs” because I printed a lot of them. I used to print a thousand copies of three to four singles a year. Everybody knew me; everybody had my CDs. But I’d go to radio and TV stations, and I’d see them in the dustbin because people didn’t care. I was that guy. But I’ve never let that weigh me down or make me look at people who didn’t help differently.

    It’s part of my journey. Specific incidents happen to me so I can remember where I come from and where I’m headed. I don’t dwell too much on them, whether positive or negative. No matter how much good or bad happens to me, nothing stops my movement. That’s why when people say I’m a good storyteller, I refute it. I have many stories to tell because I’ve been through a lot. I don’t have any regrets about my life and decisions.

    This reflects in your stage name, Reminisce

    Reminisce: Reminisce came up because of the first four letters of my name, Remilekun. I went with the flow because it sounded nice. I actually wanted to use MC Khalid, but no one used Muslim names back then, except maybe Rakim, and he was older. 

    Each of your projects seems curated to take listeners through the significant phases of your life. Is that intentional?

    Reminisce: I’m intentional about my art and its perception. I have to grow, and I want anyone who listens from the start to grow with me. As the listener evolves with Reminisce, the music must level up. If you listen to Alaye Toh Se Gogo and you heard shit I already said on Alaga Ibile, there’s a disconnect.

    My albums are portraits. See it as a young guy who once didn’t have a beard growing a goatee. Soon, the beard will connect, and you’ll see that “Alaga is getting older.”

    I don’t want to force anything. I evolve, and so do the people I serve my music. I carry them along and make it fun.

    What’s the hardest lesson you’ve learnt so far?

    Reminisce: Zero expectations. 

    People will always be people. Know this, and you won’t be disappointed. My dad told me I shouldn’t pressure myself. I have to make it, but I also have to ask myself what I want. He told me to have it at the back of my head that the fruit of any decision I make will affect my family. Whether for good or bad, I have the option to choose. 

    What does success mean to you?

    Reminisce: Success is relative in the Ibile Movement. It’s why Olamide’s Grammy nomination means the shit to us. We can’t compare ourselves to new kids who have the springboard or backing, doing genres way more popular than we do. People’s journeys and stories are different. To me, whatever makes anyone feel like they’re made or fulfilled is a success. Some people will never win a Grammy. Some people have been nominated for the award but will never win. Whether a Grammy is your metric for success or not, it’s all about perspective.

    You just have to figure out what audience you want to reach because there’ll only be a few global talents every year. You need to focus on your audience, serve them what they want and milk it. Everyone can’t be Drake; he’s a rare phenomenon. Stick to your thing. There’s money to make everywhere.

    As a rapper in Nigeria, understand that you represent a disadvantaged genre right now. Even the numbers and metrics overseas are saying the same thing. You must be extremely smart about your music and business.

  • Portable, AKA Dr. Zeh, is one of the most talked about artist in the Nigerian  music scene at the moment, after he made a random appearance at the British Fashion Awards 2023 with Skepta. 

    Since he burst into the industry in December 2021, he’s kept his name in the news and on people’s lips. Born Habeeb Okikiola, Portable is a controversial figure, but that’s exactly what feeds his continued relevance. To understand how he’s captivated a mainstream audience, this is a timeline of his journey.

    December 2021: Sango Ota to Lagos

    It was a different December for Portable in 2021. A social-media personality known as Don Blu posted a video of Portable singing ZaZoo Zehh, a freestyle, on Instagram and Snapchat. Many viewers found it funny and thought he was just another local artist looking for fame. But the freestyle made the rounds on the internet and reached popular street-dancer, PocoLee, who heard a potential end-of-year jam. Upon request, Don Blu facilitated the link-up between Portable and Poco Lee. Next thing, YBNL boss, Olamide, asked Portable to pull up to Lekki, Lagos.

    On December 14, 2021, they dropped the audio (produced by P.Priime) and music video (directed by TG Omori). ZaZoo Zehh became one of the breakthrough Nigerian songs of 2021, and barely 72 hours later, Portable climbed the Livespot X stage to perform his hit with Olamide and PocoLee. Wizkid joined them on this stage to spray Portable with dollar bills. Four days after, Portable was dragging Poco Lee online for “ripping” him. He stated that he owns the song and should rightfully be credited as the primary artist instead of “PocoLee feat. Portable & Olamide”. Portable also claimed that Poco only gave him $600 out of the $3000 Wizkid sprayed.

    Image source: X.com

    Next thing, Kogbagidi (born Quadri Taored), a show promoter Portable used to call his “helper” sent him packing from his house. In the video Kogbagidi posted on his page, he called the “$3000” Poco Lee’s money and told Portable to return to his village in Sango Ota, Ogun State. As some guys packed Portable’s belongings out, Kogbagidi blamed them for not monitoring Portable in his absence.

    The drama generated online sympathy from music lovers and artists like Slimcase, who took to Instagram to plead for Portable.

    Portable apologised to Poco Lee, Kogbagidi and Olamide, asking them to forgive him for the earlier flare-up. Kogbagidi and Portable made up, but soon after, they had another clash about cars and contracts. In a video that surfaced online, Portable held a baseball bat, complaining about being cheated, while Kogbagidi begged him. They made up yet again. But on Jahbless’s “Original Intelligence” podcast in January 2022, Portable announced that the relationship ended.

    January – April 2022: Billboard charts and U.K. debut

    On January 5, 2022, ZaZoo Zehh debuted at number 14 on Billboard Top Triller Global Charts. On January 19, he released All Eyes On Me featuring Barry Jhay, and Neighbour with Small Doctor on the 29th. On February 11, Portable released his Zazuu Zeh EP and spent the next two months consistently putting out songs and features. In April, Portable performed at AY’s Easter show and went with socialite and 5-Star Records owner, E-Money, to the U.K. for shows in Peckham, Birmingham and Manchester.

    May – July 2022: Zeh Nation is born and Headies drama

    In May, Portable posted a certificate of incorporation for a new record label called Zeh Nation Limited on Instagram. The Headies 2022 nominee list came out on May 24, and Portable was in the Rookie of the Year category alongside Fave AV, Ugoccie and Magixx. He was also nominated for the Best Street-Hop category with Bella Shmurda, Mohbad, Naira Marley and Goya Menor.

    On May 25th, Portable threatened to cause harm to other nominees if he didn’t win the awards. The Headies asked him to retract his statement and tender an apology. Instead, he offered a back-handed apology, claiming they knew his attitude before they nominated him.

    On July 18, Portable called himself the founder of cult group, One Million Boys, and The Headies swiftly disqualified him from all categories.

    August 2022: Chief of Zeh Nation

    On August 22, Oba Olabode Thomas-Fagbayi (Onitigbo of Tigbo-Ilu) conferred upon Portable the chieftaincy title, Amuludun of Tigbo, Aworiland, an area in Yewa Local Government, Ogun State. He posted videos of his coronation ceremony on Instagram, and days later, he signed his first artist, Olamzzy, to Zeh Nation.

    September – December 2022: International shows, album drop and coffin entrance

    Portable went from losing a South African gig due to his social media fights in September, to performing in Germany and Italy in October, where he claimed to have faced extortion and escaped death. On November 25, he released his album, Ika of Africa, a few days after he signed Youngy Duu to Zeh Nation. And on December 28, Portable arrived in a coffin to Portable Live In Concert at Fela’s Shrine, Lagos — his debut show as the main act.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hyCvIcbhAgs\

    April 2023: A prison-inspired hit

    On March 30, police officers were at Portable’s Odogwu Bar in Sango Ota for unspecified reasons. The artist took to his IG story and claimed they came to assault him. The following day, he ended up in police custody. On April 3, the court granted bail after he met some conditions.

    Four days after his release, he put out the viral hit, Am Not a Prisoner.

    August 2023: Terry G link-up and U.S. tour

    Portable and Terry G released Ogbafia on August 16, 2023, after their viral link-up. Soon after, Portable and his wife, Omobewaji, hosted a ceremony to celebrate the first anniversary of his chieftaincy title. He later announced his United States tour to run from September 8, 2023 to March 23, 2024.

    November 2023: The sophomore album

    Portable released his second studio album, Anikuleti Street Don Jazzy (meaning the Don Jazzy of Anikuleti Street), on November 24, 2023. Although there’s no noise around it, Dr. Zeh is still on his U.S. tour as of the date of publishing.

    December 2023: Skepta link-up and Brit Fashion Award

    It came as a surprise to many when Nigerian-British artist, Skepta, asked for Portable’s whereabouts on his IG story and X. On December 5, the rapper posted a photo of Portable’s reserved seat at the 2023 British Fashion Awards before they both pulled up to the function.

    Image source: X.com

    Knowing how Skepta moves, he ended up making a record titled “Tony Montana” with Portable. The music video was released on March 1st on YouTube.

    READ: Subs, Gold Teeth & G-Wagons: Seyi Vibez vs Zino vs Portable

  • 2023 is stacked with so many music releases that it’s easy to lose sight of  some tracks we’ve found remarkable in the year.

    In this list, we carefully curated twelve great songs that went under the radar when they were released.

    Show Me Something — WeTalkSound ft. PDSTRN, Kaey & Vader the Wildcard

    Aside from being Nigeria’s largest creative community and incubating talents, WeTalkSound, a.k.a. WTS, curates musical experiences and releases with its assembly of musicians. PDSTRN, a singer-rapper, takes the chorus of Show Me Something, and Kaey handles the first verse and hook. Vader, also a rapper, sings the second verse. If you’re looking for a groove your babe can whine to, or something you can ride to, press play on this.

    Tales By Moonlight — Oyedele

    If you weren’t a get-inside kid while growing up in the Southern West of Nigeria, you’ve likely heard the Yorùbá nursery rhymes that opened this record. Oyedele switched between singing and rapping and a sprinkle of call-and-response with ‘Tilewa, the featured artist, to examine relationship nuances.

    Tánwá — The Musical Being

    Only a few artists are still very active in the Nigerian folk music scene. The Musical Being strides in rich Yorùbá lyricism that shines together with his commanding vocals. Tánwá opens the titular EP and offers a message of hope that hangs between prayers and positive manifestations. The Musical Being joins the list of young musicians like Dotti the Deity and Mo’Believe, keeping the neo-folklore music alive.

    Alive — Jola Bello

    Though this song, Alive, can wash all over any listener who’s not reciprocated with the love they give out — Jola’s only trying to fire up the burning desire for intimacy. In what sounds like an assurance she can’t give, Jola sings, “Hop on me like a German / hop on me, hop on into freeway.” Alive is her second song produced by Kemena.

    Devotion — IDVH

    IDVH is a singer-songwriter, music producer and sound engineer who released a new EP, Xpress Music Vol. 1, in September. In Devotion, he’s having an honest conversation about his expectations from relationships. You have to wonder why he’s not staying single until he meets someone who genuinely likes him — instead of taking and giving half-baked romance. But his choice of song is so catchy that one runs back the tune and delves into his whole catalogue.

    Run Me Love — Shalom Dubas

    Guitar riffs are always consistent on Shalom’s songs. Run Me Love isn’t exempt. It’s a dreamy song about a love interest who is unsure of what they want.

    “Do you want to whine me or whine on me?” The rapper wants to be certain.

    Flashing Lights – Tekno

    For the first time in my life, I’m rinsing and repeating Tekno’s music, and it’s beyond my usual allure of party, clubbing and jams filled with lamba. Flashing Lights is the third song on his latest album, The More The Better. This song is simple yet gets listeners emotionally invested in it. Flashing Light was my go-to during my just-concluded talking stage that led nowhere. Though that has ended, Tekno’s song will be on a playlist I’ll share with a new person. It’s that sweet.

    Amma Hoe — Bizzonthetrack

    When we count Nigerian artists who feed their listeners every three market days, mainstream or underground, Bizzonthetrack stays in the top ten list.It’s hard to miss his sexually-liberating amapiano jam, Amma Hoe. True to his nature, Bizz refuses to confuse any lady about what he wants from them. Currently, he’s into the business of making legs vibrate, nothing deep and serious.

    Another Day, Another Naira — Kaey 

    As a Nigerian living in Nigeria, money preoccupies the mind before bed. When you wake up another morning, you’re screaming about money again. It’s even harder for a young creative person trying to make something because Nigeria is no country for dreamers. Another Day, Another Naira explores the hustle culture in Nigeria that prioritises money over everything else.

    For everyone caught up in the hustle and bustle and stuck in the rat race, Kaey fixed an anthem for us.

    Flying Corks — Brotha Pollock & Mxps Rellington ft. Ghaffar

    Taking a trip into Brotha Pollock’s grimy lo-fi production and Mxps Rellington’s novelist mind, you’ll find psychological depth and dramatic structure, strings and references of pop culture moments — weaved together to present vivid imagery of respects they deserve and keeping their Hip-Hop music undiluted.

    Mxps Rellington compares his grand moves to that of Dostoevsky. Name a more clever rapper.

    To You — Dwin, the Stoic ft. Ogranya

    When two brilliant singer-songwriters come together, a heart-bending magic is expected. Dwin, the Stoic and Ogranya wag their voices like a wand and deliver a heartbreak ballad about a love that shouldn’t crumble, hoping to spellbind their lovers to stay around with them. One can listen to To You and feel the waves of melancholy crashing down or the breeze of the beach blowing one’s colourful shirt. No matter what, the song will make you feel something.

    Unconditional — Mojeed x Czure

    Spellbound by his themes of immigration, Lagos nightlife, and chasing the bag, amongst other mundane things, Mojeed has put himself among the elite Nigerian rappers who can ghost us, and when he comes back, we’re there — listening. On his first 2023 drop, Unconditional, he opens up about his availability to a romantic relationship that’s not one-sided. The beauty of this record is the culmination of growth and maturity Mojeed has laid on Czure’s production.

    He smoothly delivers in Yorubanglish, a mixture of Yorùbá and American-accented English, that has become the signature style of Mojeed.

    He gave us Unconditional to hold body while he preps a mixtape, Monkeys, Men & Martians, and an untitled EP marked for this November.

    ICYMI, our Burning Ram Meat Festival is happening in Lagos on 11th November.

    Cop your ticket here asap.

  • How well do you know Nigerian artists and their discography? Well, we’ve compiled some lesser-known tracks by 11 of them to test you. Prove you know your stuff by identifying the artist by 3 song titles alone.

    Go ahead: