I read this article on Daily post and thought i should share and of course ask questions. But please read the article with me...
...Davido had all the time in the world to hype his debut, but I have
just this brief opportunity to tell the ugly truth about it. And tell it
I will, because “the truth is always more heroic than the hype.” Fact:
‘Omo Baba Olowo’, that misnomer of an album, is a contrived collection
of forgettable formulaic tracks. All sound and fury, signifying nothing.
Clearly,
someone (I suspect a certain Asa Asika) has been lying to Davido about
his music. Or perhaps the notoriously shallow Nigerian music audience
unwittingly invented the deception that is his so-called talent. Either
way, the young man must have taken his sudden, almost Illuminati-ish
rise to fame to the head, (mis)leading him to release a directionless,
decidedly premature product as his debut album. To his credit, if he had
recorded this hack job with a loaded and cocked shotgun aimed at his
privates, he couldn’t have done much worse. *cue Homeric laughter*
Inspired
by the jack-of-all-trades running wild in Nigeria’s unfortunately
prolific movie industry (Funke Akindele-Oloyede, I’m looking at you),
Davido wears multiple hats – singer, songwriter and (occasional)
producer – to disastrous effect on ‘Omo Baba Olowo’. While I can bite my
tongue and allow his passable (read: untrained and Auto-Tune
compensated) singing voice, er, pass without much comment, it is
impossible to voluntarily ignore his particularly terrible songwriting.
No one song on the album epitomises that lyrical deficiency better than
the delusively catchy ‘Down’, a poster child for the nonsensical formula
currently being applied with resounding success across the Nigerian
music scene: [vacuous lyrics] x [sexual theme] + [upbeat instrumentals] =
surefire hit.
Okay, Pause.
I know it's kinda long but, just continue for the day's question.
For a person who fancies a hands on approach to
just about everything relating to his music career, it is surprising
that Davido exclusively produced just one track on album, howbeit one
that stands out – ‘Back When’, featuring hardly unimpressive rapper
Naeto C. Nonetheless, his influence and sonic preferences resonate
throughout the album, characterized by its distinctively pop feel. The
consequence? Most of the instrumental arrangements are composed of the
same musical elements. Translation: boring. The album comes off as
over-synthesized and artificial, helped along by a destructive overdose
of Auto-Tune.
Like the now epically failing Mo’ Cheddah before
him, Davido is a spawn of the hype machine. So much noise has been made
about him, with little thought given to what kind of artiste he is or if
he is making real music for that matter. And with only two good singles
to his name, the buzz surrounding his career far outsizes the substance
that exists, and his potential to create more of that substance. While
branding ‘experts’ may argue that Davido represents a phenomenal
marketing success, one would want to ask how long you can fool the world
for with a Volkswagen Beetle cloaked in a Ferrari skin. *starts
stopwatch* Shallow is the word here. Nothing more, probably less.
When you get a job done, whether good or bad, u should brace up for critiscm (:-) *wink*
So here's the question do you agree with him?
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