"Coming
from Africa I’m my own manager, I have my own label called Mo’ Hits
with my artists Dr. Sid, Wande Coal, Don Jazzy, D’Prince and K-Switch. I
own Mo’ Hits and we’ve won numerous awards by the grace of God." D'banj
tells TT Magazine.
On
Sunday (Feb. 19), fans from as far away as Maryland packed into New
York City’s Irving Plaza to see D’banj, Nigeria’s biggest Afrobeat star
in concert. The self-proclaimed “Kokomaster” hit the stage to screams
and even fainting, as one woman sunk to the floor after D’banj touched
her hand.
Running
through his three albums No Long Thing, Rundown Funk U Up and The
Entertainer including his international hit “Oliver Twist,” the MC born
Dapo Daniel Oyebanjo commanded the stage with waist wines, glittering
outfits and jokes about his “Koko,” also known as his manhood.
How will you break into America’s entertainment scene?
D’BANJ:
I’m bringing my culture, my music and preaching the gospel. We’ve been
learning from America’s Hollywood scene and other areas in Africa
because our continent is developing.
We
look up to the way you’ve built your industry and we try to do ours in
the best that we know. It’s so good to see that Americans appreciate my
music so that’s what I’m bringing, just original Africa.
How did you join Kanye West’s G.O.O.D. Music label?
D’BANJ:
I had a concert in Dubai and when we pulled up to the airport’s first
class lounge and a hostess ran up to me with a plaque with Kanye’s face
on it, asking me to sign it.
I
said ‘I’m not Kanye West, I’m D’banj but Kanye West is coming? All eyes
open.’ Then my manager spoke to Kanye, came back and told me ‘He’ll
give you five minutes.’ I walked over -- as an African man I’m always
prepared -- and I played my music ‘Stand Out,’ ‘Fall In Love’ and
‘Scapegoat’ for him on my iPod. Before we knew it, I’d almost missed my
flight and he invited me to New York.
Coming
from Africa I’m my own manager, I have my own label called Mo’ Hits
with my artists Dr. Sid, Wande Coal, Don Jazzy, D’Prince and K-Switch. I
own Mo’ Hits and we’ve won numerous awards by the grace of God. Being
with Kanye for the last eight months and me leading a successful label
in Africa, I’ve learned a lot and I believe people will see what we’re
going to do.
I
signed with Kanye in June and that same month I won the BET Award for
Best International Act. My New York concert isn’t done by G.O.O.D.
Music, it’s done by Live Nation, meaning I’m already a moving machine.
So who better to introduce me to the global world than Kanye West, a
crazy genius?
What is your chemistry like in the studio with West?
D’BANJ:
Kanye doesn’t try to change you. He has great ears and great people
working with him. I learned the way people do music in America is
different, number one, the budget. You don’t have to rush a song, you
can take your time.
I
was glad because I have a studio in my home but I thought I was doing
too much. I’ve been working with everyone else on G.O.O.D. Music too and
John Legend and I worked together in London recently. It’s been great
experience, I just beg people to listen with an open mind.
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