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  Tunde King was a Nigerian musician credited as the founder of Jùjú music. He had a great influence on Nigerian popular music.
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Abdulrafiu Babatunde King was born in the Saro-dominated Olowogbowo area of Lagos Island on 24th August 1910. He was the son of Ibrahim Sanni King, a member of the minority Muslim Saro community. His father was a Chief Native Court clerk at Ilaro and had lived for some time in Fourah Bay, Sierra Leone. He was born shortly before Lagos became a mingled town: the 1920s and 1930s when it was peopled mixture of local Yoruba people and returnees from the New World.

Palm Wine Music And Juju

Palm Wine music was a form of music that combined Yoruba folk music with musical idioms from countries such as Brazil and Cuba. Banjos, guitars, shakers and hand drums supported lilting songs about daily life. This style was the core of what is now known as Juju music. That is, Juju music sprung out as a branch of Palm wine music. Jùjú music was a form of Palm Wine music that originated in the Olowogbowo area of Lagos in the 1920s, in a motor mechanic workshop where “area boys” used to gather to drink and make music. Tunde King was the leader of this group. Together with this group of boys, they formed the popular Juju music genre. The guitar-centred Jùjú musical style blends African elements such as the Yoruba talking drum with Western and Afro-Cuban influences. Tunde King says that the name “Jùjú” itself originated when he bought a tambourine from a Salvation Army store, which he gave to his Samba drummer. The drummer developed a flamboyant style that included throwing the tambourine into the air and catching it, which the audience called Jù-jú, duplicating the Yoruba word for “throw” with a tonal accent. His trio expanded into a quartet, with King on six-string guitar-banjo and vocals, Ishola Caxton Martins on sekere (gourde rattle), Ahmed Lamidi George on tambourine and Sanya (“Snake”) Johnson on tomtom and supporting vocals. The members of the band created a moderately-paced ensemble sound that backed up the guitar and vocals with simple harmonic progressions.

Life

Tunde King attended a local Methodist primary school and the Eko Boys’ High School. A schoolmate taught him to play the guitar, and he became a leading member of a local group of “area boys” who hung out at a mechanic’s shop on West Balogun Street. The group talked, drank beer and sang, accompanied by improvised instruments. By 1929, King had a clerical job and was also working part-time as a singer and guitarist with a trio including guitar, samba and maracas, later changing to tambourine, guitar-banjo. and sekere (shaker). By the mid-1930s he enjoyed considerable success, with several recordings and radio broadcasts, but he still relied on live performances to earn a living, often at private functions. For example, King played in the wake keep of the prominent doctor Oguntola Sapara in June 1935.

Recordings

The first mass recordings of Jùjú music were made by Parlophone of the EMI group, starting in 1936, released on 78rpm shellac discs. Tunde King released a number of these recordings including “Eko Akete” and the classic “Oba Oyinbo” (“European King”). He was paid only a small amount to record each release and earned a very small amount from royalties. However, the recordings were essential in establishing his reputation. Other recordings include “Sapara ti sajule orun”, “Dunia (Ameda)” and “Ojuola lojo agan”. In all, he made over 30 records. Two of his recordings, “Oba Oyinbo” and “Dunia” were included on an anthology CD Juju Roots: 1930s-1950s, released by Rounder Records in January 1985.

Legacy

Tunde King’s music influenced his contemporaries and later players such as Akanbi Ege, Ayinde Bakare, Tunde Nightingale and Ojoge Daniel in the 1940s, players in the 1960s such as King Sunny Adé and Chief Commander Ebenezer Obey, who introduced electric guitars, 1970s stars such as General Prince Adekunle and continued to have a great influence into the 1980s when stars such as Sir Shina Peters and Segun Adewale were playing modern forms of Jùjú. Sources: Christopher Alan Waterman (1990). Jùjú: a social history and ethnography of an African popular music. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-87465-4. Stephen Blum; Philip Vilas Bohlman; Daniel M. Neuman (1993). Ethnomusicology and modern music history. University of Illinois Press. Wikipedia Featured Image Source: The Net NG
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This article was first published on 4th October 2021

jeremiah

Jeremiah is a scholar and a poet. He has a keen eye for studying the world and is passionate about people. He tweets at @jeremiahaluwong.


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