Sunny Ade’s Manager Speaks –Davido, Small Doctor & Olamide Stole King Sunny Ade’s Song Lyrics & Still Sang Jargons
New
generation pop stars keeps violating the law that they are to always seek
permission before sampling decade’s old work of arts that were done by older
artistes.
This was the submission of juju
icon King Sunny Ade’s manager, Clement
Ige who was speaking at Goldberg’s Ariya Repete Roundtable Discourse
in Abeokuta.
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Ige, who has worked with KSA
for nearly forty years and is also an Executive Director at Culture FM, Ondo
identified a number of issues with the new generation artistes that have become
a menace threatening the growth of traditional Yoruba music.
“They use English language to
speak Yoruba. Like the young man who sang ‘makole
marale’: how do you build house before buying a land?” he asked.
He also added. “Many of them
don’t give credit to the original composer of the song they adopt. They just
sing it without seeking permission. That’s a copyright infringement. It’s not
done in developed societies.
Till today Small Doctor didn’t get our permission before and after singing “ijó tí m’ojó l’àná, tí wọn n’pariwo, oni nkọ, ola nkọ”.
And many of them are guilty of
this. The Davido that used Sunny’s lyrics in his song didn’t even get it right
and that’s because he didn’t ask for permission; if he did we would have
corrected him.
What is ‘Kuluso ewe, agbagba ewe…?” The line is
actually ‘Seleru agbo, agbara agbo’.
I know because I co-wrote the song!”
The panel was to discuss the
evolution of Yoruba traditional music and its influence on modern pop music and
it featured musicians such as K1 De Ultimate, Sir Shina Peters, Lekan Babalola
and a host of others.
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It is a precursor to the annual
Ariya Repete talent hunt that seeks to find out young talents in the Fuji and
Juju genres. Auditions for talents on March 13 in Ado-Ekiti, Sango Ota and
other places across eight cities in Nigeria.
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