Fishe News

Fela Kuti — A Generational Movement No Buy-Over Should Ever Disrespect

Fela Anikulapo Kuti was not just a pioneer of Afrobeat — he was Afrobeat’s conscience. His life, music, and activism formed a generational movement rooted in liberation, not luxury; truth, not trends. To speak of Afrobeat today without reverence for Fela is to enjoy the fruit while disrespecting the tree that bled to grow it.

Fela Sang to Free the People

Fela’s music was born in struggle. Raised by a politically conscious mother, Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti, he inherited resistance as legacy, not aesthetics. When Fela sang, he was not chasing airplay, views, brand deals, or foreign validation — he was naming enemies. He called out military dictators, corrupt politicians, colonial mentalities, and social hypocrisy by name.

Songs like “Zombie,” “Sorrow, Tears and Blood,” “Coffin for Head of State,” and “International Thief Thief” were not metaphors — they were indictments.

These songs came with consequences: beatings, arrests, censorship, the destruction of his home, and the death of his mother. Fela paid in blood and freedom for the truths he told.

That context matters. Afrobeat was not created to be safe. It was created to be dangerous.

Afrobeat Was a Weapon Before It Was a Product

Fela built Afrobeat as a tool of resistance. The long instrumentals, hypnotic rhythms, and repetitive chants were intentional — they mimicked African communal traditions while holding listeners captive long enough to hear the message. He sang in Yoruba, Pidgin and English, so the market woman, the bus driver, and the student could all understand.

His shrine was not a club — it was a political classroom. His band was not entertainment — it was organisation. His music educated the masses when the state lied to them.

Today’s Afrobeat industry, while successful and globally respected, exists in a completely different moral lane.

Today’s Afrobeat Sings for Profit, Not Protest

Let’s be honest — most present-day Afrobeat artists sing to sell, not to liberate. There is nothing inherently wrong with making money from music. Artists deserve comfort, success, and global recognition. But problems arise when commercial success erases historical truth.

Modern Afrobeat often centers:

Meanwhile, Nigeria — the same country Fela fought for — still struggles with police brutality, corruption, poverty, bad governance, and stolen futures. Yet many artists who benefit from Fela’s blueprint avoid political speech because it might threaten endorsements or visas.

That silence you wear in your own time, while Fela spoke for you to have a living today is exactly why disrespecting Fela is unacceptable.

You Cannot Inherit a Movement and Mock Its Founder

No present Afrobeat artist exists without Fela’s sacrifice. The global appetite for African sound, the freedom to tour internationally, the respect for African rhythm — all of it traces back to a man who was beaten, jailed, and buried without state honour.

To downplay Fela as “old school,” “controversial,” “Bigger than Him,” or “irrelevant” is historical arrogance. It ignores the fact that:

Fela did not enjoy the luxury of neutrality. He stood alone so others could stand comfortably today.

Respect Does Not Mean Imitation — It Means Recognition

No one is asking today’s Afrobeat artists to live like Fela, suffer like Fela, or sing exactly like Fela. Times change. Sounds evolve. But respect is non-negotiable.

Respect means:

You can sing for money — but never pretend the movement started with money.

Fela’s Spirit Still Watches the Music

Fela “Anikulapo” Kuti called himself “the one who carries death in his pouch” because he refused to fear power. His legacy is not frozen in vinyl or documentaries — it lives in every drum pattern, every horn section, every global stage Afrobeat touches today.

To disrespect Fela is to misunderstand Afrobeat itself.

Because before Afrobeat became a global export,
before it became charts and streams,
before it became a lifestyle —

It was a fight.

And Fela fought it so the people could breathe.

Exit mobile version