Im a 23 year old Armenian from Virginia Usa and this music touches me down to my ancestral spirits. It brings me away from the southern hillbilly society that i feel i dont belong to and reconnects me with my heavily cultured roots and energies. The world is a happy place which, despite all our pain, is abundant with life.
I have a fond memory of a time I spent in Sweden back in 2005. I had run out of money one night before my flight back to England, forcing me to spend a night on the streets of Stockholm in -15 degs c weather. Part of the reason I had run out of money is that several days before I had bought two Fela CD's to play on my cdman. At first I tried to stay inside the expansive building of T Centralen where my train the next afternoon would take me to the airport. However at 11pm I and many others, travelers and legit homeless were pushed out into the snow by Police. Closed till morning. The homeless people left the area quickly leaving just a young African man and myself wondering what to do. We struck up a conversation in regards to our situation. I was in inadequate clothing for the weather and he in a worse situation. He had only that afternoon arrived at the airport from Nigeria to stay with his cousin. From the airport he rang his cousin to be told. 'Get a train into the city and I'll meet you in the morning.' So here he was in a tracksuit and trainers fresh from the heat of another continent and the prospect of spending the night on the frozen streets. We decided to move out of the wind and did so as best we could. In the lea I produced my cdman and showed him the CD's I had. He was delighted to find Fela among my selection. We then spent the next four hours dancing to keep warm sharing an earbud each, connected awkwardly by the wire. He tried to teach me how to do some Afrobeat steps and together we passed the hours until a bus station across the road open at around 4am. Inside the warmth we drank coffee and chatted more until around 6am I went to wait for my train to the airport and he went off to meet up with his cousin. I have forgotten his name at this point. Yet I think I shall always remember till my dying day the cold, cold night I danced to Fela's wonderful Afrobeat to stay warm with the Nigerian stranger who may have been one of the nicest people I ever met. :)
One of those rare encounters that leaves life’s indelible mark. Expatiate on this interesting encounter with before and after short story… it makes for good reading.
I was playing in James Brown's Band and I thought we were the Funkiest band on Earth. The we went to Lagos, at the Shrine, to listen to Fela and Afrika 70 and I discovered we were wrong. The Funkiest band on Earth that was them. Bootsy Collins.
I just discovered Fela Kuti's music last night and here I am now with a growing interest in Nigeria's cultural and social issues. Greetings from Mexico to everybody!
I had the pleasure/privilege of playing drums at a impromptu fela gig. Its the highlight of my musical career, I felt like i was in a trance after 5 mins playing. Amazing, like being hypnotized.
What Fela said in this song decades ago is what Nigerians are just waking up to in 2017. My mum back then as kid even told not to listen him anymore because he was evil for speaking against the exploitations of the religious leaders, few weeks ago she called me to stop paying tithes to greedy pastors. Funny isn't it
Fela Kuti and Bob Marley. Two greats who led the masses through their message in music who were intentionally and systematically silenced. And their legacy still lives on. We're still listening. July 2019.
Bob died of cancer. His rasta beliefs made him reject conventional medical treatment. A tragedy indeed, but hardly intentional silencing. The prophets may be gone, but their messages live on through the music.
@@ShanghaiRooster pop culture stripped him of his political message though, at least in the eyes of the general public. It's been sedated been made less dangerous in most hands but not all, some hands listen.
@@lynazidane6697Sometimes his politics were shallow though too. “Buffalo Soldier” doesn’t really recognize the plight of Indigenous people. At best, it’s maybe a bit regretful but in terms of how black soldiers were treated and forced yo fight.
Sending love, protection, healing and the power of the Most High and the mighty ancestors to my people in Nigeria 🇳🇬 ...Nigerian Live Matter Too!! End SARS
I'm a Christian now, recently gave my life to Christ a few years back and it's the best thing I've ever done, however for me no music compares to Fela n I do agree with a lot of his logic jus that now I'm in Christ I have deeper understanding of the world. However musically, I don't think I can ever stop listening to this music and I just take it like if something like this can come from the Earth then one must wonder how great our God is!
I have to cry listening to this genius, prophet and hero. Never ending goose bumps since I listen to this music, and that is more than 30 years already.
The synergy between Tony Allen and Fela was electric man. The business side of the relationship is another story but musically, they were equals. Two incomparable geniuses in the history of popular African music.
The synergy is electric and Tony Allen is a genius! But not equal to Fela Musically. No one is equal to Fela Anikulapo Kuti & He still remained the Most famous graduate from London Music School.
@@juanestadian8471You can’t possibly be serious. As a drummer Tony Allen was superior. What instrument could Tony Allen play that Fela couldn’t? Tony Allen couldn’t play saxophone. Fela is on par with Mozart and Beethoven as a composer.
@@westyraviz which is why i said max roach and ginger baker come close. I didn’t say they surpassed Tony Allen. Tony Allen is the greatest drummer in the history of popular music, bebop jazz included. But……there would be no Tony Allen if it wasn’t for two people, Max Roach and Art Blakey, who Allen says inspired him to play the drums
@@westyraviz fela surpasses Mozart as a composer. Mikes Davis surpasses Beethoven and Mozart as a composer. Because both were jazz musicians. Jazz extremely difficult to write and perform. It is not mindless improvisation as some people, casual listeners think. It is improvisation underrated by sketches of music.
This was Fela's commentary on theocracy and religious politicians in Nigeria. In this song he criticizes the Muslim and Christian elites in Nigeria for telling people to accept poverty and suffering because they will supposedly be rewarded in an "afterlife". This would make a great anti-Boko Haram anthem as they demand people give up everything good in life for fundamentalist Islam.
Fela Kuti was a visionary he was born with insight of the world conditions which became a reality until this day.Sorry for the younger generation who minds are gone forgetting who he is and what he stands for. Religion is still sucking the blood of the poor and uneducated instead of worshipping God they’re worshiping man, wake up Nigeria you can do better.
@@danielsmith1066 Yes, it is something that happens at different scales and not only in art. Studying the origin of the oppression of women and, of course, the way to go out of this inferno of exploitation and oppression engendered is the task of every human being.
I moved to Nigeria from USA to be with my Nigerian husband and learn more about my African/Nigerian ancestry & culture. Online I'd seen comments from Nigerians about the state of the nation on a recent post stating Nigeria was a happy place to live. Some comments said "suffering & smiling". I was later informed its a common saying based off this song, so here i am. This is my first time hearing Fela, and I love this music already. I'll be listening all weekend 💃🏾
just takes time and depends on how you get here. Took me many years and the only track I enjoyed was Water got No Enemy. But here I am this very day, playing Fela all day. Realest Shout Out to Burna Boy who is Fela reincarnated - that's how I really got into Fela
Feel so bad for Nigeria. A scammer pop up on my fb account. Feel more sincerely sorry for him than upset with him. I prayed for him and all of Nigerian. God never intended for any human on his earth to go hungry and without. One man greed is another man hunger. The cycle has to stop somewhere.
@@frankosakwe8382 bout the fake smiling; I see it. Everywhere I go, fake smile. I once had someone tell me, no one wants to hear about your problems, hence Suffering and smiling. Fela Kuti speaks truth.
The best African musician ever!!!! Fela Anikulapo Kuti. you're Legends not a noise makers live beyond death, his music is still very relevant to what Nigeria are passing through till today. i salute Abami Eda he deserves a Nobel Peace Prize
One of the greatest and most talented musicians to ever come out of Africa and maybe the best! His music lives one today. Everything he sang about 40 years ago are still happening today. All the billions of Naira missing in the 70s that Fela sang about in his music and got him in trouble with the Military and Civilian rulers are still occurring today!!!! Look at the rulers that Fela sang about and hated Fela for it: Gowon, Muritala, Obasanjo, Shagari, Yaradua, Buhari, Babangida, Abacha, Abiola, etc.............. What a legend. It is a pride to all Nigerians that this man came out of that country called Nigeria!!!
It’s still happening today even worst: budget padding, looters in the Panama Papers, electricity supply worse than ever before after privatization, Buhari’s asking Cameron to return stolen funds, individuals in the north owning oil blocks in the south... It's heart wrenching
Oh my GOD,i was too young to understand what the legend was fighting for but as I grew up ,i understand why he was & still the greatest prophet of our time,fela spent all his time fighting 4 emancipation of Africa ,equal rights , justice & Africa unity, NO comparable, may his soul rest in peace AMEN.
The Legend ,the Black president when you sang this song the notorious military and civilian turned to armed robbers called themselves politicians called hemp smokers
Fela, totally refused to be boxed. His songs were soul/Afrobeat/funk symphonies that did not fit the 5 minute segments favored by music companies and record companies. This particular powerful political symphony is more topical today than when it was first released close to 40 years ago. Play it to the children often.
I feel like a lot if not most music stems from an African source but black americans are american black people, black african people didnt create what we call Jazz. White americans aren't english, they're American. Jazz is the epitome of American music if not the blues. I get the social/cultural point you're making, but this is music history we're talkin, it aint a matter of taste or opinion.
I often listen to the great Fela but when you listen to the musical arrangements then you appreciate the genius of the man. In 2022 his words still resonate meaning!
One thing about this musical genius was that the band can play a series of songs continuously for one hour nonstop beats Rythms vocals and precursions all in one place
The music is not trying to force a melody into your head, it's just... there. This is what I love about trance music, it is not trying to grab your attention, but when it does, it still is interesting.
One of the positives that I can take out of lockdown is discovering Fela Kuti and Manu Dibango. I thought to myself yes this is great background music, however it becomes so absorbing that it completely takes over, job done. The kings are dead long live the kings!
He was arrested nearly 300 times, was beaten every time. Tortured on a regular. Utterly fearless. Broken bones and trauma to the spleen, and too much jail food, are enough to weaken the immune system. That's what killed him. I once had the blessing to be roommate with the daughter of one of his dancers. Fela was a shaping factor in her life, and she represented his spirit for REAL! The expat IBO in NYC called her Princess Kush, and she earned it.
Today 22 years ago this legend died. We celebrate, we suffer and smiling. Na secret na confidential matter. Just love and respect each other. Enjoy your time guys.
I love Fela and James Brown. If you know Fela history you would know that Fela himself said he was influenced by JB. However, Afrobeat is a genre all it's own. I wish they both were still here.
Fela, our greatest and fearless philosopher really told all the stories about how hopeless and wicked our so called leaders had been. Now he's gone ,what can we do to keep his spirit alive. I think he deserves a special place in our struggle and history. I will recommend him for a special national honor
Fela spoke for all the oppressed people of the world. He deserves more than a national award. He remains one of the most influential artists of all time. Let's start the campaign to keep his message alive! Am with you all the way.
Fela is just like Jesus Christ our Lord, when Christ was alive few believed him. But when is gone millions realize the value of Jesus Christ, just now all Fela said came to pass. I grew to know when Fela mate are abusing him calling all sorts of names. Rest on our legend.
What we ran away for, had finally catch up with us as a country. Religiously we had failed and governmentaly we had failed. Let's run back to our God for help. And this man said it.
This man passed this way but we never appreciated him and He saw things even science could not see. He remains the Nostradamus of Africa and The Diaspora. Only if he lived to see what Buhari has done to the citizenry and to my beloveth Nigeria. Buhari has deceived Nigerians that he is he is th messiah, divided us further along ethnic-religious Lines while protecting his fellow crusaders. He has promoted hatred and broken the cord which holds us together. Today we no longer see ourselves as Nigerians but as Afenifere, Ipob, Arewa, Miyetti, NW, SW, NE, NW, NC, SE, SS, MB. Rest in peace THE WEIRD ONE.
Growing up musically in the 70's, the album covers were what drew us in....the artwork was amazing.....you had to use your imagination.....look at Bob Marley's albums, Third World, Peter Tosh and Fela.
You can't compare fela and James . Both masters of their own music from different cultures both have in common struggle, poverty, African genes which made their music so great. They had something to say through song dance beat it aint no competition they inspired people which is how powerful music is and should be not a competition. One love unity
This all I gonna say since you cant get it both of them gene come from Africa no competition. End of it when Africans stop competition n come together then u get somewhere try both masters of their own music both have in common the same things one love unity
Abiyshag Shulamit Ysrayl You preach unity and exercise division. I agree Fela is one of a kind and owes nothing to the World, as does James. We only compete with our deficits of character.
ultimately james brown was influenced by the sounds of barrel house music and the black church. jimi hendrix acknowledged his musical influence came from the blues as that is really all jimi played, he was also influenced by little richards boogie woogie style. fela's music sound and groove is a mix of james brown, american jazz and native african juju music. i would add a little jamaican ska but ska was influenced by american rock n roll and motown. black american's gave more to fela than the world will ever realize by way of influences and it goes beyond the music. this i have personally heard him acknowledge only a few years before his death..
We Africans are still looking for a good leader to take us to the promise land, he said a lot about our way of lives especially in Nigeria, so sad nothing has changed since, even the situation is getting worse
Nigerian people wake up!!!!!!Suffering and simleing. It go better till 5058 Raise up against the Authority thevies. Various musicians but Fela na Oga, zoom to 21 century is songs are still ringing bells .Nigerian politicians have not changed
September 2020, introducing my wife, who is having contractions with our first son, to Fela. The music speaks to the world, and the word's explain the music flawlessly.
This is the first Fela song I heard. It shook something loose inside me. Exploring his extensive discography and learning about his revolutionary approach to life has been an amazing experience. What an inspirational force for good. Thanks for the upload!
Who's here in 2024 ❤👋
from here til infinity
Brian from Illinois,,,amen
🤞🏿
Meeee
All the way from Zimbabwe, we here baby!!!!
Im a 23 year old Armenian from Virginia Usa and this music touches me down to my ancestral spirits. It brings me away from the southern hillbilly society that i feel i dont belong to and reconnects me with my heavily cultured roots and energies. The world is a happy place which, despite all our pain, is abundant with life.
Barev dzees
You're a hillbilly. Embrace it while the Africans embrace our own.
👁️ MO AB 🗽🌏 ALL Moorish 👁️🌏 ASIA 🌏 ASIATICS 🌍 Inheritance 🧠 Birth right 👁️
Western part of Virginia... I was there too....
TAZEWELL....and such...beautiful place,but....people....eĥhhhhhh
Hope all remains well❤❤
@@1Pasha1492 nutcase much 🤓
I have a fond memory of a time I spent in Sweden back in 2005. I had run out of money one night before my flight back to England, forcing me to spend a night on the streets of Stockholm in -15 degs c weather. Part of the reason I had run out of money is that several days before I had bought two Fela CD's to play on my cdman. At first I tried to stay inside the expansive building of T Centralen where my train the next afternoon would take me to the airport. However at 11pm I and many others, travelers and legit homeless were pushed out into the snow by Police. Closed till morning. The homeless people left the area quickly leaving just a young African man and myself wondering what to do. We struck up a conversation in regards to our situation. I was in inadequate clothing for the weather and he in a worse situation. He had only that afternoon arrived at the airport from Nigeria to stay with his cousin. From the airport he rang his cousin to be told. 'Get a train into the city and I'll meet you in the morning.' So here he was in a tracksuit and trainers fresh from the heat of another continent and the prospect of spending the night on the frozen streets. We decided to move out of the wind and did so as best we could. In the lea I produced my cdman and showed him the CD's I had. He was delighted to find Fela among my selection. We then spent the next four hours dancing to keep warm sharing an earbud each, connected awkwardly by the wire. He tried to teach me how to do some Afrobeat steps and together we passed the hours until a bus station across the road open at around 4am. Inside the warmth we drank coffee and chatted more until around 6am I went to wait for my train to the airport and he went off to meet up with his cousin. I have forgotten his name at this point. Yet I think I shall always remember till my dying day the cold, cold night I danced to Fela's wonderful Afrobeat to stay warm with the Nigerian stranger who may have been one of the nicest people I ever met. :)
One of those rare encounters that leaves life’s indelible mark. Expatiate on this interesting encounter with before and after short story… it makes for good reading.
How I want take read this long thing now 😂😂😂
Wow..I hope that Afro Nigerian man comes across your comment.And you guys hook up if God still has given you days of life
I'm sure he will never forget you and your kindness ✨️
I was playing in James Brown's Band and I thought we were the Funkiest band on Earth. The we went to Lagos, at the Shrine, to listen to Fela and Afrika 70 and I discovered we were wrong. The Funkiest band on Earth that was them. Bootsy Collins.
Nigerians are still suffering and smiling Fela was a prophet
The whole of Africa still does, unfortunately
They stopped smiling now. They are running away in thousands!!
I just discovered Fela Kuti's music last night and here I am now with a growing interest in Nigeria's cultural and social issues. Greetings from Mexico to everybody!
You are welcome my dear Africa love u....🇳🇬🇳🇬❤️❤️
Hello
l love this and the world is still (just about) an amazing and rich place . . .
You have sooo much to listen too! Fela has several sons too that also made/make great music with their fathers' influence. You're in for a treat.
@@jessebignell5147 how are you ?
One of my favourites of all time. An exploration of Africans’ obsession with Religion and Politics.
I had the pleasure/privilege of playing drums at a impromptu fela gig. Its the highlight of my musical career, I felt like i was in a trance after 5 mins playing. Amazing, like being hypnotized.
Wow, how lucky. Stay blessed
Could you provide more context. Sounds like a cool story, I'm sure many (including myself) would be delighted to know the details.
You'll never forget that night. No need for pics or video.
@@moodyjames7871 Facts.
Wonderful
Fela deserves a Nobel Peace Prize
Real talk‼️
Shit. Oxishit. Fela deserves a book. A book in every school of the world. Consciousness is the Title.
I'm agree with you, he was a real musical genious. No contest.
Yes ke
Fela is the core of Nobel. Such Peace against violence !
I am a 15 years old girl. Coming back and listening to this gives me so much life compared to trending songs now
yess it's like soul cleansing, I am 16 and did this over the lockdown.
Please read more about African history. Blessings n Love
I'm so proud of you little sister 💝
@@lisaechabor598 for real theres something spiritual about felas music been listening since I was 14
This is when the world was truly serene .
This Fela was not just a Musical Maestro.....he also had some fucking Big Balls !!
Gbosa!! Babylon feel that one !
Polydor music of nigeria
Fela and Bob Marley, two visionaries and prophets whose music is still relevant today!
Peter tosh
and Sun Ra!!!! Fela is from Africa and Marley from America. Sun Ra is from Cronos and it will be relevant for at least 50 years ahead!!!
labros avramis I think for as long humanity exist bro
Music is powerful
@@petermaximum6821 Indeed
Nothing has changed in Nigeria 🇳🇬. Rest in perfect peace REVOLUTIONAL LEADER
It's so sad. Nothing has changed at all. I Love my people but we must make a stand
Really?? Its got worse!!!! When Fela sang this song £1 = N1. Now? £1=N2000
What Fela said in this song decades ago is what Nigerians are just waking up to in 2017. My mum back then as kid even told not to listen him anymore because he was evil for speaking against the exploitations of the religious leaders, few weeks ago she called me to stop paying tithes to greedy pastors. Funny isn't it
Ezzy Pizzy my mom used to tell me that too 😂😂😂 but I find her always singing some of his songs.
Lol
Ezzy Pizzy right, but it's better late than never
Fela was a prophet
It's sad more like.
National anthem for Africans. Fela will always live on. He is prophet of our time
Fela Lives On. If you are still here in August 2019. Hit for me Like.
I be 57yrs.First Fela Live.shrine .......18yrs.life Changing....I go be Africa Oyibo.
Truly the man was ahead of his time. Cameroonian here all the way from Dallas-USA. 2020???
Fela Kuti and Bob Marley. Two greats who led the masses through their message in music who were intentionally and systematically silenced. And their legacy still lives on. We're still listening. July 2019.
Bob died of cancer. His rasta beliefs made him reject conventional medical treatment. A tragedy indeed, but hardly intentional silencing. The prophets may be gone, but their messages live on through the music.
@@ShanghaiRooster pop culture stripped him of his political message though, at least in the eyes of the general public. It's been sedated been made less dangerous in most hands but not all, some hands listen.
@@lynazidane6697Sometimes his politics were shallow though too.
“Buffalo Soldier” doesn’t really recognize the plight of Indigenous people. At best, it’s maybe a bit regretful but in terms of how black soldiers were treated and forced yo fight.
@@ShanghaiRooster he was intentionally infected with cancer, the CIA took him out ...allegedly
An so religions build in thousand's of years whipped away by fella in 20 min ... Now that's the force of music ... Amen /right now
😂 when he speaks in tongues 🤣
The satire... Clear Mockery 😂🤣
haaasasafvmvhmp[[rrrssssghghjn,bbcxeaaaahdd
One of my favorite part as a child until my mother brought a pastor to pray for my brothers and I as a teenager and he did it.
Sending love, protection, healing and the power of the Most High and the mighty ancestors to my people in Nigeria 🇳🇬 ...Nigerian Live Matter Too!! End SARS
I'm a Christian now, recently gave my life to Christ a few years back and it's the best thing I've ever done, however for me no music compares to Fela n I do agree with a lot of his logic jus that now I'm in Christ I have deeper understanding of the world. However musically, I don't think I can ever stop listening to this music and I just take it like if something like this can come from the Earth then one must wonder how great our God is!
You should listen to colonial mentality 😊
I have to cry listening to this genius, prophet and hero. Never ending goose bumps since I listen to this music, and that is more than 30 years already.
The death of Tony Allen brought me here...Where have these melodious sounds been all my life?🥁🎺🎙🎶🔥
The synergy between Tony Allen and Fela was electric man. The business side of the relationship is another story but musically, they were equals. Two incomparable geniuses in the history of popular African music.
The synergy is electric and Tony Allen is a genius! But not equal to Fela Musically. No one is equal to Fela Anikulapo Kuti & He still remained the Most famous graduate from London Music School.
@@chillitopo2420 Maybe as a composer Fela was superior. But as an instrumentalist, Tony was incomparable, only ginger baker and max roach come close.
@@juanestadian8471You can’t possibly be serious. As a drummer Tony Allen was superior. What instrument could Tony Allen play that Fela couldn’t? Tony Allen couldn’t play saxophone. Fela is on par with Mozart and Beethoven as a composer.
@@westyraviz which is why i said max roach and ginger baker come close. I didn’t say they surpassed Tony Allen. Tony Allen is the greatest drummer in the history of popular music, bebop jazz included. But……there would be no Tony Allen if it wasn’t for two people, Max Roach and Art Blakey, who Allen says inspired him to play the drums
@@westyraviz fela surpasses Mozart as a composer. Mikes Davis surpasses Beethoven and Mozart as a composer. Because both were jazz musicians. Jazz extremely difficult to write and perform. It is not mindless improvisation as some people, casual listeners think. It is improvisation underrated by sketches of music.
People spend more time arguing about Fela and James Brown's legacies rather than thinking about the message put forth in this music...
Don, when you talk about Fela or J. Brown, it would be shortsighted just to cover only one dimension of these wonderful human beings. Thank you.
This was Fela's commentary on theocracy and religious politicians in Nigeria. In this song he criticizes the Muslim and Christian elites in Nigeria for telling people to accept poverty and suffering because they will supposedly be rewarded in an "afterlife". This would make a great anti-Boko Haram anthem as they demand people give up everything good in life for fundamentalist Islam.
+Abel Ashes Do you have the authority to make such brave comments?
Abel Ashes
wow...those false profits...are just agents....!
I don't need any "authority". I have have knowledge.
Read the lyrics?
songmeanings.com/songs/view/3530822107858727846/
Abel Ashes hmmmmmb
Fela Kuti was a visionary he was born with insight of the world conditions which became a reality until this day.Sorry for the younger generation who minds are gone forgetting who he is and what he stands for. Religion is still sucking the blood of the poor and uneducated instead of worshipping God they’re worshiping man, wake up Nigeria you can do better.
“Art is not a mirror held up to reality
but a hammer with which to shape it.”
― Bertolt Brecht
I liked Brecht, Hull '91...didn't think all those women who put up with him got as much recognition as they should have done...
@@danielsmith1066 Yes, it is something that happens at different scales and not only in art. Studying the origin of the oppression of women and, of course, the way to go out of this inferno of exploitation and oppression engendered is the task of every human being.
this message is still relevant till date! especially in Nigeria n Africa! Religion has become a commercial business in nigeria
I moved to Nigeria from USA to be with my Nigerian husband and learn more about my African/Nigerian ancestry & culture. Online I'd seen comments from Nigerians about the state of the nation on a recent post stating Nigeria was a happy place to live. Some comments said "suffering & smiling". I was later informed its a common saying based off this song, so here i am. This is my first time hearing Fela, and I love this music already. I'll be listening all weekend 💃🏾
Grateful to discover this beautiful tunes today while smoking blunt Amen
As a Huge James Brown Fan, Easy Transition to Fela Kuti, Who is on a whole different level, sounds, style, it's Amazing Music!
Definitely agree with you
I genuinely feel sorry for people that can't get into this magic.
Must be deaf & blind... this sound is the purest gift! Boundless thanks!!
just takes time and depends on how you get here.
Took me many years and the only track I enjoyed was Water got No Enemy. But here I am this very day, playing Fela all day.
Realest Shout Out to Burna Boy who is Fela reincarnated - that's how I really got into Fela
Just discovered Fela, I am grateful. Better late than never 🙏🏿 Feel more proud to be African!
💖💖💖💖💖
👑🐐🎶🕊️🌍🌏🌎🌐✨
2020... My people still suffering & smiling
Not sure they're smiling now
Feel so bad for Nigeria. A scammer pop up on my fb account. Feel more sincerely sorry for him than upset with him. I prayed for him and all of Nigerian. God never intended for any human on his earth to go hungry and without. One man greed is another man hunger. The cycle has to stop somewhere.
@@kalwilliams189 than maybe... God is not what you were told it was...
@@frankosakwe8382 bout the fake smiling; I see it. Everywhere I go, fake smile. I once had someone tell me, no one wants to hear about your problems, hence Suffering and smiling.
Fela Kuti speaks truth.
The suffering is now on another level
Yoruba people deserves accolades for inventing Afrobeat and giving us good music
Fela said it all and now here we are, it is a pity. I weep for Nigeria.
The best African musician ever!!!! Fela Anikulapo Kuti. you're Legends not a noise makers live beyond death, his music is still very relevant to what Nigeria are passing through till today. i salute Abami Eda he deserves a Nobel Peace Prize
One of the greatest and most talented musicians to ever come out of Africa and maybe the best! His music lives one today.
Everything he sang about 40 years ago are still happening today.
All the billions of Naira missing in the 70s that Fela sang about in his music and got him in trouble with the Military and Civilian rulers are still occurring today!!!!
Look at the rulers that Fela sang about and hated Fela for it: Gowon, Muritala, Obasanjo, Shagari, Yaradua, Buhari, Babangida, Abacha, Abiola, etc..............
What a legend. It is a pride to all Nigerians that this man came out of that country called Nigeria!!!
+talk2me9ja
...dream on.
It’s still happening today even worst:
budget padding, looters in the Panama Papers, electricity supply worse than
ever before after privatization, Buhari’s asking Cameron to return stolen
funds, individuals in the north owning oil blocks in the south... It's heart wrenching
Fela is the greatest African musician ever.
FELA IS STILL ALIVE.
COME & GROOVE WITH US @
LE SENOU, 28 RUE MARCADET -
PARIS 75018
July 2019. Love the comment.
Oh my GOD,i was too young to understand what the legend was fighting for but as I grew up ,i understand why he was & still the greatest prophet of our time,fela spent all his time fighting 4 emancipation of Africa ,equal rights , justice & Africa unity, NO comparable, may his soul rest in peace AMEN.
The Legend ,the Black president when you sang this song the notorious military and civilian turned to armed robbers called themselves politicians called hemp smokers
I'm still amazed someone could get this out of their head and into an arrangement. Shm...
Fela, totally refused to be boxed. His songs were soul/Afrobeat/funk symphonies that did not fit the 5 minute segments favored by music companies and record companies. This particular powerful political symphony is more topical today than when it was first released close to 40 years ago. Play it to the children often.
Spot on!
this song is brilliant. the lyrics are pure gold. this is not just music.
Enamorado
Its the Gospel. The one and only Gospel we should be conscious of.
A
The best of fela
@@mailmajor01 best
It's amazing how influential this is to modern jazz and dance music.
+MD Mohawk -Not really. Roots in Africa, made in America. Now it belongs to the whole world.
I feel like a lot if not most music stems from an African source but black americans are american black people, black african people didnt create what we call Jazz. White americans aren't english, they're American. Jazz is the epitome of American music if not the blues. I get the social/cultural point you're making, but this is music history we're talkin, it aint a matter of taste or opinion.
Right on Cat
So who cares if it's pioneered by whites or blacks, it's music. Why does everything have color barriers attached. Turn it up and enjoy it.....
Blues is the root of all music, IMHO.
I often listen to the great Fela but when you listen to the musical arrangements then you appreciate the genius of the man. In 2022 his words still resonate meaning!
His word will still resonate in 2075
The first and the last Black President. Fela forever!
Fela is also an evangelist too
Fela. Kuti. Serra. Un. Roi. Pour. Toujours..!!.??.....
@@olusesiadeniyiisrael5039 ChoirMaster!
Abami Eda.
One thing about this musical genius was that the band can play a series of songs continuously for one hour nonstop beats Rythms vocals and precursions all in one place
The music is not trying to force a melody into your head, it's just... there. This is what I love about trance music, it is not trying to grab your attention, but when it does, it still is interesting.
Peace and love from Morocco. ..
You are the best African musician ever!!!!
Down with radical religion and stupidity
His music is life. He is a musical prophet. He continues to live !!!
One of the positives that I can take out of lockdown is discovering Fela Kuti and Manu Dibango. I thought to myself yes this is great background music, however it becomes so absorbing that it completely takes over, job done. The kings are dead long live the kings!
He was arrested nearly 300 times, was beaten every time. Tortured on a regular. Utterly fearless. Broken bones and trauma to the spleen, and too much jail food, are enough to weaken the immune system. That's what killed him. I once had the blessing to be roommate with the daughter of one of his dancers. Fela was a shaping factor in her life, and she represented his spirit for REAL! The expat IBO in NYC called her Princess Kush, and she earned it.
Richard Head you are absolutely correct
0£
Didn t he died from Aids ??,
Today 22 years ago this legend died.
We celebrate, we suffer and smiling.
Na secret na confidential matter.
Just love and respect each other.
Enjoy your time guys.
21 minutes of Political and religious Awakening, Fun and Spiritual awakening all in one. Truly Magical.
I love Fela and James Brown. If you know Fela history you would know that Fela himself said he was influenced by JB. However, Afrobeat is a genre all it's own. I wish they both were still here.
He was even speaking in tongues, pure genius
olumide ononaiye 🔥✊🏿🔥
Fela, our greatest and fearless philosopher really told all the stories about how hopeless and wicked our so called leaders had been. Now he's gone ,what can we do to keep his spirit alive. I think he deserves a special place in our struggle and history. I will recommend him for a special national honor
I agree with you my brother. Started listening to him at the ripe age of 5 when my dad brought home some of his LP,s.
Fela spoke for all the oppressed people of the world. He deserves more than a national award. He remains one of the most influential artists of all time.
Let's start the campaign to keep his message alive! Am with you all the way.
What fala say for loge now is coming to pass in 2020,
Hum Nigeria which way
The roots of music are in Africa. Thank you, Mr. Fela Kuti for this precious gift.
Music has no country or continent
@@santiagoauge7161 morden day musics have
Rap r&b hip hop reagge tango samba jazz country music rock music funk etc
Music started when the god Hermes invented the lyre while he was an infant, and gave it to Apollo.
@@gerritvanderspurt731 bla bla bla
@@gerritvanderspurt731 rubbish
I had total joy of seeing him at Glastonbury... Unforgettable
Me too. What year was it? 1985? That was the first time I had heard of him. Blew me away.
I discovered Fela's music via Ginger Baker. Two greats talents that are sorely missed.
Fela is just like Jesus Christ our Lord, when Christ was alive few believed him. But when is gone millions realize the value of Jesus Christ, just now all Fela said came to pass. I grew to know when Fela mate are abusing him calling all sorts of names. Rest on our legend.
It's Jan.2020 I fell in love with this Fela song back in 1988 and it hits home now more than ever. I LOVE THIS SONG forever FELA.
A higher vibration this resonates on. Puts me in a trance-like state of upliftment. Nothing enlightens my spirit like Fela does. I'm grateful.
African spirituality.trantic bushman dancing does the same and traditional sussu drums
@@naletsanaele Are you ok?
@@naletsanaele You are better off just texting something of the kind:
I'm grateful to Fela too phuzzz82.
Fela's music speaks to the soul.
I don't know who needs to hear this but Fela starts talking at 9:36.
MUSIC IS THE WEAPON FELA FOREVER. This is beyond music, this is a fight this is spiritual. This is HISTORY.
How disturbing is it that it's 2020 and everything he says is still relevant in today's Nigeria.
The troubles of Nigeria has made me gone back to fela song.. Let me endure it because he told us!!!
Dubem Dum Dum 🔥✊🏿🔥
Wow. Incredible music, and as I read through the comments and learn about this man for the first time, I immediately have immense respect for him.
seanco ✊🏿
he is the root of almost all of burna boy's sampled songs
Marvellouss!!!! I´m shocked!! ..d kind of sound I´ve been dreaming listennin´in São Paulo!!! Help Us!!
What we ran away for, had finally catch up with us as a country. Religiously we had failed and governmentaly we had failed. Let's run back to our God for help. And this man said it.
This man passed this way but we never appreciated him and He saw things even science could not see. He remains the Nostradamus of Africa and The Diaspora. Only if he lived to see what Buhari has done to the citizenry and to my beloveth Nigeria. Buhari has deceived Nigerians that he is he is th messiah, divided us further along ethnic-religious Lines while protecting his fellow crusaders. He has promoted hatred and broken the cord which holds us together. Today we no longer see ourselves as Nigerians but as Afenifere, Ipob, Arewa, Miyetti, NW, SW, NE, NW, NC, SE, SS, MB. Rest in peace THE WEIRD ONE.
whenever i am frustrated at how music is going, i listen to this video. Sheer class
shyamvk ✊🏿🔥✊🏿
This touches my soul. Much love from a 22 year old Swazi
#End police brutality,# End bad governance, # End Buhari, # Let my country be Great Again!!!
Sometimes you find gold onthe internet
mannn, the album artwork is all kinds of amazing
Growing up musically in the 70's, the album covers were what drew us in....the artwork was amazing.....you had to use your imagination.....look at Bob Marley's albums, Third World, Peter Tosh and Fela.
My God ! Whoever you are... We thank you for Fela 💞🔥
Fela - the man who saw tomorrow through music. Ur music will be here for many centuries. Rest on, Olufela
You can't compare fela and James . Both masters of their own music from different cultures both have in common struggle, poverty, African genes which made their music so great. They had something to say through song dance beat it aint no competition they inspired people which is how powerful music is and should be not a competition. One love unity
This all I gonna say since you cant get it both of them gene come from Africa no competition. End of it when Africans stop competition n come together then u get somewhere try both masters of their own music both have in common the same things one love unity
Abiyshag Shulamit Ysrayl You preach unity and exercise division. I agree Fela is one of a kind and owes nothing to the World, as does James. We only compete with our deficits of character.
***** there is merit to what you say, but music rolls that way... who influenced James Blood Ulmer? Hendrix?
haha I suppose that's true, cheers!
ultimately james brown was influenced by the sounds of barrel house music and the black church. jimi hendrix acknowledged his musical influence came from the blues as that is really all jimi played, he was also influenced by little richards boogie woogie style. fela's music sound and groove is a mix of james brown, american jazz and native african juju music. i would add a little jamaican ska but ska was influenced by american rock n roll and motown. black american's gave more to fela than the world will ever realize by way of influences and it goes beyond the music. this i have personally heard him acknowledge only a few years before his death..
We Africans are still looking for a good leader to take us to the promise land, he said a lot about our way of lives especially in Nigeria, so sad nothing has changed since, even the situation is getting worse
if Africa unites it will suffer no more
Baba Kuti 👍
Greatest African superstar. Ikpoooooo
Me I say, the ancestors of Fela Kuti and Bob Marley were close relatives, 3 or 4 centuries ago.
Legends not the noise makers live beyond death, his music is still very relevant to what Nigeria is still experiencing today. i salute abami eda
Obafemi Obajemihi ✊🏿
Great grooves, the 2 guitars bouncing rhythms off one another in almost all Fela's music is what brought me, the grooves kept me. Fantastic sound.
Mannnn I'm speechless....its 2021 and i just came across this 💎.....
"Them go juba bishop juba pope juba immam" They are still do ing it o, Baba Agbalagba!
I'm pretty tired of shuffling and smiling myself!
Its shuffring (suffering) my dear 😂
It's Suffering and Smiling dear.
Yo his band was flawless!!! These are Great musician all assembled to get this powerful and relevant message out. King Fela was way ahead of his time.
The guitar at the beginning, the trumpets after,.. the lyrics. Woah!
Raymand Doks ✊🏿
Nigerian people wake up!!!!!!Suffering and simleing. It go better till 5058 Raise up against the Authority thevies. Various musicians but Fela na Oga, zoom to 21 century is songs are still ringing bells .Nigerian politicians have not changed
Victor Toks.. I just Love what you are saying.. at the same time, we Africans need to build our OWN PARADISE.. BY OURSELVES.. FOR OURSELVES!!
ah true
Victor Toks 🔥✊🏿🔥
September 2020, introducing my wife, who is having contractions with our first son, to Fela. The music speaks to the world, and the word's explain the music flawlessly.
The best music I have ever listen too.
Justice Tebogo ✊🏿
I can't tired to listen to the late great legend Prophet Fela Kuti 😭🙏😭 continue to rest in peace
still one of Africa realist of all time
Music that takes you on a journey that you can never forget.
Clancy k 🔥✊🏿🔥
One of men who saw tomorrow,
Mazi Mazi 🔥✊🏿🔥
A never tomorrow now. So sad...
This is the first Fela song I heard. It shook something loose inside me. Exploring his extensive discography and learning about his revolutionary approach to life has been an amazing experience. What an inspirational force for good. Thanks for the upload!
Ben Gockel ARARARARA ✊🏿
Also listen to "Why Black Man Dey Suffer", "Palava (Trouble sleep yanga wake am)", and "Water e no get enemy". If you haven't heard them already.