In a recent interview, African China opened up on why he opened a hairdressing saloon.
Read excerpts from the interview below.
Aside from music, is hairdressing one of your many interests?
By opening a hairdressing salon, what I have done is invest for a
rainy day. If you check properly, you would realise that some of those
who began their careers about the same time I started mine are now
broke. Today, a lot of them cannot feed themselves and their dependants.
Before fame beckoned, I used to work as a barber at a salon and I am
not ashamed to say that. Now that I am African China, I know this
business idea would generate income on a daily basis because people
always want to look good. The salon business is not the only business I
have. I also have a boutique in Surulere, Lagos. I have a sound
equipment rental business and I have a record label that is as old as
Kennis Music.
It appears music no longer pays your bills?
It still pays my bills and I still get shows.
I just don’t want to be like others who are now struggling.
But it appears you are no longer invited to perform?
My space is there; I can come and take it anytime. I will always
be relevant. I will continue to do my thing. The industry is not the way
it used to be. In the past, an artiste used to release an album
biannually. Nowadays, it is every week and that’s why those songs will
cease to be relevant in the next three years. Some artistes even go to
the studio to freestyle which to me amounts to talking rubbish. Even the
artistes who freestyle know that they are playing on the intelligence
of their fans. When those artistes come together, they talk and laugh
about it.
Is that to mean you are no longer in demand?
I wouldn’t say that. I wouldn’t want to use that word because I
am performing at a show tomorrow and I am also performing tonight. One
is at Egbeda and the other show is at Okota. I wouldn’t say the demand
for African China has dropped.
Don’t you think you have been edged out by the new generation artistes?
No, because lyrically and musically, I am still African China.
Nigerians love variety and the fan base is divided. I have my fans who
are loyal to me and my music. They will go wherever I go and they like
the fact that I always speak the truth.
Is your genre of music still relevant?
Yes, it is. At some point, it almost faded out because everybody
wanted to listen to songs glorifying women’s backsides, champagne and
all sorts of rubbish. The media are not playing my songs because a lot
of the them work for the government.
How come you are not collaborating with the new-school artistes?
I don’t have anything against them. I am friends with them and I
am also an elder brother to them. Recently, I contacted Tekno for a
collaboration but he has been busy. There was a time I needed to do a
song with Ice Prince and I tried to reach him. His manager kept playing
hide and seek with me. As a result, I lost interest. When Burna Boy was
the rave, I telephoned his mum who was his manager at that time. They
didn’t revert in spite of the fact that I telephoned them several times.
You had a rape scandal in London some years ago…
If we were outside Nigeria, I would have sued you for saying that
because I wasn’t found guilty of rape. What would you say about the
likes of Timaya who allegedly fled? I stayed back to prove my case. I
was charged to court and I was acquitted. There was evidence to prove
that I did not have carnal knowledge of my accuser.
Have you visited London since that incident?
Yes, I have been there many times. I shot the video of London
Fever there and I have travelled with my family to London more than once
and we will be travelling there again this summer (shows screenshots of
his wife and children’s expired and valid United Kingdom visas).
Are you impressed by the new generation of artistes?
At the moment, they are doing well. The beats are still okay.
People dance to the beats more than the lyrics. We have more junkies
than activists in the music industry; people who smoke before they can
write a song. I will categorically tell you that a lot of us never
smoked before recording or going on stage.
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