Heir to the Afrobeat dynasty, and international music star, Femi
Anikulapo-Kuti, has attributed his success to his tutelage under his
father, the late Fela Anikulapo-Kuti; first as a trainee, and later as a
member of his band.
He told The Nation that his father was his first critic,
adding that when he played his first composition to his father, he asked
how people could dance to it. The singer reminisced, “Fela asked, ‘so how do you want people to dance to this?’”
I only thought of the melody when I composed the song, but on speaking
to him, I realised that it was important for Africans to be able to
dance to the song.”
Though not a graduate of music, Femi was a protégée of his father,
who learned his craft at the foot of a master craftsman, and
acknowledged the fact that hard work was a major secret he acquired from
his mentor father.
Femi started receiving music lessons from his father as a teenager.
Speaking about his marriage to his ex-wife, Funke Kuti, he noted that he does not believe in the marriage institution.
“I never believed in marriage. I loved my wife, and got carried away.
I am happy about the experience. We got married for a number of
reasons; she left home, and many people said she had made the greatest
mistake of her life. She got pregnant and there were so many reasons to
get married.”
Going further, he asserted that his father advised him not to get
married but he went against his father’s wishes. He went on to say that
getting married affected the relationship, saying, “Now we are great
friends, but probably if we had not gotten married, we probably would
have still been together.”
He said further: “When you get married, if it breaks up, you get into
a very bitter street, that makes it is very difficult for people to
make up afterwards. Everything goes bitter around you, and hatred comes
in. And when hatred comes, you find that many couples can no longer
stand each other”.
No comments:
Post a Comment