Page 60 - Urban Kapital DECEMBER DIGITAL ISSUE
P. 60

AFROBEATS




               RECONNECTED





               THE DIASPORA








                           Turn on your urban radio station right now  // AFRICANS IN

                           and within 30 minutes, you are likely to
                           listen to an Afrobeats. “Afrobeats” as op-  THE UK SEEMED
                           posed to “Afrobeat” (1970 genre invented   TO IDENTIFY WITH
                           by Nigerian musician, Fela Kuti) is a music
                           phenomenon that exploded in 2012. And      THEIR CARIBBEAN
                           frankly,  7  years  later,  I believe it  is  long
                           overdue. African immigration is not new    COUSINS RATHER
                           to the United Kingdom and yet, France and
                           Belgium in particular, have always been at   THAN THEIR
                           the forefront when it came to promoting Af-
                           rican music.                               BROTHERS IN THE

                           As early as 1999, Bisso Na Bisso, a con-   MOTHERLAND
                           glomerate of French rappers with a Con-
                           golese heritage, released RACINES (Roots)
                           to celebrate their African-ness. That album
                           successfully blended Rap and RNB to clas-
                           sic African rhythms and melodies to spear-
                           head a movement that many followed in
                           the Francophone and Lusophone diaspora
                           community. Bisso Na Bisso looked to Africa
                           for inspiration. The lyrical content equally
                           addressed the woes of being black in Eu-
                           rope as well as la joie de vivre typical to
                           Africans.

                           Around the same time, Africans in the UK
                           seemed  to  identify  with  their  Caribbean
                           cousins more than their brothers in the
                           motherland. One can question the reason
                           for this. Was it a sense of sharing a com-
                           mon British culture? Or was it a lack of
                           self-identity?

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