Fela anikulapo kuti biography albums incorporated
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Femi Kuti Biography
1962—
Nigerian singer, songwriter, bandleader
Nigeria's Femi Kuti calls his band Positive Force, and that name illustrates some of the differences between Kuti and his famous father. Kuti is the son of Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, an icon of Nigerian music whose protest lyrics were a constant thorn in the side of the country's military government, and who often ended up in prison as a result of songs that seemed to portend rebellion among Nigeria's masses of impoverished young people. Femi Kuti carries forward his father's legacy in many respects, but his is a Nigerian music for a different country, one that is making steps toward democracy and trying to get a grip on endemic corruption. Protest is certainly present in his music, but it is measured rather than incendiary.
One of numerous children of Fela, who had at least 27 wives, Femi Kuti was born on June 16, 1962. Some sources place his birth in Britain; others in Lagos, Nigeria. His mother Remi was bor
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Fela 1938–1991
Musician, singer, political activist
Music Protested Nigerian Government
Fame Spread To World
Fought For Nigeria Even in Death
Selected discography
Sources
One of Africa’s most acclaimed musicians, Nigerian Fela Anikulapo Kuti was “a peculiar late-twentieth-century mix of shaman, politician, ombudsman, activist and musical genius,” according to Gene Santoro in the Nation. Fela, as he was popularly known, wrote and performed political protest songs that have won him a large following both at home and abroad, to the frequent chagrin of government authorities. His music—dubbed “Afro-Beat,”—was an amalgam of American blues and jazz blended with African rhythms, while his pointed lyrics—in pidgin English and African—confronted government corruption, multi-national corporations, and police brutality. In a career that spanned fyra decades, Fela recorded over 50 albums and performs frequently in concer