Reggie Gillumo, a visionary artist based in the US capital, has spent nearly three decades…
Month: May 2025
Apple Music and Universal Music Group (UMG) have unveiled Sound Therapy, a groundbreaking audio wellness…
The glittering ceremony that celebrated African storytelling excellence took place in Nigeria’s commercial hub Saturday…
Sean “Diddy” Combs confronts potentially career-ending federal charges as his high-profile criminal trial commenced Monday…
Nigerian music is having a spiritual renaissance, and these five new songs prove it. From…
The global art world is mourning the sudden loss of Koyo Kouoh, the trailblazing Cameroonian-born…
Beyoncé has launched the first leg of her highly anticipated Cowboy Carter tour in Los…
A towering 12-foot bronze sculpture of a Black woman, a new installation titled “Grounded in…
The Elizabeth Longford Prize for Historical Biography has announced its highly anticipated shortlist for 2025,…
As the beloved Sir David Attenborough celebrates his 99th birthday, his dedication to the natural…
Olu Alake described Okri’s presence at the centre as a homecoming of sorts because as he told it, Ben Okri who won the Booker Prize in 1991 for The Famished Road once “lived” at the Covent Garden premises of the Center.
Acknowledging the fact Ben Okri said, “You would find me at the bar having a beer and arguing with Dambudzo Marachera.”
Kuti sounds jaded as he continues to address the discomforting political, economic, and social conditions of Nigeria on “Corruption Na Stealing”. Simmering with steady percussion, Femi Kuti shares incisive critiques with exhaustion, bemoaning the use of English language to subvert the truth and rule of law in favour of the rich.











