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But those are just the broad strokes. e particulars of Kuti’s

life, both musically and beyond, are wildly di erent from most

anybody else’s. Part of a deep legacy in Lagos, Nigeria, -year-

old Kuti has attained the status of royalty to his fans. Earlier

this year, he and his band, Positive Force, dropped their th

album,

One People One World

,

an up-tempo collection of

songs yearning for peace and

global unity. (It was released

in February by Brooklyn-

based Knitting Factory

Records.)

Although his own achieve-

ments have absolutely con-

tributed to his popularity, the

truth is he had a reputation,

even as a teenager, because of

his blood. Femi is the eldest

son of superstar Fela Kuti, the

famous Afrobeat pioneer.

It must be a strange ex-

perience, growing up with a

legend but not quite realizing,

as a child, how di erent that

experience is. Femi remem-

bers when his father had his rst major hit; the year was

and he was years old. “I can never forget that—the song was

everywhere,” he says. “ ey played it in all the record shops,

all the stores, everywhere we went. We just knew it was my

father’s song.”

As the decade unfolded, his oldest sister added to the atmo-

sphere by bringing music she loved from the other side of the

Atlantic Ocean into their home. Kuti recalls hearing a mix of

the era’s top talent: Donna

Summer, Bob Marley, e

Temptations, Earth Wind

& Fire, and Diana Ross. At

the same time, he admits, “I

focused more on my father’s

music. ere was always a

big competition in the house

of who would learn all the

lyrics to my father’s songs.”

A major gure in the

second half of the th cen-

tury, the late Fela Anikulapo

Kuti—known simply as Fela

to many—is best known as a

towering musician. His most

enduring worldwide legacy

is Afrobeat, the fusion of

Western jazz, soul, and funk

with West African musical

traditions, from centuries-old rhythms to modern beats such

as highlife.

An early alchemist of the Afrobeat sound that originated

Learning the trumpet,

I became frustrated

because I thought it was

going to be an easy task.

It was very difficult.

But the end result was,

it made me a be er

person, cooler, wiser.

RAVINIA MAGAZINE | AUGUST 6 – AUGUST 19, 2018

16