By the time the album closes with “Wild Goose Chase,” exhaustion has set in for Brymo. Tired of his foolish, hopeless search for love, relevance, and the pursuit of happiness, he pleads that the mirage should be taken from him. Sung in Yoruba and Nigerian Pidgin, “Wild Goose Chase” transitions to become “Arodan”, the title and opening track on the Yoruba segment of Shaitan. Serving as a link, the song neatly ties the albums together, indicating that they are one.
Tag: Brymo
Ọlawale Ọlọfọrọ, widely known as Brymo, has opened up about the traumatic experiences that shaped…
it’s the music that serves as a vehicle that drives the plot from its jubilant, carnivalesque opening to its tragic, funereal ending.
When you hear the name Brymo, what comes to mind is music that is reflective,…
Award-winning actor, Udoka Oyeka is adding another title to his film catalogue as premieres the…
Over two weeks ago, Brymo went on a self-proclaiming rampage on Twitter during which he…
Afrobeats singer Brymo follows up his latest album “Yellow” with a new EP titled “Libel“.…
On the first day of April, Brymos’s seventh studio album, Yellow dropped and as expected,…
A few days ago, poet and popular music critic, Dami Ajayi, put out his ‘annotations’…
We received this comment in the mail. We were going to approve it for the…
For a Nigerian artist who had his first solo hit, almost two years after Wizkid’s,…
The much advertised seventh album of Olawale Brymo on April Fool’s Day turned out to…









