Sunday 28 October 2018

Kaduna Radio: the Curfew anchor & The Night to Remember

By anselm SESUGH NGUTSAV 

It is Saturday evening 27 October, 2018.

Curfew laden city of Kaduna has seen deep unsavoury moments in recent events. The bubbly city lost a monarch to criminals in a kidnap and murder, has lost citizens in clashes at different parts of the town and gone back and forth of a 24 hour curfew; on this fateful evening it has been a round the clock curfew, 24 hour curfew!

Radio is a quick go-to for news and current information on goings-on here and now. Radio gives information to the Kaduna community pretty fresh and provides an avenue for live phone interaction. While measuring its broadcast modus operandi against broadcast standards in a society tiptoeing around itself to get by safely. 

It is an observatory certainty that many more people than usual, would have turned to radio, having time on their hands from the curfew for: company, information, and of course who wouldn't want to be entertained. After having a compulsory home rest beyond your plan running into days with no knowledge of when it might end. 

At the moment, if you tune to Liberty radio 91.7FM Kaduna, the first voice you are likely to hear on a morning work day is that of Tunji Oyeleke
Tunji powers or drives the morning belt as radio terminology captures it. 

Radio anchoring has a lot to do with experience outside of the rudimentary eloquence of speech. 
For one who has being in radio for some time, you can pretty much get by fine enough, on any shift or drive. 
However, 'fine enough' doesn't cut it with an audience looking to be satisfied and not just that, but given the nature of the times in the city of Kaduna, normal isn't just enough. People want to forget the horror, yet be abreast with what is next. 

This Saturday evening has Tunji on radio. He will obviously be driving the belt. 
Fewer of Liberty radio 91.7FM On-Air-Personalities (OAPs) are heard on radio live at this time, due to the curfew obviously. The danger of an OAP sounding weak and monotonous is likely a case when you have to face your audience too frequent without space to replan and structure content for delivery; fatigue, flight of ideas, lack of morale, the list goes on. The charge is to surpass the looming challenges and perform beyond 'fine enough'.


The city of Kaduna does have other radio stations as options for radio experience and a frequency change to another station can happen to you from an unsatisfied listener. 

The task is always to marry character, style and manner of presentation with an audience one is faced with per time, and most importantly with the time of the day. 
Imagine your favorite meal at your most desired time and place. That is what an OAP aims for. Serve the listener right! 
While at a restaurant a waiter enquires your meal choice, on radio the OAP simply gauges and makes a run to win your heart as a listener. Loosing that moment means loosing you and loosing you for that moment, means you can do away with him or her at any time. 
That is like being in a relationship, where you are totally in love with your partner yet you stand the risk of being left alone at the altar, shrine or wherever the wedding is to take place. Yes! That wedding day bride or groom absence is what it means to be tuned off. 
You know why? Being on radio is not just about talking through the mic, it's the audience. The audience is your partner. And in this relationship the moment that matters most, is the one you are there reaching out via a program or simply talking and playing music.

Kaduna has been through days of a 24 hour curfew, that is going to make a grumpy partner: hard to please and difficult to understand.

Tonight, it seems the curfew on the audience of Liberty radio 91.7FM has existed longer with a talent like Tunji Oyeleke away from an evening/night shift.

Unsurprisingly, his experience leaves him quite competent to hold his airwaves with great music selection and smooth mixes. 

TJ as Tunji is referred to in alias, captures the Croc-city pulse with music and presentation that is both vibrant and exquisite in character and manner beyond a brief review tonight. 

Tunji Oyeleke has an enigmatic radio performance bathed in spontaneous comedy, that resonates with a Kaduna audience that seems to have been waiting for him, given the rate of calls and participation; with spouses giggling with their partners or even alone as they conversed with him on his lighthearted phone-in theme or topic of discussion. This offered the ultimate evening/night radio experience! Especially at a time like this on an evening of this kind, and a weekend at that. 

People were and are tired of discussing the curfew, they simply want information that leads to an end of it and or to something better at this time. 

Tunji had never demonstrated such complete fullness of talent, skill and capacity as he seemed to enjoy himself so much one had no choice but to enjoy with him! 


This is what listening to the radio should do, and Tunji has just set the bar for the entire Kaduna State and beyond where people could visit to learn what an evening/night shift should be like. 

Liberty radio 91.7FM could really set a standard for radio tourism from Northern Nigeria to the entire continent and we are all ears to hear the changes the esteemed management of Liberty TV and radio has in the near future. 



Listen to radio! Most importantly, listen to Liberty 91.7FM

Monday 28 May 2018

A Review of This is Nigeria by Falz

This is Nigeria by Falz is by far the boldest song from Nigeria replete with a creative video that seeks to not only disturb but actually does disturb the sociopolitical and religious system of the Nigerian State, since Fela Anikulapo Kuti’s music in the history of Nigeria.

Unlike the many attempts at a mimicry of Fela's music which ends up on the fringes of stimulating and impressing our senses through melody and rhythm. This is the absolute true Fela-nian spirit, captured in contemporary hip hop music.

Dabbling beautifully between the fluid boundaries of a cover, re-make or re-imagery of Childish Gambino’s This is America, this video has won its own sole standing as a masterful piece depicting true and orginial This is Nigeria experience.

This is Nigeria; is a big win for the artiste, director and the Nigerian music industry as a bold dare into an artistic call out only credited in the history of Nigeria to Fela Anikulapo Kuti.

In this three minute, forty two second video, ending shorter than Childish Gambino’s over four minute video, starts with Falz on an analogue radio set which nicely depicting the technological backwardness of Nigeria (reminding me of the cover of an old book I read from my father's library My Cousin comes to Jo'burg by Mbulelo V. Mzamane). Though shirtless Falz's trousers could pass for a Fela style wear.

The video being soft in imagery and graphics depicting the Nigeria situation, makes a lucid case while leaving us a video to be watched by almost anyone.   

The reception and critique of this video as a remake justifies the display of Falz’s message right in front of you rather than behind as western reviewers pointed out from Childish Gambino’s This is America when placed in acute juxtaposition. 

The hijab wearing female dancers compliment both the ideological and revolutionary signs Falz makes toward the end of his video symbolic now to the black and African communities; the Fela-nian spirit and music. The stereotype of conservative and withdrawn hijab wearing ladies was defiled by ‘the stride in their steps’, to paraphrase Maya Angelou’s line in the poem Phenomenal Woman. The swing of their arms is beyond confident to daring.

The brilliance and intelligence in this work, not long after the original version, doesn’t banter with a message drowned by unnecessary theatrics and display, as it comes with lyrical balance of Nigeria’s issues and great rhythm.

The non-compromise in the use of certain illustrations to communicate, like the Toyota SUV for a scene where a politician gets his son out of police trouble neglecting the other victims supposedly students like his son in his company is something Nollywood could learn from, of scene where the lyrics said little leaving more to the watcher.

A complete This is Nigeria experience by Falz can only come from this video.

See video link here 



Falz


Review Author: Anselm Sesugh Ngutsav
writer, poet, radio presenter and photographer

Tuesday 20 February 2018

'While you were sleeping...' the wild and free contest

PURPLESILVER COMMUNITY in one of its many activities carries out contests among members of its community.

The last one, being the first contest between the members of PURPLESILVER Community  this year lasted about twelve hours, in entry window time.

The voting window comprising of members on the community's online platform held a voting through an over nine hour voting window duration.

Entries came in from members who entered the contest ranging from simple and jocular to horror and tragic. All starting with the theme line 'While you were sleeping...'

Some entries were disqualified on the grounds of altering the theme line or late entry time.

The PURPLESILVER Community allows entries to be anonymous or in a pen name as options of choice to give freedom to writers who feel obliged to express themselves in an unpopular style or manner, or a way to safeguard expression without a stereotypical judgement from others.
Though stereotyped mindsets are unpopular in the community in what members describe as a community of open minded people.

The curator Anselm Sesugh Ngutsav said "this would be the best I have seen yet in a writing prompt, the strongest entries in a prompt entered in a single moment."

"The imaginations were as lucid as they were alive." He added.

I hope that particular theme line 'While you were sleeping... ' would lead us into another contest and or open up areas of discussion through worded art this time. With the hope of more entries and across larger spheres and in the near future.

The contest organised under the arm of the literary community called Guild of Editors carries out editing and other manner of editorial services for online and print Media and is in charge of the publishing dimension of the literary organization.

The contests through prompts in the past has offered prizes in different forms, as of this time, no word on the prize or reward for the winning entry which was the poem from Momoh Adejoh. The community is known for its versed interest in putting 'art first' though not in a way Donald does to America in his modus operandi of 'America first'.

See successful entries below:

Author: George Uzo Blac'

While you were sleeping,
Your demons stayed awake,
To fix you a long line of mistakes for the coming day.

While you were sleeping,
The Grim reaper sat somewhere close to your nostrils,
Waiting to find that breath that it would take home to mama.

While you were sleeping,
Your dreams stayed awake,
Hoping that you would wake up to dream more and sleep less.
- - -

Author: Victoria Hussein

While you were sleeping, I poured myself a drink and smiled at my reflection in the mirror. You stirred in your sleep and I had to stop myself from giggling at my hurriedly done hair and makeup. I had wanted to look good the first time I'd meet our daughter but you insisted she wouldn't remember any of it. You had been so freaked out by my water breaking that I didn't argue with you like I normally do. I took the clip out of hair and watched it fall to my shoulders. I was still wearing the hospital gown.

I made my way to your side of the bed and marveled at the sight of you and our daughter. We actually did it! I tucked you in and said a prayer because I knew you hadn't, it had been a long day. I traced your lip with my finger and let you sleep, you had to get up early for my burial in the morning.

- - -

Author: Angela Umoru

While you were sleeping
My heart broke into irredeemable pieces

While you were sleeping
My tears emptied into an ocean at my feet

While you were sleeping
My limp body endured the battering jerks of his passion

While you were sleeping
My innocence tiptoed into darkness without bidding me farewell

While you were  sleeping
My silence wrapped itself around like a cloak- comforting and choking

While you were sleeping
My father robbed you of a child, a child who chose eternal silence over pain

- - -
Author: Momoh Adejoh

While you were sleeping,
I felt his fingers warm,
then blood from hymen trickle

Before you woke he took cloth,
wiping filth then saying

‘my special girl
Daddy loves you most'