Hi Olamide,
I am a fan of yours and I have followed your growth
from the days with ID Cabasa and the Coded Tunes crew, to your days
under Toni Payne‘s management. Parting ways with her was quite risky but
I felt it was a move worth making as you needed a fully dedicated
management to grow your career. That move paid off and you’re now better
off for it.
Pitching your tent with 1805 Entertainment, your
immense talent and the void left by Dagrin‘s demise meant only one thing
– A top spot for you! I am glad you fit in perfectly. A bolder move to
start YBNL Nation and you going ahead to drop your second album on the
YBNL Nation/1805 Entertainment imprint was another risky move that still
paid off. At that point, I knew the ‘god of music’ was behind you.
Though
it wasn’t so surprising to see the street embrace the album cos of it
quality street wise content, the rate at which the ‘butties’ accepted
you too was alarming. People preached the YBNL gospel and gladly talked
about how good the album was. Even my cool friend Fola Alade became an
advocate of ‘Razz being the new Cool’, no thanks to you. But while we
where enjoying Jale, Street Love, Jesu O kola, silly Love, First of All,
Ilefo Illuminati amongst other beautiful songs, dear Olamide, you
unconsciously killed the album!
Yes, you unfortunately killed it
by releasing too many materials not so long after the album dropped and
you shifted our attention off the album. To make matters worse, some of
these songs were not half as good as the songs on the album and they
also were not well promoted, Confession, Tonto Dike, Baddest Nigga That
ever liveth, e.t.c. Needless to say that some were also really good, cos
some of us still have Turn Up and Durosoke topping our playlists.
Baddo,
have you heard of the point of equilibrium? That’s the point when the
law of diminishing return sets in. It happens to everything and
everyone. In simple terms, it’s the point where you get to the peak,
have nothing extra to offer and the drop starts. To some, the drop might
not be deep while to some, they would never rise to that point again.
Unfortunately, this happens a lot in the music industry. While we agree
that you are HOT at this moment and the inspiration is much, brother,
please do not wear yourself out. Ma le ara e ni ere.
Truth is
when you saturate the market with too many materials, we get tired
easily, we don’t pay full attention to them and the songs end up not
getting as much love as they should. Keep recording, keep saving them in
the cloud and don’t push too many songs within a short period. Let the
fans yearn for more, let us savour the goodness of some of what you
already have.
On a final note, I love the way your personality is
gradually evolving ‘cos building a brand of yourself should be beyond
your music. I foresee a near future where corporate brands that want to
connect with the streets would come to you, simply because you are the
link between the streets and the corporate world. A celebrated grass to
grace story. The true voice of the streets
No comments:
Post a Comment