For now there will be no Christmas single for Nigeria. Mainstream
music is heavily reliant on capital to get even the smallest buzz
running.
It’s the Yuletide again. We are in high
spirits as the air thins up with Harmattan, and everyone gets ready to
activate their ‘chilling’ mode.
What a
year it has been for Nigerian musicians. There have been over a thousand
singles, and 29 mainstream albums in 2015, and as it all ends soon with
Christmas providing many with respite from actively recording and
releasing new materials.
Christmas
is recognised as the season of death for new singles due to many
factors. People are too chilled to effectively market and promote your
new release, the systems, structures and channels from which the music
flows from the studio, down to the public are on holidays, and for those
that are operational, their strength is skeletal.
Far
be it from any artiste, manager or PR guy worth their salt to engineer
the release of singles. This is Christmas baby! Let’s all celebrate.
A
number of artistes are contemplating the release of conceptual
Christmas songs, with a local twist designed to be a classic Christmas
hit. Year after year many have tried, with almost negligible success.
Only celebratory songs with little or no allusion to the particular
season has received any acceptance and mass appreciation. The rest toil
in vain.
But respect has to be given to
Tunde Ednut, who has persisted through the years to give us multiple
versions of 'Jingle Bells', with star-studded celebrity videos and
productions. Merry
We
can make a case for the lack of a concerted push by artistes during
Christmas to release Yuletide-themed records, with the law of
persistence shunned in the face of failed efforts. Perhaps if they a
multitude songs and massively promote the records and shove them through
our playlists and into our ears and hearts, then there’s a greater
possibility of one song winning the lottery.
But that won’t happen. Nobody stays on the field of play, nobody attempts to go the distance, hence nobody wins.
All
the blame cannot fall to the artiste. The reality of the situation lies
in the brevity of the season. Christmas is short. The celebrations are
short, kicking in at the start of December, and extending to mid-January
when the collective cash crunch bites in.
Many
are scared of banking their next career move and financial investment
into a short season. Nobody wants to shoot a video running into the
realm of millions and have it removed from rotation on TV in January.
From a business angle, this is simply stupidity. It is wiser to take
that money, and throw it into your next official pop single.
For
now there will be no Christmas single for Nigeria. Mainstream music is
heavily reliant on capital to get even the smallest buzz running. In an
ideal society, that shouldn’t be the reality. But this is Nigeria, and
it is far from the ideal.
Here’s to singing ‘Silent night’ in Hausa, Igbo, and Yoruba.
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