The Funky African: Questlove on Fela
His melodic structure—the way that he can make 8 instruments play very small parts but once put together it was something so hypnotic and so powerful it was undeniable. Usually most artists just stop at that. They just stop at the music and dont concentrate on anything else. This is a person who’s music was just as strong as his lyrics. Was then just as strong) as his lifestyle.
- 11 months ago
[Super imposed images of Fela Kuti (L) & ?uestlove (R) source]
(Source: thelovebelow12)
- 11 months ago
- 7
[Fela Kuti: Music Is the Weapon | 2.23.12]
I enjoyed this documentary on the Nigerian Jazz Musician Fela Kuti.
To be entirely honest, I had never heard about who he was until Jay Z & Jada Pinkett Smith produced a broadway show about him. I saw the high flying dancers and the bright costumes and I was immediately intrigued.
I will never get to see the fresh performance as it debuted in New York. However, it is not too late to learn what he stood for, his belief in the 9 traditional spirits in Yoruban (and Afro Cuban) cults, his political stance and his lifestyle of resistance that created a movement.
I have also never heard of a saxophonist that ran for president other than Clinton. I guess that’s my Americanness talking.
What I loved about this documentary was that it showed how political unrest, in the midst of beatings (this mans scars are very real) and corruption there is this freedom that arises from loving where you’re from and claiming your innocence. People all over the world are being inspired by stories of resistance (Fela was inspired by the American Civil Rights Movement when he visited in 1969). We are a brotherhood and a sisterhood, deeply connected by our unique yet similar stories.
Theres a part in the movie where the narrator says,
“In Los Angelos, Fela reads The Autobiography of Malcolm X over and over again. He wants to become a hero—a Black hero. He writes his first protest songs. Across the ocean, 3800 miles from home, Fela discovers Africa.”
I am not sure if Fela specifically aimed to be a Black hero, so much as he understands colonialist powers and Black Nationalism.
We are not identical but we are related. He read the same autobiography I have by my bedside The Autobiography of Malcolm X. Spike said it changed his life too. Which is why I picked it up in the bookstore when I first saw it in high school.
- 1 year ago
- 2
Fela Kuti’s Dancers/Queens Salute after a show in his shrine. From Music Is the Weapon.
Love how they hold both fists in the air, turn right profile, turn left profile, turn their backs & then exit. May adopt this for my dancers’ bow.
- 1 year ago
- 3
"Music is a spiritual thing. You don’t play with music. If you play with music you will die young. When the higher forces give you the gift of music, musicianship, it must be well used for the good of humanity. If you use it for your own self for deceiving others you will die young."
— Fela Kuti, Music Is The Weapon
- 1 year ago
- 2
