"There would be no Afrobeat without Tony Allen," FELA ANIKULAPOKUTI says. "The funk really does seem like it could go on forever," says ROBIN DENSELOW. "Tony Allen is best known as the hands and feet behind Fela Kuti's explosive afrobeat"
"There would be no Afrobeat without Tony Allen," FELA ANIKULAPOKUTI says. "The funk really does seem like it could go on forever," says ROBIN DENSELOW. "Tony Allen is best known as the hands and feet behind Fela Kuti's explosive afrobeat"
"There would be no Afrobeat without Tony Allen," FELA ANIKULAPOKUTI says. "The funk really does seem like it could go on forever," says ROBIN DENSELOW. "Tony Allen is best known as the hands and feet behind Fela Kuti's explosive afrobeat"
"There would be no Afrobeat without Tony Allen," FELA ANIKULAPOKUTI says. "The funk really does seem like it could go on forever," says ROBIN DENSELOW. "Tony Allen is best known as the hands and feet behind Fela Kuti's explosive afrobeat"
FELA ANIKULAPO- KUTI The greatest living drummer as far as Im concerned. BRIAN ENO There is no question that Tony Allen is a genius, one of the greatest percussionists in the history of popular music. ROBIN DENSELOW, The Guardian When Tony Allen and Afrika 70 play, the funk really does seem like it could go on forever. PAT BLASHILL, Rolling Stone In the 1970s Mr. Allens drumming put the central beat in Felas Afrobeat. With of beats on the bass drum and accents stagered between hi- hat cymbal and snare drum, his splintered but forceful mid- tempo strut was part parade, part shufe, and part funk. JON PARELES, The New York Times Tony Allen, who along with vocalist/activist Fela Kuti created one of groove musics most glorious subgenres, Afrobeat, deserves a place on the list of greatest funk drummers of all time. For more than forty years he has been honing a distinctive style that crackles with vitality, pulsates with rhythmic wit, and pushes audiences into dance- party ecstasy. Modern Drummer magazine Tony Allen is best known as the hands and feet behind Fela Kutis explosive Afrobeat, and his playing is both fabulously propulsive and melodic, in a way that might seem paradoxical, but makes perfect sense once youve got your feet in motion. . . . Simultaneously breaking up the rhythms and reassembling them in one loose- limbed, easy rocking motion, his playing is at once apparently efortless and breathtaking. MARK HUDSON, The Daily Telegraph Were someone to lend me a time- machine to catch great bands of the past, Fela and Allens Afrika 70 band in Lagos circa 1972 would be one of the frst stops. It was then [that] Bootsy Collins, James Browns bass player, went backstage and told [band members that] they were the funkiest cats on the planet and Paul McCartney, in Lagos to record Band on the Run, said they were the best live band hed ever seen. PETER CULSHAW, The Observer An octopus- like polyrhythmic machine, Allen was to Fela and Afrobeat what Melvin Parker/Jabo Starks/Clyde Stubblefeld were to James Brown and funk: These drum- mers simply deepened and changed the pocket of popular music forever. MATT ROGERS, The Village Voice Few percussionists . . . can claim to have invented a rhythmbut thats what Allen did when he added his propulsive rhythms to the music of Kuti and together they created the sound the world came to know as Afrobeat. NIGEL WILLIAMSON, The Independent TONY ALLEN TONY ALLEN An Autobiography of the MASTER DRUMMER OF AFROBEAT TONY ALLEN with MICHAEL E. VEAL Duke University Press Durham and London2013 2013 Duke University Press All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America on acid- free paper
Designed by Heather Hensley
Typeset in Whitman by Tseng Information Systems, Inc. Library of Congress Cataloging- in- Publication Data Allen, Tony, 1940 Tony Allen : an autobiography of the master drummer of afrobeat / Tony Allen ; with Michael E. Veal. pages cm Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978- 0- 8223- 5577- 9 (cloth : alk. paper) ISBN 978- 0- 8223- 5591- 5 (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Allen, Tony, 19402. Drummers (Musicians) NigeriaBiography.3. AfrobeatBiography. I. Veal, Michael E., 1963II. Title. ML399.A455A3 2013 786.9092dc23[B] 2013013821 Tony Allen I would like to dedicate this book to my parents, Mr. James Alabi Allen and Mrs. Prudentia Anna Allen. Michael E. Veal I would like to dedicate this book to the memory of my father, Mr. Henry Veal (19252011), a great man and great father who will always be the most important drummer in my life. contents ix acknowledgments 1 introduction by Michael E. Veal 21 chapter oneRIGHT IN THE CENTER OF LAGOS 36 chapter twoHIGHLI FE TI ME 47 chapter threeTHE SKY WAS THE LIMI T 68 chapter fourGODS OWN COUNTRY 85 chapter fiveSWINGING LIKE HELL! 108 chapter sixEVERYTHING SCATTER 128 chapter sevenPROGRESS 146 chapter eightWHEN ONE ROAD CLOSE . . . 162 chapter ninePARIS BLUES 175 chapter tenNO END TO BUSINESS 187 selected references 193 index acknowledgments TONY ALLEN: I would like to thank God, my wife Silvie, my frst wife Ibilola, all of my children, Damon Albarn, Benson Idonije, Tunji Braithwaite, Shina Abiodun, James Abayomi (Kosygin), King Sunny Ade, Martin Meissonnier, Awa Ba, and Dr. Pierre Nicollet. MICHAEL VEAL: I would like to thank Tony and Silvie Allen and family, M & m, Mom and Dad, all of my friends and family, Eric Trosset, Aida at Le Khel- koum, Nazaire Bello, Marlene Boulad, Bruno Blum, Elizabeth Calleo, Nils and Heather Chaplet, Abayomi Gbolagunte, Tana Grastilleur, Jean- Marc Laouenan, Gerwine Bayo- Martins, Martin Meissonnier, Cyrille Nnakoum, Max Reinhardt, Nadia Saddok, Usman at Porokhane, Sammy at Le Relais Afro Star, and all the members of the reading group at the Columbia University Center for Jazz Studies. I would also like to ac- knowledge the following people: Ken Wissoker at Duke University Press for his long- standing faith in this project; the Yale University Griswold Fund, which funded research trips to France in 2006, 2008, and 2011; and my assistants, who helped transcribe many hours of interviews: Anna Pelczer, Henry Trotter, Nancy Steadle, and Singto Saro- Wiwa. Finally, I would like to thank those readers who gave valuable feedback during the writing process or were helpful in other ways: Kof Agawu, Franya Berk- man, Eric Charry, John Miller Chernof, Kwami Coleman, Manthia Dia- wara, William Glasspiegel, Alex Kennedy- Grant, Rachel Lears, and the anonymous reviewers for Duke University Press. introduction MICHAEL E. VEAL In this era when the art of drumming is being challenged by the art of digital drum programming, the masters of drum set playing are more valuable to us than ever. Their ability to manipulate the human nervous system into ecstasy by segmenting perception into a matrix of clashing and interlocking rhythms ensures that no matter how much their work is digitally sampled, looped, or chopped, the sonic power of their real- time rhythm remains unparalleled and undiminished. This sonic power is crucial for us because it also contains a social power. In the decades immediately following World War II, for example, the bebop and postbop drumming innovations of Max Roach, Philly Joe Jones, Elvin Jones, Tony Williams, and Art Blakey helped bolster modern jazzs cultural demand for recognition as a high- intensity African American art music of the postwar American metropolis. In the 1960s, the syncopated funk rhythms of drummers such as Clyde Stubble- feld, Jabo Starks, and Zigy Modeliste helped bolster a revo- lution in political and cultural consciousness by reasserting a sonic image of Africa into the African American cultural equa- tion. In Jamaica, the cultural imperatives of Rastafari- infuenced roots regae were voiced upon a foundation laid by drummers such as Carlton Barrett, Leroy Horsemouth Wallace, Carlton Santa Davis, Lowell Sly Dunbar, and others. In Nigeria, Tony Allen is another master of the drum set whose rhythmic inno- vations with Afrobeat legend Fela Anikulapo- Kuti helped power 2Introduction a critique of cultural attitudes that resonated across postcolonial Africa and beyond. As dance music producers around the world look toward Africa for compelling rhythms, as jazz drummers continue to absorb the infuence of world percussion traditions, and as the power of rhythm con- tinues to give dancers a glimpse of liberation and of joy, it is time for Tony Oladipo Allen to be recognized for his major contribution to the world of drumming and to contemporary African music. It has been an honor for me to participate in that recognition by co- authoring Tony Allen: An Autobiography of the Master Drummer of Afrobeat. Tony and I frst met in New York City in 2000, and, based on my pre- vious work on Fela Kuti, he asked me to help write his autobiography.1 The process has been an adventure, on many levels. Most of the formal interviewing for this book took place intermittently between 2004 and 2011, mainly in Tonys home in the Parisian suburb of Courbevoie. But the book also chronicles informal conversations we had elsewherein moving cars, on the Paris Metro, and backstage in dressing rooms across Europe. Many West Africans are naturally gifted storytellersexperts at instilling dramatic tension into even the most mundane anecdotesand Tony is no diferent. The recollections and insights in this book, however, are anything but mundane; Tonys story is fascinating, providing insight into the man many consider Africas greatest drum set player. Tonys journey is a complex one that transcends many boundaries and subverts simplistic and essentialized ideas about African culture and identity. From the beginning, he was a nonconformist who instinctively rejected many of the strict formalities associated with traditional Yoruba culture. He grew up in Lagos as the oldest child of a Protestant, Nigerian, Yoruba father and a Catholic, Ghanaian, Ewe mother, his paternal family name long ago Anglicized by Christian missionaries and slave traders. Despite being repeatedly warned about the risks of an artistic lifestyle, Tonylike most other musicianssimply had to play music, but, un- usually for African families, his parents were ultimately supportive of his musical inclinations despite their own doubts, giving him the space to fnd his own way. Tony, then, is a twentieth- century, urban African modernist, and his life story should be understood as refecting the com- plexities of his time. This is the story of a musicianboth a human story and a musical story, told on the rhetorical turf of a musician and a musician- academic. On his own terms and in its own language, Tonys story provides many angles on the proverbial broader picture. It is a glimpse into the musi- Introduction3 cal worlds of postWorld War II Nigeria and Ghana of the 1950s and 1960sthe Golden Age of West African highlifea crucial yet under- documented period of Africas musical historyand it ofers a colorful articulation of many themes central to the history of African popular music. Tonys early travails as a freelance musician in Nigeria drama- tize the difculty of keeping bands together amid jealousy, intrigue, the trials and tribulations of patronage, and intense competition for meager resources. We see musicians striving for status in a strongly hierarchical society that has not typically accorded musicians a great amount of social prestige. We see the enormous power that words of praise or insult hold in West Africa. We see music used as a powerful agent of both social co- hesion and social (especially ethnic) division. We witness an entire post- war generation of innovative music sprout on the wings of Pan- Africanist cultural currents, and with music as a medium of both cross- cultural understanding and misunderstanding, we see the peoples of Africa and the African diaspora reencounter each other after centuries of separation due to slavery and colonization. We see successive trends in West Afri- can popular music as it is impacted by popular genres from around the African diaspora, such as jazz, son, calypso, mambo, soul, funk, regae, dub, and hip- hop. Finally, we see the advent of world beat, and of ex- patriate African musicians making careers for themselves outside their native countries in the context of globalization, and in the wake of col- lapsed and formerly viable national music industries in Africa. In the big picture, Tonys story parallels the history of Nigeria in the second half of the twentieth century, as the country progressed from the last decades of colonization, to national independence and civil war in the 1960s, to the oil boom and its radically destabilizing social efects in the 1970s, and on to the military dictatorships of the 1980s and 1990s and the uncertainties of the new century. Other themes might be thought of as more specifc to Tonys particular story: the drum set as a symbol of African musical modernity; the challenge of surviving as an African musician in Europe and as an English- speaking musician in France; and an intimate view of the inner world of Fela Kutis Koola Lobitos and Africa 70two of the greatest bands to ever play African popular music. Why has a musician of Tonys power and artistry remained underacknowledged for so long? The most obvious answer is that in general the contribution of drummers is not widely recognized. It is a oft- repeated truism among musicians 4Introduction that a great drummer can make any band sound great, but this senti- ment is not widely understood by the general public, whofor obvious reasonsare much more inclined to focus on lead vocalists and fashy front- line soloists than they are on the musician powering the band from beneath a halo of cymbals. This may explain why to date there are so few biographies of any of the masters of the drum set. Another, more subtle factor is one that Tony himself alludes to in this text. It is often the case that outside Africa, African drumming is stereo- typically understood to mean hand drumming. In fact, Tony is just one of several excellent African drum set playersincluding Paco Sery, Kof Ghanaba (Guy Warren), and Remi Kabakawhose contributions have been marginalized in the primitivist/exoticist discourse around African drumming that prevails in the West. This is particularly ironic given that a number of the great American jazz drummers have expressed their ad- miration for Tonys playing.2 In the bigest picture, the marginalization of African drum set players refects the Wests ongoing reluctance to ac- knowledge Africas contribution to modernity in any feld of endeavor. A third reason is that Tonys best- known work was created in the em- ploy of Fela Anikulapo- Kuti (19381997), a bandleader not always known for his generosity in promoting or acknowledging his sidemen. In all fair- ness, Fela was not unique among African bandleaders in this regard. The greatness of African popular music is fundamentally predicated on com- munal creation, but the fow of power, compensation and recognition in most bands is almost invariably top- down and pyramidally shaped. Very few individual African musicians have been able to carve out names for themselves outside the bands with which they are associated, regardless of their talent. This was even more the case in Felas bands given that all of the music was composed and arranged solely by him, and because so much of his presentation was based around his personality. Tony was an ofcial member of Felas band for ffteen years, but their de facto professional and personal association spanned three and a half turbulent decades. These constitute what were arguably the most ex- citing and cutting- edge decades in the history of West African popular music, and they were decades during which Fela was one of the cen- tral fgures. But this book is not a mere flling- in of the gaps in Felas story, given how central Tony was to his music. In the same way that the achievements of John Coltrane would have been unthinkable without the contributions of Elvin Jones and Rashied Ali, the achievements of Miles Davis unthinkable without the contributions of Philly Joe Jones, Tony Introduction5 Williams, and Jack DeJohnette, the achievements of Ornette Coleman unthinkable without the contributions of Ed Blackwell and Billy Higins, and the achievements of James Brown unthinkable without the contri- butions of Clyde Stubbefeld and John Jabo Starks, the achievements of Fela would have been unthinkable without the contributions of Tony Allen. It is worth noting that of all these drummers, Tony is the only one to date who is the subject of a full- length biography or autobiography.3 His name might not be as widely known as Felas, but the truth is that few substantive articles about Fela fail to mention Tonys contribution to the development of Afrobeat, and everyone agrees that Felas music lost a substantial amount of its power and dynamism after Tonys depar- ture in 1978. Some even go as far as to periodize Felas music according to the designations With Tony Allen and After Tony Allen. Fela went on to write many more brilliant compositions between Allens departure and his own death in 1997, but in general they lacked rhythmic dyna- mism that Tony had added to his greatest music. As Tony has often noted, his parts were the only ones in the band that were not precomposed by Fela. Comparing Tonys No Accommodation (recorded with Africa 70 in 1979) with Felas 1982 track Original Suferhead (both songs are built from similar drum set patterns) makes clear just what and how much Fela lost when he lost Tony.4 Nevertheless, Tonys infuence remained fundamental to Felas music and the Afrobeat patterns he composed with Fela in the 1970s were used as generic patterns by all of Felas later drummers, including Adebiyi Ajayi, Ogbona Alphonso, Moustique, Ma- sefswe Anam, Nicholas Ringo Avom, Benjamin (Ola) Ijagun, and many others. Tony acknowledges Felas genius throughout this story, but Felas greatest music would have had much less of its lasting power had Tony not made such a seminal contribution to it. Tony was at the epicenter of Felas music, from their mutual fasci- nation with straight- ahead jazz in the early 1960s, through the swing- ing, good- time days of dance- band highlife in postindependence Ghana and Nigeria at mid- decade, through the funk and Black Power epipha- nies in Los Angeles at decades end, to Felas countercultural Kalakuta Republic in the 1970s, and on into the early years of African musics global presence in the world beat market of the 1980s and 1990s. Their story began as one of friendship and collaboration, and later degenerated through a series of misunderstandings that provided yet another vivid example of the destructive impact of fame and the sobering efects of personal tragedy. In terms of social background, Tony was neither a poor 6Introduction Lagosian nor a member of the educated elite, but a member of the Lagos Island middle class. As such, he would have reasonably expected that Fela, from the highly respected Ransome- Kuti family, would act in accor- dance with the traditional Yoruba ideal of the gbajumonthe big man of wealth and achievement who consolidates his social status by redis- tributing his largesse among those in his social network who have shown him dedication and loyalty.5 But the world of Fela Kuti especially as it increasingly became his own highly idiosyncratic creationwas not a world particularly steeped in tradition. It was the world of an African pop star whose entire engagement with the world was predicated on rebel- lion and the fouting of convention. The hazier things got in the course of Felas growing fame, the easier it was for more fundamental and reason- able considerations to slide. In this sense, Allen was not alone in feel- ing underacknowledged and undercompensated. What remains in the end, however, is a moving story of two musicians forever linkeddespite it allbecause of the brilliant music they created together. In the long run, I believe historical accounts will list as one of their most signif- cant achievements the creation of a national style. Despite the scores of innovative musicians in their country, it is Afrobeat that has gradually be- come recognized as the sonic signature of Nigeria in the global sphere, much like the role of reggae in Jamaica, calypso and soca in Trinidad, and mbaqanga and isicathamiya in South Africa. It is also notable that, aside from Felas musician sons Femi and Seun, Tony is the only member of Felas entourage to make a substantial name for himself outside Felas context. Despite the magnetic pull Fela clearly had on many people (including many musicians who stayed with him for decades), Tony alone seems to have possessed the clarity, inner strength, and ingenuity to reinvent himself and create a new and successful life for himself away from the brilliance and madness of Felas world and of Nigeria. Tony left Nigeria at a time when a sharp rise in violent crime, a succession of military dictatorships, an austere economic climate, and a culture of corruption had choked much of the life force out of the local music industry. He successfully established a life for himself in Paris dur- ing a period in whichalthough conditions were relatively favorable for African popular musiciansit was extremely difcult for Africans in general to do so because of a sharply rising tide of anti- immigrant hos- tility. He could easily have built a prosperous career for himself by play- ing Felas classic songssongs that Fela himself resolutely refused to per- form once he had recorded themfor nostalgic Nigerian expatriates and Introduction7 curious Europeans and Americans. He chose instead to carve out his own identity within the Afrobeat genre and to build his own audience from the ground up. Tonys early solo years were marked by notable collabo- rations with other Afropop innovators, such as Nigerias King Sunny Ade and Zaires Ray Lema, and since the 1980s he has released a score of well- received albums of his own material, while fruitfully interfacing with a variety of currents in jazz, electronica, experimental music, British pop, and hip- hop. Now a dual Nigerian and French citizen, he lives in the sub- urbs of Paris with his wife and their three sons, enjoying a stability that is highly uncommon among immigrant African musicians in Europe. Because of the musical, thematic, and cultural overlaps that define Tonys history, I have tried to shape this book according to the conventions of autobiographical writing in both jazz and African music. There are numerous examples of auto- biographical writing in jazz, with which Tony Allen: An Autobiography of the Master Drummer of Afrobeat shares a number of themes. It is a sur- vivors tale, like Art Peppers Straight Life;6 and much like Miles Davis and Quincy Troupes Miles: The Autobiography7 or Hampton Hawess Raise Up Of of Me,8 it presents a warts- and- all self- portrait. Like Louis Armstrongs Satchmo: My Life in New Orleans9 or Sidney Bechets Treat It Gentle,10 it is a colorful evocation of a bygone era. And like virtually all musical autobiographies, such as Duke Ellingtons Music Is My Mistress,11 Jimmy Heaths I Walked with Giants,12 or Horace Silvers Lets Get to the Nitty Gritty,13 it is a story in which other great musicians make cameo appearances at various times: Louis Armstrong, Dizzy Gillespie, Wayne Shorter, Sunny Ade, Bootsy Collins, Stevie Wonder, Victor Olaiya, Frank Sinatra, Randy Weston, Julius Araba, Ginger Baker, and Frank Butler, among many others. But the overall tone here is fairly specifc to three genres. The frst is African musical autobiography, of which there are not many written in English; to date, the best- known would include Fela Kuti and Carlos Moores Fela, Fela: This Bitch of a Life,14 Manu Dibangos Three Kilos of Cofee,15 Miriam Makeba and Nomsa Mwamukas Makeba,16 and Hugh Masekela and D. Michael Cheerss Still Grazin.17 Despite diferences in musical tradition, gender, location, or personality, the narrative ethos that unites these works is a particular mix of the euphoric highs of artis- tic creation and the excitement of the creative lifestyle, against a back- drop of political turmoil, social change, economic hardship, and exile.18 8Introduction The second subgenre to which this book belongs is the classic sideman narrative, of which Fred Wesleys Hit Me, Fred! is an excellent recent examplea tale of a sideman strugling for recognition while laboring under autocratic and egotistical bandleaders.19 The third is the ongoing literature on what might be called musical Pan- Africanism, of which Steven Felds Jazz Cosmopolitanism in Accra, Robin D. G. Kelleys Africa Speaks, America Answers, and Ingrid Monsons Freedom Sounds are three recent and notable examples.20 Ultimately, Tony Allen is a portrait of a tenacious human being who has been able to maintain and even prosper within these varying circumstances, due to abundant talent, resource- fulness, and the personal and spiritual power to renew himself and his life. In this sense, it shares mostnarratively and rhetoricallywith the autobiographies of Dibango, Masekela, and Makeba, on the one hand, and Wesley, on the other. While this book is not, strictly speaking, an academic work, I believe it will nevertheless make a contribution to the growing feld that might be called African cultural studiesstudies that may have their various disciplinary roots in cultural anthropology, ethnomusicology, music his- tory/theory, cultural studies, or other disciplines but are united by their focus on African popular or mass cultural forms. Tonys story also has much in common with the stories of other indi- vidual artists in postcolonial Africa, beyond the specifc sphere of music. In particular, I found it inspiring to write this introduction at the same time that I read Henry Glassies revealing biography of the infuential Yoruba visual artist Twins Seven Seven.21 It was fascinating to compare and contrast the way that two Yoruba modernistsone a visual art- ist from a traditional rural background in Oshogbo, the other a musi- cian from an urban, cosmopolitan background in Lagosprojected the vitality of Yoruba artistic creativity out into the world in two very difer- ent yet equally dynamic ways. Broader issues aside, this book would not have been written in the first place were it not for Tonys contribution as a drummer. Readers of this book should keep in mind that the concept of a drum kit was a new and novel one in Tonys world of mid- twentieth- century West African percussion, where the tra- dition had been (and largely continues to be) ensembles comprised of several musicians playing individual parts. The polyrhythmic complexity that we typically associate with West African percussion music is a direct Introduction9 result of the combination of these individual parts into complex com- posite structures (hocketing). From its roots in the vaudeville era of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, by contrast, the drum set (drum kit, trap drums) was conceived as a deliberate miniaturization of the percussion sectionan economical solution to both spatial and fnancial constraints. Its use allowed multiple percussion instruments to be accommodated in the smaller performing spaces of the vaudevillian theater, and because it centralized multiple instruments under the con- trol of a single musician, it was a more economical way of employing a percussion section.22 Thus it is not surprising that, when Tony and other African musicians frst heard the sound of the drum set via jazz record- ings that had made their way to Africa, they assumed they were hearing several musicians playing individual percussion instruments. The irony, of course, is that the jazz drummers had worked hard to master the tech- nique of independent coordination, precisely so they could execute a core Africanist principle in the context of African American musicthat of improvising against a steady, ongoing groove pattern. It was Tonys em- brace of the challenge of independent coordinationstarting with inde- pendent movement of his hi- hat cymbals and eventually developing over the entire drum kitthat set him apart from other highlife drummers and established him as a master percussionist by the time Felas Koola Lobitos highlife band morphed into the Afrobeat outft Africa 70 in the early 1970s. At several points in the text, in fact, Tony emphasizes the signifcance of his independent use of the hi- hat cymbals. This might seem a relatively minor point to most drummers, until they realize that the tradition in Nigerian and Ghanaian highlife was to use both hands on the snare drum (a technique derived from both indigenous traditions and British mili- tary drumming), while using the other drums for occasional accents. The hi- hat cymbals were rarely used by highlife drummers. When Tony inte- grated the hi- hat cymbal, it allowed him to maintain a continuous, jazz- derived ofbeat in counterpoint to the rhythms he was playing with his other limbs, and it also allowed him to integrate the innovations of the rhythm & blues and funk drummers who used their hi- hats in a variety of dynamic ways. From the very frst moment that I heard Tonys recorded performances with Africa 70such as Question Jam Answer (1972); Confusion, Unnecessary Beging, Alagbon Close, and Water No Get Enemy (all 1975); Yellow Fever (1976); and Shufering and Shmiling (1978)I 10Introduction knew I was listening to one of the worlds great drummers. In terms of technique and style, Tonys sound is most accurately described as a jazz- and funk- infected rearticulation of rhythms drawn from local Nigerian and West African genres such as highlife, apala, and Nigerian mambo. He is not a powerhouse fusion drummer on the order of Billy Cobham or Dennis Chambers, nor is he a heavy fatback drummer on the order of Parliament- Funkadelics Jerome Brailey or James Browns John Jabo Starks. His goal is not to awe the listener with virtuosic displays and fashy solos. With a light, jazzy touch on the instrument, a very poly- rhythmic concept of groove playing, and an arsenal of subtle infections, Tonys philosophy of drumming privileges dynamic fow, propulsion, and ongoing conversation with the other members of the percussion section. In this sense, he adheres to core social and philosophical principles ar- ticulated by West African traditional drummers, many of whom shun vir- tuosic displays in their performances in order to more efectively ground themselves within a dynamic musical conversation that is itself part of a broader and ongoing social interaction.23 On one hand, Tonys play- ing can be understood in the context of the small- band jazz drummers who inspired him, such as Max Roach, Philly Joe Jones, and Art Blakey. On the other, he can be compared with other innovative drummers of his generation from around the African diaspora, who helped tease new vocabularies of dance music drumming out of jazz by fusing it with vari- ous local idioms, such as Carlton Barrett, Sly Dunbar, and Leroy Horse- mouth Wallace in regae, or Zigy Modeliste, David Garibaldi, and Clyde Stubblefeld in funk. In the broadest view, Tonys playing can be placed in the lineage of drummers in local traditional and popular Nige- rian genres such as apala and highlife, who formed the stylistic context for his emergence. In a more abstract sense, he can also be placed in the lineage of Ghanas Kof Ghanaba (19232008), one of the progenitors of Afro- Jazz and the acknowledged father of African drum set playing, whose American sojourn in the 1950s (which included musical encoun- ters with Duke Ellington, Charlie Parker, and Max Roach) helped him revolutionize the role of the drum set in West African music.24 The fact that Tony has recently begun performing on a custom drum set crafted for him by the artisans at the Arts Center in Accra, Ghana (a set that fea- tures hand- carved traditional African drums rack- mounted in place of Western tom- toms) sugests that, in a sense, he has come full circle from the days when he admired pioneers of the African drum set such as Gha- naba and Rim Obeng. Introduction11 Fefe Naa Efe (from Fela and Africa 70s 1973 album Gentleman) is not one of Felas better- known songs. But for listeners whose ears are attuned to the language of drumming, it is one that makes clear how cru- cial Tony was to Felas project of developing Afrobeat out of highlife by drawing on the structural innovations of funk and the harmonic inno- vations of modal jazz. The steadily chirping soundstream of hand per- cussion instrumentsclefs (claves), shekere (beaded gourd rattle), and congasrefect the highlife infuence in Felas Afrobeat and provide a perfect web of sound for Allen to play within and against. Like the great jazz drummers, he keeps a steady conversation with the other instru- ments, particularly the soloists, advancing to the front of the ensemble by playing the ride cymbal for thematic passages and then dropping back into line with the percussion to support the ensemble. Like a great boxer, he knows when to jab with his bass drum in order to punctuate a soloists line, when to momentarily scatter and reconsolidate the fow with a hi- hat fourish, when to stoke the tension by laying deeply into the groove, and when to break and restart that tension by interjecting a crackling snare accent on the downbeat. In terms of his solo work, on the other hand, Tonys solo on Felas Open and Close (1973) seems to place him most directly in the lineage of Max Roach in terms of structure, phrasing, and sound. This solo, in fact, compares closely with Roachs own solo on recordings such as Sonny Rollinss seminal St. Thomas (1956).25 For many years there was no extant footage of Africa 70 in perfor- mance, and as a result I often had to imagine Tonys body language while playing. When I fnally saw him play in 2000, my mental image was con- frmed: he played with a very still, centered torso, allowing each limb to work independently. This orientation is helped by his slim, compact build and medium height, which brings the top of his head to the approximate level of his mounted cymbals. It is this compact sphere of motion that allows him to play so fuidly and polyrhythmically. Tonys playing has evolved over the decades. With Felas Koola Lo- bitos, he drew on the legacy of big band jazz drumming as it was re- fected in dance- band highlife, playing agressively with the front- line horns. During the early Afro- rock years of 197071 and songs such as Chop and Quench and Beautiful Dancer, his sound was choppy and agressive, a jazz- inspired fusion of highlife and rhythm & blues drum- ming that blended with Felas choppy, James Browninspired guitar and bass patterns. At mid- decade, he was playing highly syncopated, funky patterns such as those on Kalakuta Show or Alagbon Close, which 12Introduction blend funk and highlife in a way that build polyrhythmic tension to the breaking point. Even after the infamous and devastating army attack on Felas Kalakuta Republic in early 1977, the musical chemistry between Fela and Tony remained unbroken, as refected in the somber, funkifed clock rhythms of Sorrow Tears and Blood (1977). By the time Africa 70 cut Shufering and Shmiling and Vagabonds in Power the following year, Allens drumming had become smoother and more jazzy, cutting through the Afro- funk like a sharp knife. In this last phase of the Africa 70 band, he began to compose terse, minimalist funk patterns for tracks like Fear Not for Man and No Agreement. Since the 1980s, Tony has gradually tended toward an equally polyrhythmic but less interactive ap- proach, given that his playing has increasingly provided a foundation for a soundscape production style inspired by dub- infuenced electronica on albums such as Black Voices (1999).26 But regardless of how his playing has evolved, he has never lost the groove, keeping the time as steady as a drum machine, and simultaneously as loose, fuid, and subtle as a jazz drummer. Felas Afrobeat can be viewed from one angle as the fnal innovation in the evolution of dance- band highlife; from a diferent angle as the most sophisticated African variant on the early, polyrhythmic style of funk music as it was developed by James Brown and his musicians between 1964 and 1971; and from a third angle as a brilliant indigenization of jazz drumming (a tradition that, for obvious reasons, is itself historically rooted in several core Africanist principles). In this light, it is interesting to note that many of Tonys most fruitful collaborations have taken place with American funk and jazz musicians, including former Brown band members trombonist/arranger Fred Wesley and saxophonist/arranger Alfred Pee Wee Ellis, as well as with vocalists Michael Clip Payne and Gary Mudbone Cooper and keyboardist Joseph Amp Fiddler, all from George Clintons Parliament- Funkadelic orbit. The story of Afrobeat is foremost an African story but secondarily one that is very much about cultural interplay and about the centrality of the African diaspora in for- mulations of contemporary African music. That Tonys breakthrough mo- ment as a drummer came as a result of his encounter with one of John Coltranes drummers is a vivid testimony to the way some of the strong- est currents in postwar black music intersected and nourished each other despite historical, cultural, and geographic distances. Introduction13 An autobiography is an act of self- invention and self- creation and, in this as told to format, equally an act of collaboration. My goal was for the book to feel like a continuous, relaxed session of Tony telling stories. This was essentially how we conducted the interviews, and this is the kind of narrative fow I have tried to preserve here. As always, however, transforming raw con- versationno matter how captivatinginto a narrative that is simulta- neously an authentic representation of the subject and compelling on the page is the major challenge in this kind of writing. The goal is to make the pages speak to the reader, and I would like to think that my knowledge of African music, jazz, and African culture in general helped me interact with Tony in ways that resulted in the richest and most revealing narra- tive. Given that Nigeria is ofcially an English- speaking country and that English is one of Tonys native languages, his speaking voice during our interviews was pretty much standard English with an idiomatically Nige- rian slant. For the most part, he did not speak in deep pidgin English or Lagos slang. In editing these conversations into a coherent written nar- rative I occasionally smoothed out some grammatical anomalies, but overall few adjustments were necessary in the area of language, and I feel that the tone and favor of Tonys voice have been accurately repro- duced here. What does it mean for an African American to coauthor an autobiog- raphy of an African musician living in France? For me, it meant frst of all the honor and pleasure of playing saxophone with Tonys band around Europe, a musical opening that in turn provided other professional open- ings for me in Europe. Second, it allowed me to discover Tonys skills as an excellent chef of Nigerian food. From him I learned to cook a variety of savory stews such as groundnut stew, egusi stew, and pepper soup, as well as staples such as pounded yam (fufu) and gari. And Ill also admit that without the culinary incentives emanating from Tonys kitchen as we worked, the tone of this book might have turned out very diferently! Working on this book also meant having the opportunity to spend ex- tended time in Paris, one of the worlds great cities. Anyone who has spent time in Paris can immediately sense the reason that artistically and intellectually inclined people have always gravitated to the city. Its unique ambience results partially from pragmatic urban planning and construction decisions made long agothe city is planned as a spiral (which tends to yield adventure), and buildings are built to human as opposed to corporate scale (which allows the lives lived within to feel 14Introduction meaningful and poetic). The ambience obviously also results from a char- acteristically French emphasis on cultivating the senses through a variety of pursuits which, for a musician, are magnifed by the social respect and admiration given to artists and art forms of all kinds. Even though it lies on the opposite side of the city from Tonys home, I adopted the area around Belleville- Menilmontant (i.e., the 19th and 20th arrondisse- ments) as my second space away from New York City, due to its hilly topography, cultural diversity, beautiful parks (Le Parc de Belleville, Le Parc de Buttes Chaumont), storied history (Pre Lachaise cemetery, the Paris Commune, etc.), wide boulevards, and overall arty atmosphere. As richly chronicled by Tyler Stovall in his 1998 book Paris Noir, the relationship between African Americans and Parisians has historical roots in the Jazz Age that followed the First World War, a period when many African American jazz musicians settled in areas such as Pariss famed Montmartre district.27 This cultural presence was rearticulated in the decades following World War II by expatriate literary fgures such as Richard Wright, James Baldwin, and Chester Himes and was later given an experimental infection by avant- garde jazz musicians (such as those associated with the AAcM and BAg collectives) who made the city their temporary home in the late 1960s and early 1970s.28 Given this, it is safe to say that African American artists and intellectuals have gen- erally found a sympathetic atmosphere and some of their most recep- tive and appreciative audiences in France, and as such it is unsurprising that a sizable percentage of the canonical works of African American art (especially literary works) have been created there. And even though the actual African presence was still relatively small at midcentury, Afri- can culture was gradually asserting itself in the sphere of visual art, with Paris- based artists such as Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque raiding tra- ditional African fgural art traditions for their unique formal and concep- tual qualities. However, the France of Jacques Chirac and Nikolas Sarkozy was by no means the same Paris as that of the Jazz Age or Cold War years. Similar to the political predicament in which James Baldwin and Angela Davis gradually found themselves in the 1960s,29 most African Americans visit- ing Paris today would probably fnd themselves acutely sensitive to the complexities of race in France during the era of Fortress Europe. Emi- gration of both North and sub- Saharan Africans to France has increased dramatically since World War II, but these immigrants are largely mar- ginalized in mainstream French discourses. A mere glance would reveal Introduction15 that virtually everyone cleaning the Parisian Metro seems to be of African descent; that black people have a minimal presence in the mass media (the exceptions being football players); that the stations of the Paris Metro are used as de facto immigration checkpoints for Africans and so- called Arabs (actually North Africans) and that there is growing unrest in the banlieues (suburbs) surrounding the major cities that has much to do with issues of race, ethnicity, religion, and culture. A more studied glance would reveal the social efects of a wave of anti- immigrant senti- ment that began to mount around the time Tony emigrated to France in the mid- 1980s, symbolized by highly publicized and controversial events such as the strugles of the sans- papiers, the discriminatory Pasqua laws passed in the late 1980s, and the emergence of right- wing politicians such as Jean- Marie Le Pen and his Front National party.30 The most ftting soundtrack to what I observed (and occasionally experienced) seemed to be neither the hot jazz of Django Rheinhardt, the hallowed voice of Edith Piaf, nor the moody 1960s pop of singers such as Serge Gainsbourg or Franoise Hardy. Nor was it the traditional music of African immi- grants, such as the Malian ngoni player or the Muslim calls to prayer that could be heard emanating from a foyer close to my apartment. Rather, it was French hip- hop, a medium that seemed the truest refection of all of the tensions of immigration, globalization, and cultural adjustment symbolized by the substantial African presence in France. In all fairness, these social tensions are related to the broader encounter of difering cultures and are to be expected given that France is home to Western Europes largest immigrant (and Muslim) population, by far. Hopefully this wave of social tension will gradually resolve through Frances gradual fashioning of a new, twenty- frst century vision of itself. All of this is relevant to Tonys story insofar as it is the environment in which he has lived, worked, and raised a family for the past twenty- fve years. He might be hailed as a master percussionist by night, but by day he faces many of the same challenges as other African immigrants to France and, indeed, in Europe in general. One evening, as we glanced out of his apartment window toward the monumental Grande Arche de La Dfense, our conversation drifted into difuse and philosophical areas.31 Tony remarked to me, Back in the 60s and 70s, we were playing for the love and joy of it. Today were playing for survival. I dont believe his comment referred simply to the issue of money or even recognition. Tony emerged during a period in which black musicianswhether in Africa, Afro- America, or the Caribbeanwere cultural heroes riding a 16Introduction wave of national independence and cultural nationalism, and the cul- tural assumptions of Pan- Africanism were driving forces behind some of the eras greatest musical achievements. Much of his most enduring work was created during that period in which postWorld War II eco- nomic prosperity provided the material foundations for social optimism and social change. That is surely a diferent world from that of the ex- patriate African musician of the twenty- frst century, his native country perpetually on the brink of chaos, trying to make it within the tightening gates of Fortress Europe.32 More than money, Tonys comment refected profound changes in the existential state of musicians like himself, not to mention the general place of musicians in contemporary society. Which is to say that sometimes one has to do what one does not only to survive, but also to remember and reafrm who one believes oneself to be. But this is much more a narrative of cosmopolitanism than it is of exile. Not only have these challenges failed to erode Tonys creativity, but his music has taken him places in the world that neither Fela nor any of his other former employers in Nigeria had the opportunity to see places such as Brazil, Israel, Japan, Iceland, Dubai, and La Reunion, to name just a few. Night after night, it was heartening to see him receive extended ovations at the end of his shows around Europe and the United States. The audiences were not only acknowledging the presence of a living legend, a pillar of Afrobeat, and a survivor, but also the more im- mediate fact that they had just been funked- up for two hours by the vir- tuoso drumming of a musician who, at seventy years old, shows no signs of slowing down. Without question, Tonys work in the decades since 2000 has been much more varied than his earlier years, with him having diversifed his activities and become a global ambassador of Afrobeat. Arguably, he has done more than any other musician to blend Afrobeat with a variety of other musical genres. If the funky, dubbed- out Afrobeat- electronica of his own recordings such as Black Voices and Home Cooking set the perfect mood for the cofeehouse scene in Amsterdam, the In- spiration/Information collaborations with Jimi Tenor are a perfect ft for Londons hip neo- jazz scene. Tonys collaboration with Damon Albarns band The Good, the Bad and the Queen has projected his unique sound to the global pop audience, while the collaborations with Jamaican gui- tarist Ernest Ranglin have helped solidify his credentials in the sphere of world jazz. Meanwhile, Tonys own recent albums such as Lagos: No Shaking and Secret Agent, with their roots in classic Afrobeat and high- life, are true to the classic Afrobeat aesthetic. Despite all of the changes Introduction17 that both he, his music, and the world have been through since the end of World War II, Tony stands as a model of remarkable consistency at seventy years old. In many ways, he is currently enjoying the best years of his career. From the party times of Nigerian highlife, through the tense cultural warfare of Felas Kalakuta Republic, to the dubbed- out ambigui- ties of his expat Afrobeat- electronica, Tony Allens groove has remained as fuid as a stream and as steady as a rock. No matter how much reality itself has been sampled, looped, or chopped in our age of virtuality and information overload, he has never lost his head in the midst of headi- ness. After more than a half century behind the drums, he is still provid- ing a funky pulse that helps us make sense of our worlds. NOTES 1. See Michael E. Veal, Fela: The Life and Times of an African Musical Icon (Philadel- phia: Temple University Press, 2000). 2. One such admirer was Max Roach, who unfortunately passed away before I could ask him to contribute a blurb for the back cover of this book. 3. An exception to this is Leslie Gourse, Art Blakey: Jazz Messenger (New York: Schirmer, 2002). 4. Allens No Accommodation can be found on the reissue compilation Afro Disco Beat (Vampi Soul 090), and Original Suferhead can be found on Felas cd of the same name (McA/Universal 314-547-382-2). 5. Christopher Waterman, Juju: A Social History and Ethnography of an African Popu- lar Music (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1990). See chapter 5, The Social Organization and Contexts of Juju Performance in Ibadan, for a discussion of the gbajumon. 6. Art Pepper and Laurie Pepper, Straight Life: The Story of Art Pepper (New York: Da Capo, 1994). 7. Miles Davis with Quincy Troupe, Miles: The Autobiography (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1990). 8. Hampton Hawes and Don Asher, Raise Up Of of Me (New York: Thunders Mouth Press, 1974). 9. Louis Armstrong, Satchmo: My Life in New Orleans (New York: Da Capo, 1986). 10. Sidney Bechet, Treat It Gentle (New York: Da Capo, 1978). 11. Edward Kennedy Duke Ellington, Music Is My Mistress (New York: Da Capo, 1973). 12. Jimmy Heath and Joseph McLaren, I Walked with Giants: The Autobiography of Jimmy Heath (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2010). 13. Horace Silver with Phil Pastras, Lets Get to the Nitty Gritty: The Autobiography of Horace Silver (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2006). 14. Carlos Moore, Fela, Fela: This Bitch of a Life (Chicago: Lawrence Hill, 1982). 15. Manu Dibango in collaboration with Danielle Rouard, Three Kilos of Cofee: An Autobiography (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1994). 18Introduction 16. Miriam Makeba in conversation with Nomsa Mwamuka, Makeba: The Miriam Ma- keba Story (Johannesburg: Ste, 2004). 17. Hugh Masekela and D. Michael Cheers, Still Grazin: The Musical Journey of Hugh Masekela (New York: Three Rivers, 2004). 18. There have also been a number of musical autobiographies published locally in Nigeria, though these tend to be a bit narrower in thematic scope. For example, see Sunny Ade with Clement Ige and Femi Abulude, Hooked to Music: An Autobiog- raphy (Ibadan: Distinct Publications, 1996). See also Ebenezer Obey in collabo- ration with Mike Awoyinfa, Ebenezer Obey: The Legends Own Story (Ibadan: Egret Books, 1992). 19. Fred Wesley Jr., Hit Me, Fred: Recollections of a Sideman (Durham, NC: Duke Uni- versity Press, 2005). 20. See Steven Feld, Jazz Cosmopolitanism in Accra: Five Musical Years in Ghana (Dur- ham, NC: Duke University Press, 2012); Robin D. G. Kelley, Africa Speaks, America Answers: Modern Jazz in Revolutionary Times (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2012); and Ingrid Monson, Freedom Sounds: Civil Rights Call Out to Jazz and Africa (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007). 21. Henry H. Glassie, Prince Twins Seven Seven: His Art, His Life in Nigeria, His Exile in America (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2010). 22. See, for example, Paul William Schmidt, History of the Ludwig Drum Company (Mil- waukee: Centerstream, 1991). 23. One of the most valuable contributions of John Miller Chernofs African Rhythm and African Sensibility (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1979) is the authors comprehensive explication of this core philosophical tenet of West African drum- ming, exemplifed by the following passage: A musicians creative contribution will stem from his continuing refection on the progress of the situation as both a musical and social event . . . The drummer must integrate the social situation into his music (p. 67). 24. Ghanaba was known as Guy Warren until he Africanized his name in the 1960s. For more information, see Feld, Jazz Cosmopolitanism in Accra; Kelley, Africa Speaks, America Answers; and the chapter The Original Cross- Overs from John Collins, West African Pop Roots (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1992). 25. St. Thomas can be found on Sonny Rollins, Saxophone Colossus, Prestige ojccd- 2912 (1959). 26. Tony Allen, Black Voices, Comet 005 (1999). 27. Tyler Stovall, Paris Noir: African- Americans in the City of Lights (New York: Mariner, 1996). 28. See the chapter Americans in Paris from George Lewis, A Power Stronger Than Itself: The aacm and American Experimental Music (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2008). See also the chapter Points of Departure: European Interludes from Ben Looker, The Point at Which Creation Begins: The Black Artists Group of St. Louis (St. Louis: Missouri Historical Society Press, 2004). 29. See for example Baldwins essay Take Me to the Water from No Name on the Street (New York: Vintage, 2007) or Alice Kaplans profle of Daviss Paris years in Dreaming in French (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2012). 30. Manthia Diawaras We Wont Budge (New York: Basic Civitas, 2003) does an ex- Introduction19 cellent and artful job of surveying the convergence and divergence of African and African American attitudes during this period. 31. Conceived as a monument to Frances humanitarian ideals, the Grand Arche de La Dfense was completed in 1989. See Franois Chaslin and Virginie Picon- Lefebvre, La Grande Arche de La Dfense (Paris: Electa- Moniteur, 1989). 32. James Winderss Paris Africain (New York: Palgrave, 2006) is an excellent survey of the complexities of the African musical presence in France since the 1980s. RIGHT IN THE CENTER OF LAGOS I was born Tony Oladipo Allen in Lagos on July 20, 1940, and I grew up in the area called Lafaji, right in the center of Lagos Island. My family lived at number 15, Okusuna Street. Lafaji was a good area. It was very near to what we called the Race Course in those days. Today they call it Tafewa Balewa Square. Kings College is in that area, too. Later on, my family moved to Ebute- Metta, on the mainland. My fathers name was James Alabi Allen. He was a Nigerian, a Yoruba from Abeokuta. We dont exactly know how the name Allen came into my fathers family, but its probably a slavers name. It must have come either from my great- grandfather or from his own father, because one of them was among those people rescued by the British slave patrols in Sierra Leone. Many of the slaves that were taken from Nigeria and rescued by the slave patrolsespecially the Egbas that were taken from Abeokutathey would drop them in Sierra Leone. Thats why today my fathers family still has a place in Sierra Leone. I re- member that once when I was arriving in Britain, the immigra- tion ofcer looked at me suspiciously and asked where I got the name Allen. I just looked at him and laughed and told him, I wish I could know my real name. Because the name Allen is coming from you guys. You gave me my name, historically, so why are you asking me where I got this name from? He kept his mouth shut after that. 1 22Chapter 1 My fathers father, Adolphus Allen, was a prominent man in Lagos. Allen Avenue in Ikeja is named after him. I dont know too much about him because I was only two years old when he died. What I do know is that he was a clergyman who founded a church called Bethel Cathedral, which is on Broad Street on Lagos Island. Before that he was a police- man, and he must have passed through some hard things working with the white guys back then, because it was his will that none of his children would become policemen, and none of them did. My grandfather also owned a big piece of farmland in Ikeja, on the outskirts of Lagos. That land was later sold by my father and his brothers to the Lagos State gov- ernment, and the government built the Airport Hotel on it. It was also part of that land, but on the other side of Obafemi Awolowo Way, that my father sold to Fela years later. In the old times, that was the smaller part of the farm. My mothers name was Prudentia Anna Mettle. She was born in Lagos as one of the daughters of the Ghanaian settlers in those days. Her par- ents and grandparents had settled in Nigeria way back, probably in the 1800s. My mothers mother was from Keta, Ghana. So my mother spoke Ga and Ewe, and believe it or not, she could even speak Yoruba better than my father! As for me, I grew up in Lagos speaking Ga, Ewe, and Yoruba. In those times, most of the Ghanaian settlers were fshermen, and they lived on Victoria Island. Back in the old days, Victoria Island was a real fshermens village. Think about environments like Hawaii with all the beaches and fshermens hutsthat is what Victoria Island was like before they developed it into what it is today. There were six of us children in all, and I am the oldest one. The one right under me is my brother Adebisi. Hes an aeronautics engineer, working for British Airways in London and Lagos. The next one after him is my brother Olatunji, who is a civil servant in London. After him is my brother Olukunmi, who is a doctor in London. After Olukunmi is my sister Jumoke, who is a head nurse in Boston, in the United States. And the baby of us all is my sister Enitan, who is a trader in Lagos, in the market. I also have a half- brother from my father. Hes called Tunde and hes a mechanic in Germany. Since I myself have been in Paris for twenty- fve years, you can see that we have all spread out from Nigeria, across the world. We all have Yoruba names, but since our mother was from Ghana, we each have a Ghanaian name too. For example, my brother Adebisi is also called Kof, and my sister Enitan is also called Af. As for me, there are Right in the Center of Lagos23 people in Lagos today who still know me as Kwame, because I was born on a Saturday and thats the customary name in Ghana if you were born on that day. My family on my mothers side all call me Kwame. Maybe being a dual breed like that is why Ive always done my own thing. Ive always been independent. Like when it comes to clothes, Im somebody that always liked dressing casually, ever since I was young. I simply like casual dressing. But it was the pride of all my colleagues I was growing up with to have these fancy Yoruba attires, these big agbadas and all that stuf. If you want to talk about our own traditional Yoruba cloth- ing, you have to have about three layers to put on, maybe four. First you put on the normal singlet (sleeveless undershirt) underneath, for the per- spiration. Then you put on the one called buba. Thats the one with short sleeves. After that you put dansiki on top, which is the third layer. And still, you must put agbada on top of that. Then its complete. And some people can even put some lighter materials on top of that! Thats the tra- dition. Even all of my brothers love it. But for me, I prefer to pick what I like, dress casually, and go by my own style. I mean, dressing is not really part of what I think about. I can dress elegantly if I want to. But Im not really putting a lot of energy into styles and all that. I just want to be com- fortable, thats all. But the Yorubas are really into conformity. For example, every time when there is any occasion, like a funeral or whatever, they have to cele- brate and throw a big party. And every group at the party has to have very specifc garments. Like maybe this side is the mothers side of family. The family will tell them that they should dress in a certain style. And then on the fathers side, they will tell them to choose another style. The family will bring the sample cloth out to the family and tell you, This is what we are choosing for the occasion and this is how much it costs. Its not like here in the West, where you can just put on a regular suit for any occasion. You have to have the garments made in a certain style, and every section of the family has to wear the same stuf. That means its gonna cost you to be at that party, because you have to get this stuf made. And then you only use it that one time. For a diferent occasion, you have to get a whole new set of clothes made. If its not a funeral, its a newborn baby. If its not a newborn baby, its a wedding. If its not a wed- ding, its the opening of a new house. And some people dont even have all this fucking money! They have to go borrow this money, just to be part of this occasion. I never played this game, man. Its one game I detested completely from home. 24Chapter 1 In the old days, I always preferred to go for the normal English suit, without the tie. And after a while, even the suit itself became a big prob- lem for me, because it was becoming too heavy in the climate. It was like punishment for me in that climate. You know what I mean? I felt like I couldnt handle that. Thats why back in the 70s, I was dressing with the jeans with the short cutof vest. Sometimes I would come into Felas house and he would look at me and say, Allenko, you know what you look like? You look like those ones in the North that drive the cows. Like a cowboy! Its the cowboys that dress like this. He was trying to tell me that I looked bush. And I would tell him, Well, as long as it looks nice on me, I dont care. I love it like this! Its just that I always had my own outlook, even before I got into music. Thats my basic personality. I like to be myself. And I wouldnt have made my own way in life if I wasnt like that. I grew up fast because I was the oldest one. I took care of all my brothers and sisters, especially the two right behind me. My mother let me do that from the age of about eight. Sometimes I used to sit in the kitchen with her and the other housewives from the neighborhood, and I would cook right along with them. The other housewives were a little jealous of that. They always used to tell my mother that she was spoiling me and that I wouldnt respect women in the future if I could do their work for them. But it was good for me because Ive always been a good cook and have always been able to take care of myself. I wasnt really brought up with Nigerian cooking, because I was brought up by a Ghanaian mother. On the other hand, my father was a Nigerian, a Yoruba guy from Abeokuta, and he had his own way of eating, which he could have preferred. But my mother did the cooking, and she had to satisfy my father. He must be able to enjoy his dinner, and I never heard him complain a day in his life. That tells you something about my mothers cooking! And thats why for me, I am cooking more on the Ghanaian side than the Nigerian side. The Gha- naians have their own approach to recipes, which is diferent from the Nigerians. Diferent ingredients. So if I say I want to cook African food, youll really be having two things in onepart Nigerian, part Ghanaian. When I was eighteen, my mother left and went to Ghana for a while, and took Jumoke and Olukunmi with her. That left me to take care of the house and the rest of the kids. I was cooking for everybody, even my father. He used to go to work and leave money for me to buy food, be- cause he couldnt even fry an eg! So I did everything around the house for a year and a half, until my mother came back. Right in the Center of Lagos25 I was even driving from around the age of thirteen. But the way I started is a real story! You see, my father specialized in automobiles, and he used to have jobs at home sometimes, because people would bring their cars to him instead of taking them to the workshop, where they knew they would be charged much more for the workmanship and the materials. So this particular day, one guy was supposed to come and col- lect his car while my father was at work. And because the kids were on midterm holidays, I was at home. My father gave me the keys to the car and told me that if this guy came, I should give him the keys so he could take his car. On that particular day the car was right in front of the house, and the sun was really hot. But there was a big tree right across the street, in front of the Catholic school. So this guy from the neighborhood who was kind of like a big brother to meI was thirteen and this guy was maybe like twenty- fvehe came to tell me that there was too much sun on the car and that I should move the car under the tree. I didnt know anything about driving cars, nothing at all. But since he was a grown- up and I was only thirteen, I couldnt think quickly for myself to ask, What the fuck is this guy telling me? The car is not sufering! So I just took the key and opened the door to the car. I thought I would start it and then try to put it in gear. But it was already in gear! The car took of, and there was no way I could control anything. I was just lucky that there was no oncoming car. I was able to cross to the other side of the street, but the trunk of that tree was right in front of a gutter, and I went toward there. I meant to stop under the tree, butno way. And at the same time, there was a woman with a baby coming out of the mater- nity hospital that was just down the road. I brushed the woman with the car, and she fell into the open gutter with the baby in her hands. And the baby was just one week old! Luckily for me, there was this guy pushing a hand truck or street cart, what we call omolanke. They used to use it to carry heavy loads on the road. The guy took of running, but he left his omolanke sitting there, and when I hit it, that was what stopped the car. Meanwhile, the woman was lying in the gutter with a one- week- old baby and a broken leg. They called for an ambulance and took her to the hospital. And then they called the trafc police. And of course the guy who told me to move the car had dis- appeared completely, and he didnt come back to the house until twelve oclock in the night! The police came, parked the car properly, took me to the police station, and phoned my father. They couldnt put me in the 26Chapter 1 cell because I was too young, so they put me behind the counter. When my father came they gave me bail and released me with him, but a court case was on now because that woman with the baby had been admitted into the hospital. At the end of the day it was a Yoruba thing, and my father wanted to settle the police matter through the back door. But it took time on the police side, because it was a case for them. The charge was driving without a license, and reckless endangerment. They told my father that I should appear in the police station every morning before going to school. And this went on and on. Even after the holidays it continued. We even went there on Saturdays. It was really just a matter of corruption, because my father had to pay them some money every time we went. My father was trying to pay to scrap the case, but it wasnt that easy because the big guys there were white men and you couldnt just scrap a court case like that. On the other hand, if they found out that I drove a car, I might have ended up in welfare (i.e., child services). Finally, the police told us that we had to see the inspector, who was an Igbo guy. My father gave money to this inspector, and they still didnt scrap the case. They were still making us come every morning, and my father was still paying. And we werent even going to the station anymore, but to the house of the inspector in the barracks! Luckily for us, this white sergeant came in one day and said, I see these people here every daywhat is the problem? What are the charges against them? The inspector told him that I had pushed an omolanke into a woman and the woman fell into a gutter. He said it like that be- cause he wanted to keep taking money from us every day, but if he told them I drove a car they might take me and put me into welfare. So the sergeant said, This boy pushed a hand truck? What the hell is he doing here!? And he told my father that from then on, we shouldnt come back there anymore. So, luckily for me, I got out of that one! This was one time that I thought my father was coming to eliminate me completely. I thought Id be dead! But he never touched me! I think it was because he never looked at it like something normal that I would do on my own, cause I had explained everything to him. I was not even thinking that the car was in the sun. This guy came to put it in my head and I fell for it because I didnt have my own thinking cap in order at that time. And the day that all this shit happened, they were looking for the guy til about midnight. He never even came back home to his own family to eat. Everybody was waiting for him, so he came back in the middle of Right in the Center of Lagos27 the night and he had to face his own family that were asking him, What the fuck have you done!? My father understood what was going on. He was not a wicked guy, he was a very nice guy. He would never think to beat us unless our mother reported us to him. My mother was Catholic and very, very religious. When I was very young she sent me to a Catholic school called St. Pauls, in Ebute- Metta. I was serving on the altar with the reverend fathers every Sunday, and it seemed like I was bowing to everything. But as soon as I left school, that was it. I seldom go to church as an adult, and if I do decide to go, I might fall asleep in the middle of the mass, because I probably will have just fnished playing in a club on Saturday night and gone to church di- rectly from there. Its not that I dont believe in God. I believe in God, but I rarely go to church. So I must be a bit like my father. He was a Protestant, but this is a guy that I never saw put his feet in the church. My mother was the only one going to church. I remember that when I was six, the reverend fathers and reverend sisters came to our house to preach to my father. Even if he wouldnt convert, they were preaching to him that he should come and marry my mother in the Catholic church. It took some time, but later he agreed to do it. That was the only day I ever saw his feet in a church. But he was a guy who prayed every day. He had a Bible and he used to wake us up to pray the Psalms every morning before he went to work. It was just that he didnt want to deal with all the politics of the church. If youre not attending church regularly and you die, they wont bury you, but he used to say he didnt give a shit about that. He always told us that when he died, we should just throw his body onto the street because we would just be dealing with the body, not the real him! That was always his joke. And years later, when he died, we did have to go and wrestle with the church and pay a certain amount for all his back dues so that he could get a proper burial. My mother didnt play any instruments, but my father played guitar and mandolin as a hobby, so we had instruments at home when I was growing up. My father never played professionally, but he had friends who were musicians, and he kept those guitars so he could play with them. In the evening when he wanted to entertain us, he gave his friends the guitars and he picked up the mandolin so they could play as a trio. At that time, the juju music was starting to develop among the Christian Yorubas. What my father was 28Chapter 1 playing with his friends was like an early juju type of thing, the kind of juju that doesnt have electric guitar or bass or keyboard. Just acoustic guitar or mandolin or banjo, and somebody would just play a bottle and another one would play the percussion. J. O. Oyesiku was one of the musicians who used to come by. He was a good friend of the family. Sometimes on the weekends I would go with my brothers to visit him, and his wife would cook for us. Oyesiku was a soldier in the army, but he didnt live in the barracks. After he retired he moved to Ibadan, and thats when he really had time to follow up with his musical career. Another one of our family friends was Julius O. Araba. His profession, really, was as a draftsman, working for the Nigerian Railways. He did music as a hobby, but his music was strong and he was much more popular for his music than for his drafting! Besides myself, my brother Olukunmi was the only one of us who tried to follow up on the music thing. He was good guitarist, and he had a band when he was studying medicine in the university, called the Clinics! As a matter of fact, when I started my own band years later and my guitar- ist was not going to be around, I would go meet him on the campus and give him a cassette and say, Listen to thisfour days from now youll be onstage with me! And he would come and play as my guitarist, just like that. We spent four years that way. But he never wanted to play pro- fessionally. When they fnished as medical students, the Clinics all went their separate ways. Nowadays, Kunmi just has a guitar at home to amuse himself. When we were growing up we also used to listen to a thing we called mambo that was happening at that time. Im not talking about the Cuban mambo. This one was like a percussion and fanfare style, like parade music. You had diferent percussion instruments with the bass drum played with the one- sided beater, and the kind of snare drum that you hang around the neck. And then you had trumpets and maybe trombone, or sometimes tuba. It was most common on Christmas Day, among the Ewes in Lagos. It was really the Christian Ewes that got this mambo thing going in Lagos, so every Christmas Day, we would see that on the street. That was the vogue. Apart from that, if you were having a party, then you could hire a mambo band for the party. Thats when you could watch the band sitting down and playing instead of parading through the streets. At the same time, on the Muslim Yoruba side, there was apala and sa- kara. Those were just drums and voices, plus in apala they use the agi- digbo (bass thumb piano), and in sakara they use the goje, which is kind of Right in the Center of Lagos29 like a native violin. I myself used to play the agidigbo as a child, too. One of our neighbors used to love it when we boys would gather ourselves together at night and do our apala thing with agidigbo, bottle, maybe some tin cans, and we would sing too. In fact, she liked it so much that she even gave us money to buy our own agidigbo. When youre talking about apala, Haruna Ishola was really the master, man. Its like classi- cal music for us. The lyrics of this guy are incredible. If you could only understand what that guy was singing about, mantoo many things! Things about life, like proverbs. Apart from the singing, when you check the way this guy composes the rhythmical language, its fowing because the instruments are not all playing the same thing there. Its a kind of interwoven language, so its very interesting. Its like a conversation. But when we were doing those things, I never thought in my life that I would turn out to be a musician. I didnt want to be one of these agidigbo guys, playing apala and all that. It was just a question of having kicks imitating those guys and trying to sing like them. But I did really love drumming. At home, I used to set chairs up and play on them, just kind of amusing myself. And from my elementary school days at St. Pauls, I used to play snare drum in the school marching band. I held onto that for as long I was in elementary school. But I fnished primary school when I was twelve, and then I forgot about music completely. That was around 1953. After that, I went to secondary school to study. But by my third year, it was too tough for me. To be honest, I wasnt ready for it. I was tired of learning all these things that didnt seem relevant. I couldnt see what I was going to do with Latin and all those things. And the teacher was really becoming a pain in the neck, man. Thats the way I was looking at it at that time. In fact, I went to my father one day and said, I am going to beat up the teacher. And my father said, No, you cannot do that! So I went back, but one day I just said, No more. That was in 1957. Then my father asked me, What is it that you want to do now? I told him I wanted to be an automobile mechanic. I wanted to be under the cars, working with the engines. Thats what my father did, and thats what I wanted to do. But he told me, Youno, never! He didnt think I was built to deal with those heavy engines. He thought I would have been a painter, like an artist, because I used to draw a lot in my spare time. He thought I would be doing that. I didnt want to go that direction, but I thought, maybe Ill be an architectural draftsman, like Araba. So my par- ents sent me to school with a private teacher who had eight students. I had been going to this school for about six months, and I was pro- 30Chapter 1 gressing, drawing nicely. Then one day, I noticed that there was an elec- trical switch on the wall. It was completely broken, and it was dangerous. You know, in my childhood I used to play around with electricity fxing wires and batteries and light bulbs. So I had diferent components at home, and I told my teacher that I had a brand- new switch that I could install for him, and it was only going to cost him two shillings and six pence. In those days my tuition fee was one pound, and one pound was equal to twenty shillings. This was before Nigeria switched to the naira currency. So I got my switch and I fxed the problem, and I wanted him to pay me. He kept telling me, Ill get it to you, but he never paid me. Every day he says hell give me the money. I said nothing. At the end of the month, my father gave me the money to pay for the next month, because you have to pay in advance. So what I did was take the one- pound note and change the money, and I deducted my two shil- lings and six pence and I gave my teacher the rest. And he fipped out completely! He said, Hey, whats this? I said, I just took my money out of the one pound. He shouted, No! You can never do that! You have to give me my one pound for the month! I told you, I will give you your money. I said, But its over one month now since I put this switch in. The teacher said he was not gonna accept that. So I said okay, and I gave him his full pound. And then I took my screwdriver out and I took of my switch and I put it in my box and that was it. He saw this and he said, What?! Because this guy was running the school in his own home, his parents and grandparents were there. He started yelling, Mommy, mommy, mommycome and look at this! Come and look at what Allen has done! So I left the fucking switch like that, and I told him, Now youre gonna buy the switch, the electrician is gonna fx it, and youre gonna pay for both. I did it like that diplomatically, because I didnt want to fght the guy. And I took my bag and walked out. So that was the end of drafting school. I went back home and narrated the whole story to my father. And he said, Okay. What next? He asked if I wanted to look for another draft- ing school. I thought about it and told him that I wanted to go to an elec- tronics school. So I had to start all over again, reading a whole new type of literature and taking notes for the examsfrst for the theory and then for the practical. I studied for about one year and a half and then I got a job. My uncle I. K. Mettle was the chief engineer of a German radio company called Witt & Busch, and he got me employment there. So I worked as a radio technician for about four years. We were building Right in the Center of Lagos31 ampliferssix- valve, heavy- output amplifers. Right now I could coolly build a six- valve amplifer myself, no problem. That took me right up to the end of 1960. At the same time that I was doing the electronics work, I started going out a lot at night, crawl- ing the pubs. I was making some money of my own, and at that time, man, Lagos was swinging! There were so many clubs and great bands around in those times, and they were all going twenty- four hours. On Saturdays especially, nobody slept. We had the White Horse, the Lido, and the Western Top on Agege Motor Road. The Empire Hotel was also on Agege Motor Road, and thats where Fela later made the Afrika Shrine in the 1970s. We had the Ambassador and the Gondola in Yaba. There was Bobby Bensons Caban Bamboo on Ikorodu Road. Then we had the Central Hotel and the Kakadu on Herbert Macauley Road in Alagomeji. The Kakadu was where Fela later made the Afro- Spot during the Koola Lobitos times in the 60s. I myself might crawl three or four pubs in the night, just checking out the bands, because Lagos was full of great bands! They were all playing highlife, but playing it in diferent styles. The big bandleaders at that time were Victor Olaiya, Cardinal Rex Lawson, E. C. Arinze, Steven Amaechi, Eddie Okonta, Agu Norris, Eric Onuha, and Bill Friday. Those were the bands ruling the country back then. You might not believe this, but Nigerians used to go to school in those days to learn ballroom dancing. When they fnished with work, they went to learn quickstep, tango, waltz, foxtrot, and all those dances. And then there was the highlife, of course. Highlife is in straight meter, meaning its in 4/4. And everybody responds to 4/4 beats quickly. If it was a slow one, the couple would dance close together. If it was a fast one, the women would stick their bottoms out and shake them, while the guys behind were caressing it slowly. That is why the bands had to know how to play all of these styles. And the people would be dressed in evening clothes men were wearing suits and ties and women were wearing dresses. I my- self had to dress that way, with a suit and tie. Its totally diferent com- pared to what we have there now, a completely diferent world. During the time that I was working with my uncle, I also did some dee- jaying for parties and private afairs. If you want to deejay, you have to buy records, and you have to be a record lover yourself. My uncle had a lot of highlife records from Ghana, and also a lot of Latin American music on those labels like gv and hMv. But he wasnt going to be deejaying any- 32Chapter 1 where. He would just drive me there with the equipment and everything, and pick me up afterwards. So I had something to do every weekend be- cause I worked on Saturdays and Sundays. I was mainly playing Ghanaian highlifes, like E. T. Mensah, the Ramblers, and the Stargazers. Those were deep, deep recordswicked recordsand they were very popular. And I was playing Nigerian highlifes like Bobby Benson, Victor Olaiya, and Cardinal Rex Lawson. Im telling youit was fantastic, man! Complete enjoyment! They would booze me up completely at these parties. I would be drunk even before fnishing the party! You cannot compare those parties with what they call parties here in Europe. Because in Lagos we used to have out- door parties, and they could go from one night to the next morning. We were playing music out there with all the neighbors around, but nobody was going to complain because they too were enjoying whats going on. Even if they were asleep, they were enjoying the music in their sleep! They would never have said that it was noisy. But you could not do that here in Paris. Try to set up a band or a deejay out here in front of this apartment building, and everybody would be in jailyou wouldnt even get through one tune! So you can see the enjoyment of what we had there in Nigeria. It was really like a paradise! My prayer is to see Lagos back like it was then. Even if we can get back just one- quarter of what we had in those times, I think I will go back. Through going around to all the clubs and playing those records at parties, I was just checking out the music thing. And when I started taking up an instrument, the frst one was the guitar. The second one was the fddle bass, the upright. And the third one was tenor sax. But I got discouraged. My fngers were swelling up with blisters. And with the sax, my lips got cut up by the reed. It wasnt comfortable at all. Actually, the drum set was my aim. I wasnt playing yet, but I was already checking out all the highlife drummers. At that time, I really ad- mired those guys like James Meneh, Oje Neke, John Bull, and Femi Ban- kole. It was their dexterity that I admired. There was also a drummer that used to play with Bill Friday who was called Anex, who had very good technique. He was a real tight drummer who could make you dance, and you could even dance to his solos. I used to love to watch Anex play with Bill on Sundays at the Teatime Dance, which was at the Ambassa- dor Hotel. So I wanted to play the drums, but it wasnt easy to just sit down at anybodys drum set. No way, man. You had to have some kind of connec- Right in the Center of Lagos33 tion to be able to reach those drums! So I decided to use the radio as my connection, since I was known as a radio technician. One day I met a guy named Akanni Pereira, who bought a radio at the place I was working. He asked me if I would come and fx the antenna for him in his home. He gave me the address and I walked to his house after work. I was just try- ing to make some extra money in my spare time. When I got to his com- pound, I found out that he was a musician. In fact, he was one of the best guitarists in town. He was playing with Victor Olaiya and the Cool Cats, and the band was residing in Olaiyas compound, which was like a hostel for the musiciansnot all of them, but the important ones, the giants of the band, like Akanni; Tex Oluwa, who was the bassist; and Sivor Law- son, who played the saxophone. All the instruments were there as well. At night, they were playing at the Cool Cats Inn on Abule- Nla Road of Apapa Road, in Ebute- Metta. It was run by a guy named Mr. Biney, who was a lawyer and who also owned the only zoo in Lagos. So Olaiya comes in, and by the time I fnished my work, the entire band had arrived for rehearsal and the music started. BoomI became a spectator right away! I had fnished up my work, but I was obliged to stay all the way to the end of the rehearsal. I was watching the entire band, but I was really looking at the drummer. He was a guy called Osho, and he was one of the best drummers at that time. So at the end of the re- hearsal I asked Akanni to introduce me to this drummer because I would like to learn how to play the drums. And he did. I asked Osho if he would teach me how to play the drums and if we could discuss a tuition fee. He told me that I had to pay him ten pounds for the studies. So the bread I was taking from Akanni for the job I came to do, I asked him to give that money to Osho for me. We arranged for the lessons to start, and Osho told me to buy my own drumsticks. So when I was coming back from work the next day I went to Kingsway department store on Broad Street on Lagos Island and bought my frst drumsticks. Then I went back to Akannis compound and waited for them to fnish their rehearsal. And when they fnished the re- hearsal I took my frst lesson. Oshos setup was kick, snare, toms, and ride cymbals. I had to train my muscles because it was painful at frstmy leg muscles got kind of stif. The frst thing Osho taught me was how to play the highlife, which is mainly played on the snare, with accents and rolls, and sometimes the kick or the tom- toms. Then the second lesson was a rumba, and the third was the waltz, in slow time. But suddenly Osho stopped showing up for 34Chapter 1 my lessons. What could I do? One day Olaiyas saxophonist, Peter King, walked in and he said, Ah, Allen. Every day I come and you keep repeat- ing the same things. And I told him that Osho never showed up for any more of my lessons. So Peter said, Let me teach you to play the mambo, just so you can progress. And he sat on the drums and he showed me how to play mambo. Were talking about the Cuban mambo now. And so now I had four rhythmsmambo, waltz, highlife, and rumba. I was learning quickly, but like I said, Osho never came to teach me again. I would wait and wait, but since I was living with my parents, they used to get mad when I stayed out too long. There wasnt any telephone there, and they got worried. I had just a few lessons, and then that was it. So I became discouraged, and I went back to my job. But then Olaiya himself gave me a part- time job playing clefs for the Cool Cats at night. He liked me a lot because Id been introduced by Akanni, plus I used to repair his own radio for him too. So he just said, Come and play with us, man, and earn some extra bread. I did it for maybe six months, but it was fucking tough. Because we would fnish playing like two oclock in the night on Lagos Island, but my family had moved to Ebute- Metta on the mainland by this time. By the time everything was completely fnished, I usually arrived back home like fve oclock. Then I had to be back at my job at eight oclock. I found myself falling asleep at work with the solder- ing iron in my hand, and one day I dropped it on myself. I realized that this was becoming too much for meI couldnt keep doing it. Its noth- ing to play clefs in a band, anyway. Its like the lowest position in a band. I wouldnt quit my job to play clefs. So I went to Olaiya and told him nicely that it was too tough for me because I wasnt getting any sleep. He under- stood. I gave them back my uniform and we all stayed friends. I stuck to my job working as a radio technician and going to the clubs at night. But one day I became fed up with this job too, because of a German guy there who was my superior and who was always complaining about me to the boss. I put up with him for a long time, but he was getting on my nerves and I couldnt stand him anymore. The problem was that I ate in the same place where he ate, at Kingsway, where they had a restaurant inside that everyone would go to. Every time I was eating there he was coming in there and asking me what I was doing eating there. And so every time I arrived back at work, the big boss would always ask me if I went there to eat at worktime. I told him, Yes, motherfuckersometimes, be- cause I dont eat normally like everybody. I have my own program inside me which means I dont have breakfast and I must have something inside Right in the Center of Lagos35 me like snacks or something. That was because I always had a very sen- sitive stomach. But this German guy kept on me every time. One day it became physical, because I was reading an electronics book and he came from behind me, stood right behind me, and just grabbed the book from me. So when I got up from my chair I turned around and slammed him directly into the door, and he collapsed. I wanted to kill that guy that day. I knew that was the end for me there. So I took my leave and went back home and narrated the story to my father. This time he asked me, What is it now? What is your next step going to be? So I told him, Music thats all. This was sometime around 1959 or 1960. This was very bad news for my parents, to hear that Im quitting my job to go play music full time. As a matter of fact, I thought I would be going through some big shit with my parents. But that was the frst time in my life that I saw my father not objecting to my decision. This was the frst time he never said, You are crazy! He just asked me, Why do you want to play music? I said, Well, Im sick of those German guys. Im tired of them. I just want to quit and I dont want to cause too much trouble. Let me just go play music. Im not going to play free of charge. Ill earn a salary every month, so Ill still be able to pay my expenses. So he told me, Alright, if thats what you have decided to do. He never came out and said it, but maybe he was thinking about the fact that he him- self was talented and always wanted to play music professionally, which he never did. He might have thought that, as his frst son, I was going to make use of what he never did. My mother was really sad. But he told my mother, Well let him go, and if its no good for him, hell come back. Were here and well rescue him. HIGHLIFE TIME My parents knew they could trust me because I had already been through a big shit with them about smoking grass. Ive been smoking all my life, and I started at the age of ffteen. That is forbidden in Nigeria, like everyplace else. No par- ents want to see their children smoking grass, but as a teenager, you want to do everything that the others are doing. I remember the frst time I smoked. It was Christmas Eve of 1955, and my mother had gone to church. And this neighbor of ours who was about seven years older than me came to me and said, Lets try this stuf. He gave me some pufs and I noticed that it wasnt the same thing as smoking cigarettes. I felt something come over me in a wave and I went to sit down on the pavement in front of the church. This church had a very high steeple and I saw the steeple turning upside down. The whole church was foating. I told my- self, nothis cant be real! I enjoyed smoking that time, but what really made me go into it was that in my childhood, I wasnt a good eater. It was always a fght to make me eat, and my mother was always angry because once she made the food, I would disappear or even sneak and give the food to my friends sometimes. But I remember that the day I smoked, I came home and opened the cupboard, and I just couldnt stop eating. I ate so much that my stomach was bloated. When my mother came back and discovered that, she never be- lieved that it was me that had eaten all this food. She thought I had given the food to my friends again. She asked me, What 2 Highlife Time37 happened to you to make you eat this food? Of course, I couldnt tell her the real reason. And from that day, for the next fve years, I was hiding my smoking from my parents. But my mother started to attack me, because she would see my eyes when she came home, and she knew. She never said it to me, but she would always check my eyes and would report me to my father. And so my father put a curse on my smoking. He decided that he wasnt going to be trailing me and watching me and trying to catch me. You know how to put a spiritual curse? For Africans, a curse is like telling someone, Even if nobody sees you, it will still be known. And if you are lying, cer- tain negative things are gonna happen to you. He put that on me. And meanwhile I was just smoking and smoking. It took me fve years, but after that I had to confront my parents. I told them that those fve years I had been smoking grass. I had been denying it every time, but there was no point in denying anything anymore. Because in all these fve years, I never did something like committing rape, I never went to go burgle any- ones house, and you never had to come bail me out at the police station. My father agreed with me about that. Then they asked me why I smoked grass. I told them that it made me feel better and that as a musician, one needs something to face the audience sometimes. You cant always face them in your normal head, because you might have stage fright. I told them it made me feel better than drinking. It also helped me creatively. In the middle of the night, I have diferent waves going through my head, and if Im not receptive of whats passing through my head, spiritually and musically, I cannot utilize it. The smoke helps me make use of those things. Those were the things I told them at that time. My father thought about it and saw that it was true, that he never caught me involved in any bullshit. So he removed the curse and instead gave me his blessing, and I went on with my smoking. It just so happened that at the time I decided to go into the music full time, Olaiya was disband- ing, and two new bands were forming from the old Cool Cats. The band split in half. Half went with Olaiya into his new band, and half went with the new Cool Cats band led by Sivor Lawson, the saxophonist in the old band. Osho went with Olaiya, so Lawson had to look for a drummer. And fortunately for me those guys playing with him were my friends, and they said, Why dont you come and join us? I told them I would like to play the drums, but I hadnt had enough experience yet. So they got another 38Chapter 2 drummer for the time being and I went back on the clefs, so that I could assimilate the music properly. The other drummer was a half- caste guy from Ghana named Kof Galland, who also sang. It was good, because it was a steady gig. After two months, we developed a routine. Kof used to sing three songs every night, and while he was up front singing, I would sit down and play the drums. At least I was playing the drums for three songs every night. Then after nine months, Kof came to me and told me that he was leaving the band and he thought I should take over on the drums. But he never told Lawson he was leaving. He left in the middle of the night, and in the morning he was gone when they came to fnd him for rehearsal. So they had to look for a new drummer immediately, because there were gigs scheduled. But the guys told Lawson, Theres no point in looking for any drummer, because Allen is here. So instead they looked for somebody to take over from me on the clefs, and thats when Ojo Okeji came in. He came from Ifon in the West, and we became real good friends. (Ifon is the major town in Osun State in western Nigeria.) The bass player was a guy from Cameroon called Ngomalio. And while Ojo was playing the clefs, Ngomalio was teaching him to play the bass. So that was itthe gig with Lawson was really what started me of as a drummer, and that was the beginning of everything for me. Playing with Lawson was a valuable experience for me because it was a very good band. The music was fantastic. We had a full house every weekend. In fact, we were so good that some reporters from the Daily Times came to interview the band and take pictures of all the members. That was the best newspaper in the country at that time. When it came to my turn, the reporter asked me, How long have you been playing the drums? and I told him eight months. He said, Eight monthsI dont believe it! Then the guys all told him the same thingthat I had actually been playing for eight months. The reporter thought I had been playing for maybe fve years. So you can see that I was developing rapidly. Once we were even invited to open for Louis Armstrong, as part of the Nigerian Independence Day celebrations. This must have been around the end of 1960, and it was the same African tour that took him to Ghana, where he played with E. T. Mensah. Armstrong arrived and played at the National Stadium in Lagos, with Victor Olaiyas band opening for him. I missed him there. But then he played in Ibadan, which is where we opened for him, at Liberty Stadium. We traveled to Ibadan, and I remem- ber that it was raining hard that day. But the stadium was completely full Highlife Time39 anyway because Louis Armstrong was a world- known musician. Every- body loved him in Nigeria and wanted to see him play. I set up my drums, but the rain was destroying my snare, because it had a leather head. The water made the pitch go way down until the snare sounded like a tom- tom. I did everything I could to make it sound better. I even lit a newspaper and tried to dry the snare out a little bit, and we managed to play. Louis and his whole band were checking us out. We were playing highlife things. Louis was even dancing around a bit on the side of the stagehe seemed to enjoy the music. After that, Louiss drummer came on. I cant remember his name, but he looked Chinese or Japanese to me. (Armstrongs drummer during this period was the Filipino American Danny Barcelona (19292007), whom he often referred to onstage as The Little Hawaiian Boy.) He was a fuck- ing good drummer, and his drums were sitting in the rain too. I told Sivor, Look at the diference between the two snare drumsthe water stays on top of his! His snare is like a pond! Thats because it had a plastic head. I thought it was going to be impossible to play. We didnt really have plas- tic drum heads in Nigeria at that time, so I didnt really understand how they worked. But then the road manager came and he simply took out a rag and cleaned the water of the top of the drum. And when the drum- mer played, the drum sounded greatcompletely diferent from the one with the skin head. Afterwards, I had a good discussion with this guy backstage and we had a good time together. I admired him, because he was good. Louis himself was a very jovial guy, always cracking jokes and making everybody laugh. We all admired him so much. Meeting Louis Armstrong was a great experience for me, and I hadnt even been play- ing one full year yet! Within those eight months, wed already gone on tour of Nigeria, throughout the East, West, and Midwest. That was another experience for me. If we played in a city like Warri or Benin, it was pretty much the same as in Lagos. But it was a whole diferent story when we had to go to the interior. First of all, there was no electricity. The only thing they might have had were gas lamps. Or maybe the village chief might have had a generator, but only for his compound. So we had to play with 12- volt batteries. We had a type of amplifer that was convertible to 12- volt batteries. That amplifer could only carry the microphones, but we also put the guitars through it, because there was no separate amplifer for the guitars. We made do and it sounded great. It was always a full house in the village and the people always enjoyed it. And when the concert fn- 40Chapter 2 ished, everybody went home in the darkness with torches or gas lamps for the road. Most times we had to sleep in the club. Nobody was looking for beds or anything fancy like that. When the concert fnished, I usually just put down a mat and slept next to my drums. Sometimes if we were lucky we could get a bed, but those beds were full up with bedbugs. When you awakened, you would be covered with bites, and there was nothing you could do about it! And some of these clubs were really in the bush, man, I mean in the jungle. When I would lie down to sleep I would hear all the animal noises on the other side of the fence and I would be praying that no animal jumped on me in the night! In the larger towns, it could be diferent because they might have two things going on in the clubs. It might be the club on one side, and call girl business on the other side. That means they must have rooms there. So sometimes they can say, Okay, two rooms for the band, and we would manage with that. Sometimes, if we were lucky, we could go and sleep with one of the girls and have a softer place to sleep. But the point is, we didnt sleep in hotels. If we had spent money on hotels, we would have gotten back to Lagos with no money, and the proprietor was there wait- ing for his bread so that he could take his cut and pay us our salaries. But in the end we still arrived back with no money. What happened was that the band manager, whose name was George, was in charge of all the paperwork and the money. And while we were on tour some guys tricked George and Lawson through gambling. These guys knew how to play cards and they did that every night. They started in the middle of the night when we were asleep and when we woke up, they were still play- ing. They cleaned Lawson and George out, and they were gambling with the bands money! So when we got back to Lagos, there was nothing left. The proprietor couldnt believe this, so he sent a diferent band out for the next tour, and he put us on hold. That band was led by a guy named Odiachi. When Odiachi came back with all the bread he was sup- posed to, the proprietor fred Lawson and the band dissolved. That was it. Altogether it was eighteen months of experience with Lawsonnine months of playing clefs and nine months of playing the drumsand the Cool Cats were fnished. I didnt want to look for any other band. I had to change my mind about playing music full time. I told myself that I was fnished with music. Completely fnished. If that was the way this business worked, I wasnt touching this job anymore. I couldnt aford to be doing Highlife Time41 this type of job, because my father always told me, Dont leave certainty for uncertainty. So I quit. This was around the middle of 1962. I went back home to start studying againthis time, to pass my ctI guild exams in electronics. I had to do correspondence courses where I sent in the markings and they would send it back to me. It was like a one- year crash course. But after six months, the temptation came back for music. This time it was a band called Agu Norris and the Heatwaves. Norris was a trumpeter and singer from the East, but he made his living in Lagos. His gig was to play the third set at the Empire Hotel, after E. C. Arinze and Steven Amaechi had fnished. They kept on coming to beg me. And I refused and refused. The contract was for just four Saturdays a month at the Premier Hotel in Ibadan. It was a good gig with a very good salary. The money was tempting, but we had to travel from Lagos to Ibadan every weekend. I told them I didnt want it, I didnt care about the money, and to please just leave me alone. But Norris kept on coming and also sending his people to me, telling me I shouldnt be talking like that, that the Cool Cats thing was just my frst experience, that it wasnt the end of the road. So fnally I said okay, let me try it again. I started with Norris at the end of 1962. And that was itI have never stopped playing music, right up until today. With Norris, we were playing copyrights, highlife, and everything else. Most of the bands just played copyrights in those days, which meant cover versions of popular songs, played like the original recording. This was because you had to play popular hits for the crowd, and also because not all the bandleaders knew how to compose. Thats why you had to learn to play everything, because you might have to play a waltz, quick- step, rumba, mambo, or cha- cha- cha, you know. As a matter of fact, to become a musician in those days you had to know how to play all those styles. Any popular tune, you had to be able to play. Today its completely diferent. One drummer doesnt even know what another is doing. But with Norris, it was the same experience as with Sivor Lawson meaning, more problems with the money. The deal was that Norris was supposed go to Ibadan to collect the money at the end of each month and come back to Lagos and pay everybody. But instead he collected the money and then sat down there with his friend Eddie Okonta. Okonta was a trumpeter and a bandleader from the Midwest. They would sit down together and drink the money awaythe salary of the band. Then Norris would get back to Lagos and say he never received the money. It 42Chapter 2 was always like thishe drank the money out every time. Until I said, No! We have to go back home with money. We have to pay all our house rents. So one day we arrived there, and we had this Jewish club manager. We were eating, and this guy was telling us, Time to go play. We said Play? We aint playing today! He said, Why? and we said, Wheres our moneyour salary, where is it? The guy told us that we must be joking. He said, I paid your money to Mr. Norris last week! So he had to go check his guy Norris. He asked him, Norris, what happened, wheres the money? I need music. You signed a contract. This manager was beging us now. He asked us, Please just play, well work it out after the concert. We told him that if we played, it was just because we respected him, but if we didnt get our money we werent going to leave and we were gonna to stay right there on the stage. And thats what happened. We fnished playing and we never moved. It was Sunday morning and we were all still on the stage. It was like our protest, so they had to call a board meeting around eleven oclock the next morn- ing. A meeting of the whole Western Hotel company, along with Norris. And they told him, Mr. Norris, this is what were going to do. The frst contract you signed is six months. This is the fourth month of the con- tract. So we are going to loan you one month in advance again, right now, to pay these guys. And then, youre going to have to work one month without pay. But after the frst week, Norris tried to pay us half again, telling us he was gonna pay the rest the following week. I was the only one among the guys that wanted to pull out when he came back with the half salary thing, because I had already secured a new band. The frst gig of the new band was gonna be Saturday in Lagos, the same day that I was supposed to play in Ibadan with Norris. So I had to go to Ibadan pretending I was going to play, just try to grab the balance of my salary. It was kind of tricky, in a way. I told Norris that I wanted to do some shopping before the show, and I asked him to give me the money so I could go buy a few things. He asked me, Why cant you wait until tomorrow, when we fnish? He told me he couldnt give it to me all at once, that hed give it to me after the show. I asked him how much he had on him right then. He said half of the halfa quarter of what he owed me. So he gave it me and I few out from the hotel, crossed the road, and took a taxi straight to the motorpark. And that was it. I left right away and went to play a gig with a new band in Lagos. The new band was the Nigerian Messengers, led by Charles Wokoma, who was a saxophonist from Rivers State. He had just left Olaiyas band Highlife Time43 to start his own band. But then Agu Norris came to Lagos and said, Im going to take you to court! I just laughed, you know. I said, Court? Im waiting for it! Because in the frst place I never signed nothing with you. Everything was verbal. And furthermore you still owe me. If you didnt owe me I might never have thought of leaving like that. The point is we are responsible. We have kids. Dont keep fucking us up. So Im waiting for the court case! You see, I just had my frst wife then. Shes called Ibilola Agbeni. We were married in Africa according to what they call native law and cus- tom. If youre having kids, its automatic marriage for us sometimes. You become husband and wife just by having kids together. And then the time comes later when you want to go get it done ofcially. Like me personally, I was six years old when my father married my mother right in front of me. But the couple really forms before the marriage. Ibilola and I had six children together, and they all still live in Nigeria. Theres our son Adenike, who was born in 1965. The second one was our daughter Ibiwunmi, who was born in 1967. The third one was our daugh- ter Abidemi, born in 1969. Then in 1972 we had twin girls, Kehinde and Taiwo. The youngest is our son Segun, who was born in 1980. They dont really do music too much, except maybe for singing in the church some- times. But Nike and Kehinde are singing on my album Home Cooking. Anyway, with Charles Wokoma it turned out to be the same blues. Its always the same shit. At the end of the month its a strugle for your bread. I was barely managing with it until one of my friends came to tell me that Eddie Okonta had just left the Paradise Club in Ibadan. My friends name was Yinka Roberts, a guitar player. We used to be in the Cool Cats together with Olaiya. And Yinka asked me if I wanted to form another group for the Paradise gig. I asked him who the bandleader was going to be, and he told me it was going to be a saxophonist named Sunny Lionheart, a Yoruba guy from Ijebu- Ode who had been playing with Eddie Okontas band. He had a band called the Paradise Melody Angels. That meant I had to leave Lagos now and move to Ibadan. Before, I was going once a week. But this time we were going to be playing every day in Ibadan. That meant I had to move house. This was serious. Since I was born, I had never left Lagos to go stay anywhere else. So for the frst time in my life, I left. This was in 1963. I went to stay in Ibadan with my friend Ojo, who had been the clefs player with Sivor Lawsons Cool Cats when I was there. Since then he had learned to play the bass, and he was now playing with a highlife group in Ibadan led by a good trumpet player 44Chapter 2 named Rex Williams. But Ojo always wanted to be in a band with me, so Sunny brought him into the band. There was also a singer in Ibadan named Adeolu Akinsanya, who was with Kehinde Adexs highlife band. Adex was a trumpet player from Ijebu- Epe, not far from Lagos. But we got Adeolu and Adex to join the Paradise Melody Angels, because Adeolu was a great singer and composer and Sunny needed lyrics and songs. For the frst month I was living with Ojo. Then when my frst pay came, I rented a room for myself. It was a very small place because now I was paying rent for two housesone in Ibadan and one in Lagos. But I couldnt aford to pay both, so I just told my parents to move all of my stuf out of the house in Lagos. My wife was still living with her parents anyway, and she started to come to Ibadan to stay with me for a few days, and then take the bus back to Lagos. So that band was going on, but by the ffth month of living in Ibadan, I became fed up with the whole salary business again. I didnt want to play the same money game with Lionheart anymore, so at the end of the month, I just took my salary and split back to Lagos. There was no band for me to play with there, but I just wanted to go back home. Since I didnt have my own house anymore, I had to move in with my parents. Fortunately for me my brothers room was big enough for the two of us. At this time I was just turning twenty- three. And my wife always came to me to visit me at my parents house, sleeping there for days sometimes. I wasnt wanting for anything and I wasnt looking for any bands. This went on for about one month, when all of a sudden Adeolu and Kehinde showed up in Lagos. They were sick of Lionheart too, so they came to Lagos to form a house band in a hotel called the Western Hotel on Agege Motor Road in Idi- Oro. They were gonna call the band the West- ern Toppers. Actually, they brought a drummer with them from Ibadan, but they told me this boy was such a bragart and thought his playing was so great that they were already sick of him. And really, he couldnt play anything. Defnitely, he couldnt play at my level. So their aim was to get me back on the drums. I asked them, What about the bread? Be- cause Im not going to be earning less here than what I earned in Ibadan. We have to agree on my salary frst. I asked them to pay me twenty- six pounds a month. That was a lot of money in those days. Even if it was a normal day job, you must have read the book (studied and passed your school exams) properly to get a monthly salary of twenty- six pounds. Be- cause your house rent would only be about two pounds a month. So they went to tell the proprietor that I was asking for twenty- six Highlife Time45 pounds a month. What!? The hotel proprietor there had never paid such amounts to any drummer before in his life. But they told him that if he wanted a band better than everyone else, Allen was the guy they needed. No, he said, I want to hear the guy. And so they called me and I went to meet the guy. He asked, Is that you that said you wanted twenty- six pounds a month? I said, Yes sir, thats what I said. He said, The maximum I ever paid a drummer is ten pounds. Lets just hear how well you play frst. So that night I went with the band, and since they were gonna be playing a lot of stuf that wed played before, in Ibadan, I knew the material. After I had fnished, the proprietor came running: Ah yes, yes, yes, yes! It is trueno drummer ever played like this before! So he was convinced. The key was that I had discovered a way to play my hi- hat cymbals. I never saw any other drummer opening and closing his hi- hats back then in highlife. Most of them were just playing on the open snare. If the hi- hats were there, they were played closed. But I had really worked on my hi- hats, and it changed my way of drumming completely. It kind of balanced my way of thinking because I could keep the snare and hi- hats going together. It was more polyrhythmic that way. After the show the proprietor came to tell me that he was just a strugling guy too, and couldnt we negotiate? He told me that he would give me a house, and he would give me eighteen pounds a month. And the house was very close by. Just two blocks across the railway line in Idi- Oro and Im there. This sounded like a good ofer. And this guy was a very nice guy, so I accepted, and the band sent that other drummer back to Ibadan. The Western Toppers music was great, because Adeolu was a fuck- ing good singer, a great composer, and I loved his way of composing in the Yoruba language. His melodies were super. I respected Adeolu from childhood because we used to play together as children in a little band we had called Rio Lindo. He used to sing and play the agidigbo in that band. So working with him was great. I played exactly one year with that band. Playing in all those highlife bands and coming up under all of those tough bandleaders was good training for me because I learned how to demand respect for myself. But in my heart at that time, it was really jazz that I was aiming for. I have always listened to the great jazz drum- mers whenever I could. Listening to those guys made me understand the way the drum set should be played. In the beginning I was listening to Gene Krupa and I thought he was the greatest drummer in the world. But later when I started to hear others, like Philly Joe Jones, Elvin Jones, Art 46Chapter 2 Blakey, and Max Roach, it was like magic to me. Ahh, I said to myself. Fucking hell. This was serious. I wanted to play like all of them. All of these African American guys, I felt as if they were stomping on my face with their drumming, because they were so great. The way they were drumming, it had all the spirituality and all the celebration in it. It wasnt English. It wasnt Western. It wasnt what Gene Krupa was doing. It was a whole diferent language. We should have been playing the drum set like that in Nigeria. After all, it originally came from here. They took it, went there to the Americas, polished it, and sent it back to us in Africa. I realized that the Gene Krupa style of playing had too much rolling for me. He was coming from more of a military style, and it was good we all studied to get that and I wanted to get that myself. But people like Max Roach didnt solo with lots of continuous rolling. Guys like Max and Elvin and Blakey and Philly Joe, they were telling a story on the drums. Krupa wasnt doing that. These guys were telling a story by playing dif- ferent rhythms, and they were doing it with independent coordination. Thats the way the drums should be played, man. Thats why jazz was a big discovery for me, a discovery that made me much better. And it was Fela Ransome- Kuti that gave me the opportunity to really play this music. After I met him, the whole game changed. THE SKY WAS THE LIMIT At this point it was 1963 and Fela had just arrived back from London and was working at the Nigerian Broadcasting Company (NBc). His job was presenter of jazz programs. He was playing jazz for thirty minutes on Friday nights, playing mainly Blue Note records. Fela spins nicely, man. Those thirty minutes, you were really going to enjoy them. Fela was strictly a jazz man at that time. He was playing trum- pet, and a little piano, too. And he eventually decided that, since he himself was a musician, why should he be promoting other peoples music? So he decided to form a band called the Fela Ransome- Kuti Quartet with some musicians from the radio sta- tion and some outside help. But the NBc was mainly full of clas- sical musicians. There was Fela Sowande, who was the boss, the composer, and the bigest of them all. He ran the whole NBc, all the radio stations in the countryNorth, South, East, West. He was the master. And then there was Tunde Oyesiku, who also played classical compositions at NBc. Fela himself had been studying classical music in London and had just come back to Lagos after receiving his diploma. But there were no musicians who really thought anything of him at that time, because he was just working as a deejay at the NBc. He wasnt really playing any- thing with anybody outside, or rubbing shoulders with the musi- cians around Lagos. And thats why, to do the jazz thing, he had to make use of the musicians they had there at the NBc. There was one staf member at the NBc named Kingsley Etuk who was 3 48Chapter 3 a very good jazz pianist. Then they brought in Ngomalio, the bassist from my frst band with Sivor Lawson. Benson Idonije was Felas friend and was working at the NBc with him as a broadcaster. Benson was the only one I saw who was really support- ive of Fela at that time, besides Felas mother. Maybe the reason was that Felas family had sent him to London to do medicine and he decided to do music instead. Even though he had followed it up with a diploma, they were still trying to advise him to do other things. But Benson believed in Fela as a musician and wanted to be his manager in the future if anything started to happen. And since Fela was from Abeokuta and didnt really know Lagos so much at that time, Benson was also showing him around town to help him get himself together musically. Fela, Benson, Kingsley, and Ngomalio had been trying out diferent drummers. They started with a guy named John Bull. Then they brought in a guy named Femi Bankole. Fela thought Bankole was good and it looked like they fnally had a band, but then the civil war was coming and that messed up many bands. Things were still in order in Nigeria for the frst three years after independence. Then the politicians started their tribalism shit in 1964. They started their shit all around the country North, South, East, and West. They started riging elections, and the fghting began. We had been living together and getting along for years, so Nigerians were manipulated into that. It was around 1964 when we began to wake up in the morning, or come out of the club in the morn- ing after a gig, and see dead bodies piled up in the gutters. They had either been killed with bows and arrows or set on fre. It was Yorubas and Hausas fghting each other around Lagos. The politicians sparked this shit by starting to say, This is Yoruba, that is Hausa. The Igbos werent in this thing yet. Then the actual war started because oil was in one state in the East and the people in that area, who were mainly Igbos, said they had to secede. That was the time of Colonel Odumegwu Ojukwu and Biafra, which was the nation they wanted to make. Its not possible! How can they secede like that? Its one country, run from all the resources of the country. Wherever its coming from in the country, nobody cares. It should be for the nation. Its true that they were killing many Igbos in the North and in Lagos, too. But it wasnt a tribal thing. It was politics, with diferent parties using the tribal thing to manipulate Nigerian people. It was just madness, a war of total madness. All in the name of stupid oil. No war should have been fought in Nigeria because of oil. We never had oil The Sky Was the Limit49 before this time, and I never saw much poverty in Nigeria before the oil time. After the Second World War in the 1940s, I remember that I used to go with my mother to buy rations. But it wasnt a poverty thingit was a matter of it being wartime. Some people were poor, but not to the ex- tant that they are today. Today it is just about survival of the fttest. It was the oil that created that madness. Before the oil time, we were living on agriculture and diferent resources like tin, zinc, bauxite, gold in some places, food, cocoa, cofee, and cotton. We were living coolly at this time, and nobody was sufering. But today, you can see what oil has done to the country. Because of the war, the Igbo musicians were all going back to the East, Ngomalio was going back to Cameroon, and many musicians were going into the army. Femi Bankole himself went into the army. Every- one wanted to get out of Lagos. But Ngomalio told Fela, I will give you my student. His student was Ojo Okeji, who was playing with me in the Toppers. Ojo went to meet Fela, and Fela told him not to worry about reading, that they would just play a twelve- bar blues. Ojo did it, he played clean and tight. So that was it. Ojo was in. But they still had no drum- mer, and Fela, coming from the UK, had the attitude that there were no good jazz drummers in Lagos. There were lots of highlife drummers. But he was looking for someone who could really play jazz properlysome- one who knew about playing sixteen- bar or thirty- two- bar songs and who knew the proper sequence of a jazz tune. Then Ojo told them, I know a very good drummer that will play better than all these so- called drum- mers. Fela asked him, Who is he? And Ojo told him that the drum- mers name was Tony Allen. So Fela told Ojo he wanted to see me the next morning. Although I didnt know Fela personally at that time, I knew of him from his radio show and also because his house at Mosholasi (the one that later got burned down by the army) was not too far from my place. At that time, he was known by his family name, Fela Ransome- Kuti. I went to meet him at his house at Mosholasi in the morning. And the frst thing he asked was Are you the one who said that you are the best drummer in this country? I laughed and told him, I never said so. He asked me if I could play jazz and I said yes. He asked me if I could take solos and I said yes again. So he asked me to wait for him in the sitting room while he got dressed. Then we got into his car and drove straight to the NBc. The drum set was there in the studio, and the other musicians were waiting: it was Kingsley on the piano and Ojo on fddle bass. Fela had his silver trumpet. 50Chapter 3 Fela just counted of one- two- three- four and we started a tune. He played the theme, and then I played a fll to let them know that we are going to the second cycle [chorus] again. And we went on into it. When that cycle fnished, I injected another fll. On the third one, Fela stopped. And he looked at Benson and shouted, Benson do you hear this? Ben- son said, Yes! Fela said we should continue, that were going to play some more and then end the tune by trading fours. We started, every- body played nicely for a few minutes, and then we started to trade fours. On my fourth solo he told everyone to stop again and he called out to Benson again: Benson, did you hear that? Then he turned to me and asked, Have you studied in the States? Have you studied in London? I said no. He then asked me, where did I get my own way of drumming? I said hereright here in Lagos. Ah, he saidhe said he never thought he would ever fnd a good drummer, and that I had helped him observe every cycle. And he said that when we were trading fours, every one of my solos was uniquenone resembled the other. So we just closed the day like that. I still had my own gig, working six nights a week with the Toppers. But in between, I started to gig with Fela, playing jazz, like Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers, Horace Silver, and those types of things. We would play for parties on the boats, sailing in the lagoon and on the sea, what we used to call buka. Sometimes I would have to fake sickness with the Toppers so that I could play with Fela. I loved this jazz music so much, and fnally I had the opportunity to do it. That meant that I didnt have to play so much highlife. I didnt have to play so much cha- cha- cha, tango, or waltz. It was strictly jazz, for the frst time in my life. So it was like the sky was the limit for me, and it made me practice more and to listen more closely to all those great jazz drummers. All of those jazz drummers were my idols when I was in my twenties because at that time I thought they were doing something impossible. To me it was impossible that it was only one guy playing all this stuf; at least, I thought there had to be somebody extra playing the cymbal on top there. I thought it had to be two guys playing the drums. For example, Tony Williams was a killer, manthe intensity and the speed! That guy was a fucking good drummer, man! Listening to people like Tony Wil- liams and Art Blakey, I knew it had to be more than two drummers! But I could only listen to the records because there was nothing like video back then. And I eventually found out that it was trueit was only one guy! So those were the things that really inspired me, and I just knew that if The Sky Was the Limit51 I couldnt play this way, I shouldnt call myself a drummer. Jazz changed my way of drumming completely, because jazz solos are diferent from highlife solos, on the drums. When they start to play drum solos in high- life, the people dance to the solos. And the solo is like talking. Most of the drummers, they talk with the drums because thats what we do on our traditional drums. They make parables, and if you understand the lan- guage, youll know what hes talking about. In those days that was vogue. Ive done all that. I had to play like them frst before any other thing. But it wasnt really what I was after. I was asking myself, Where do we go next? And thats when I realized that I had a job to do, man, and I have tried to do my job properly. From the frst day, Fela and I became close friends. From the jazz times all the way through the 60s, very good friends. Theres nothing he wouldnt tell me. Wed hang out in the night and joke with each other. Hed ask me, How many girls have you got tonight? Id say, Two. Then he would say, Two. Ah, I beat you now. Id say, How many? Hed say hes on the fourth one. Four! Things like this, you know. Many times we talked when we had to travel somewhere ahead of the band, to get the gig and all the agreements together. We would drive there together and believe me, that wasnt easy because Fela should have been a Grand Prix driver. You would never sit down inside Felas car, Im sure. By the time he drives fve kilometers, you would beg him to stop. Youre talking about speed? He could have made a lot of money as a racer because hes really a fucking driver! Often he would ask me to pick his kids up from school in the after- noon when he didnt feel like going. And sometimes I would even cook for them because Im a good cook, and Remi, his wife, was coming from the UK. Remi couldnt really cook Nigerian food. She could only make something like tomato stew, so if she wanted another local dish like egusi or something like that, she would ask me to cook it, and when Fela tasted the food he would always say, Remi, you never cooked this stew! Who cooked this? And she would always have to say it was Allen! I really did a lot to help this guy out, but I did it out of friendship. We went on with the jazz thing for about one year and a half, and then Fela suddenly decided he didnt want to have a jazz band anymore. The question was, Wheres the money? Because many local bandleaders in the country were rich at that timethe highlife bandleaders, and some of the juju bandleaders, 52Chapter 3 too. They were rich with houses, feets of cars, and many wives. The pub- lic wasnt really seeing jazz as the music they loved to dance tothey were seeing it more as an educational thing. So we couldnt play it all the time. We were only playing on Thursdays for the boat parties. For me, I couldnt make it playing once in a week like this. And Fela himself had a family to support. He came back to Nigeria with two children, and his wife Remi was pregnant with the third one, which was born in Lagos. So he decided that if he could not beat them, he would join them. He had to join up with the highlife people, and that was it. This was in 1965. Fela liked highlife anyway. After all, he was singing it with Victor Olaiya before he left for London, so why wouldnt he like it? Highlife was so sweet in those days, and the style coming from Ghana, man, you know it was great! E. T. Mensah, Ramblers, and all those great bands. Those records stormed Nigeria! So Fela decided to form a highlife band. But it wasnt going to be highlife like Rex Lawson would play, or like Olaiya would play. Nothe style was going to be highlife jazz. It was going to be like a combination of the two. He could still put all of his jazz stuf in there, but at least the people could dance to it. Even though we were no longer playing straight jazz, the change didnt bother me at all. Sometimes the jazz didnt feel full enough for me, be- cause jazz drumming doesnt have too much bass drum action. I mean, the kick is there, but its just to accent every now and then, and youre playing most of your stuf on top, on the snare and cymbals. Its very much like foating, in a way. I like more bass drum in my own style. But I passed through the jazz thing, and thank God I got my experience from it. It enlightened me so much about how beautiful and enjoyable drum- ming could be when you know how to handle it. For Fela and me, that was our trip for one whole year, and I was able to bring all of the jazz into how I played in the new band. Highlife, jazz, African beats, call it anythingI combined them all together in my own style of playing. With all the music business going on, Fela knew he wasnt going to last long with the NBc. He was going back and forth between the two jobs, and his superiors didnt like that. So he didnt wait for the sackhe just resigned himself after a couple of years. He knew it was coming. Benson also knew that he was risking his own job at the NBc, because sometimes he had to travel with us. People were always telling him, Be careful, man, because if you follow a guy like Fela, youre going to lose your job. One night I was giging with the Toppers around the end of 1965, and I happened to peep through the window of the club. I saw a brand- new The Sky Was the Limit53 white Opel Cadet caravan pulling up. And on the side it was written, in blue letters, Fela Ransome- Kuti and his Koola Lobitos. Actually, Fela had a group in London before with the same name, just to try and make some bread and have fun while he was in school. But this was going to be a new group with totally new members. Fela and Benson came into the club and told me that since they had discovered me to be so strong in the jazz thing, they would now like me to be the drummer in the highlife band. But Fela didnt really know how to talk to people, or how to approach them nicely. His way of talking was like, Give me that. I want it. Not, Excuse me, could you please give me that thing? He was just like that, no manners. He wasnt polite. Totally diferent from his brothers Beko and Koye. Thats why, when it came to business, Benson had to do the talking for him many times. So when they came to convince me to leave the Toppers, it was Benson that was doing most of the talking. Later, Fela even sent a messenger to a club where I was playing, saying that I should resign from the Toppers im- mediately. Resign like that, in the middle of the month? I told them no way! I told them that I would do that if they were really ready to get the band together, but Id have to wait til the end of the month, when I got my salary. Then Id resign. I had to think about it, too, because as I told you, my father always advised me, Dont leave certainty for uncertainty. And several times in the past, I had already left certainty for uncertainty. With this Koola Lobitos thing too, it was kind of dangerous, because with the Toppers, at least I had some sort of umbrella. I even had a house with that deal. But Fela was telling me that when this thing takes of, he and I would be sharing the money like a partnership. That motivated me. So it was destiny, you know. Everything in life is a risk, and I was gunning for something. And thats why at the end of the month, for the frst time in my life, I submitted my resignation letters. One went to the proprietor of the hotel where the Toppers were playing. He gave me my salary and I gave him the letter. And the other I gave to Adeolu. I knew that the proprietor was a worrier. He came to my house and asked me what had happened? Was it money? If it was about money, why couldnt I just tell him that I needed more money? He said he could even give me the salary I originally asked forthe twenty- six pounds and that I could still keep the house. But I told him it wasnt a question of that. I told him that I liked everybody around the business, especially him, but I wanted to be somebody and to reach somewhere with this music thing. Everything was roses with the gig, but there was one thing 54Chapter 3 that was lackingI wasnt challenged by the music. It wasnt that the Toppers were not good. They were good. Its just that I was looking for a challenge, and to me, Felas music was going to be a big challenge. So I told the proprietor that if was a matter of the house, just tell me how much I should pay, and I would pay it monthly. We worked all that out, and then I went to continue with Fela. Thats when the rehearsals started for Koola Lobitos. The core of the band was Fela, me, Ojo on bass, and Lekan Animashaun (Baba Ani) on baritone sax. Later we added Isaac Olasugba on alto, who had just arrived from Liberia, and Yinka Roberts on guitar. When Yinka left around 1968, we got Fred Lawal. And we had Eddie Ifayehun, who was the frst trum- pet player that stuck with us. When Eddie left, we got Tunde Williams around 1967. We later added Christopher Uwaifor on alto, also. Fela wrote all the music in the band. Every fucking thing from the Koola Lobitos to the end of his life, he wrote and arranged everything ex- cept for my drum parts. Nobody ever came with his own ideas. And this is the way I think it should be. After all, he was the bandleader and the owner of the band, so he had to get his music together the way he wanted. At a certain point, though, Koola Lobitos was looking for a few outside songs, and Fela even asked me to invite Adeolu from the Western Toppers to come and give him some lyrics, since they were both from Abeokuta. But I told him that I myself knew this song Yeshe at that timeit was kind of an erotic song, but also a folkloric song. Fela didnt know it. So I told him, Lets just sing Yeshe. He took it and arranged it in his own way and it became popular. Bands were even playing it in Ghana. That was the only time I ever contributed anything, songwise. But my drum- ming patterns were all my own. Fela left that completely up to me. But believe me, man, those frst auditions were something else! The musicians that we hired in those days had been playing with other high- life bands before and werent prepared for Felas music. The bunch that came for the frst Koola Lobitos rehearsal never even came back the next day! They were complaining that what Fela was writing for them was im- possible to play, that it was too weird for them. Sometimes for the horn players, Fela had to take his trumpet out and show the fngerings and the blowing techniques. He would show them by ear. As a matter of fact, he preferred for us to learn it by ear frst because that way you really had it inside of you. Even if a musician could read the part in front of them, Fela would still play for it them, because they had never played the types of rhythms that he was writing. The Sky Was the Limit55 Some of the musicians didnt like this. So a guy might pretend for the day until the rehearsal was fnished, but the next day, when we would all be there waiting, you didnt see him. Okay, time to start all over again. That means the next day, we had to start looking for another trumpeter or saxophonist or guitarist. Many of the musicians even came to gigs, said they were going to piss, and then split and left their instrument on- stage, just before the gig started. It wasnt their instrument, anywayit was Felas, because in Nigeria at that time, the bandleaders owned all the bands instruments. But really, its not like we had many instruments when we started out. At the beginning, it was really a strugle for us to play on good instru- ments. Believe it or not, the frst time Fela ever bought new instruments for the band was in 1971, when we went to London! All those years be- fore that, we were just making do. When we started Koola Lobitos, Fela only had his trumpet, and his mother had bought him a bass to use in the band. Most of the other instruments, we had to rent from Bobby Benson. Bobby was one of the most famous highlife musicians, and he had his club called Caban Bamboo on Ikorodu Road. And since Bobby was always traveling back and forth outside the country and coming back with new instruments, he opened an instrument shop in the back of the club. Bobby was always rescuing us, and many times we had to rent from him at the last minute before a gig. Even I myself didnt have a regular drum set back then. There was a guy named Femi Asekun who was a drummer and a producer at NtA (Nigerian Television Authority) who gave me a set that I had to piece together myself. It only had bass drum, snare, one tom- tom, and a ride cymbal. No hi- hat. I did the best I could with it. The only time I sat down at a good set was when we played at Bobbys club, because they had a good set there that was used by his son Tony, who was also a drummer. Tony liked my playing, and one day he gave me a brand- new bass drum pedal as a gift. Another drummer who helped me out sometimes was my friend Bayo Martins. I think Bayo liked me for having a low profle compared to all the show- of musicians around Lagos. Bayo knew that my drums were always falling apart. He was married to a Ger- man woman named Gerwine and he had a set of drums that he brought back from Frankfurt that were fantastic, man! Bayo liked my playing and he told me, Tony, you are a great drummer, so take my drums to use any time when you are playing with Fela. It was something that I really ap- preciated, because playing his drums was like driving a limousine for me! Meanwhile, I was taking care of the amplifers when they were breaking 56Chapter 3 down. I took care of all the electronics because I knew how to do that from my training. I didnt really compare the other bandleaders with Fela. Those band- leaders were all richer than him, and their records were selling. But one had a lot more to learn from Fela, musically, than from the others. He wanted to make a mixture of things, which makes you gain more knowl- edge. It was a good favor, musically. To me he was presenting a big chal- lenge because anytime we were going to rehearse any new song, it was like we were going to the battlefeld, man. You didnt know what was in the head of this guy, so you would be praying to handle it coolly because it wasnt so easy and nobody writes music like this guy, ever! Especially during the Koola Lobitos days. You were shaking already before you ar- rived there. So you had to have guts to play in that band. And Fela fned you for every mistake. In fact, he had a whole system of fnes. If you played the wrong note, you were fned. If you came late to a rehearsal or a gig, you were fned. Then there was what he called frst touch. The rule in the band was no physical fghting. But sometimes it happened, and whoever threw the frst punch was fned. The fne sys- tem was another reason many of the musicians didnt stay. But we kept on going and going. We didnt get any rest, recruiting new musicians all the time. But with Fela, the music was always moving forward, to me. There were some nice tunes, like Ololufe, Oloruka, Ako, and Obe. Those were kicking tracks for me, and I can still imagine myself playing them, even today! I stayed with Fela for ffteen years because things were always moving forward, musically. No drummer could play what I was playing with Koola Lobitos. My playing was more dynamic than the other drummers in the country. The basic style was still highlife, but with something extra. Fela wrote out the parts for everyone else in the band, but the only thing that he wrote for meif he wanted to write anythingwas the horn accents. It was magic to see me syncopating with the horns. I wasnt just playing it straight anymore, I was syncopating with the horns on the front line and then coming back to my groove again, playing like with a big band approach. Even with all that phrasing, I kept the groove going. Plus, we had added Isiaka on percussion, to keep the groove going straight. We did our recording at Phillips Studio, in Ijora. But recording in studios at that time was just like playing live, because it was the old sys- tem of recording. No multitrack, just two tracks. You couldnt overdub anything, and you had to get everything right in one take. The whole band The Sky Was the Limit57 was recorded directly on two tracks and was mixed down immediately; there was no mixing afterwards. Most of the time that was no problem for us because we were a very tight band anyway. But with Fela being a per- fectionist, one three- minute track could take only God knows how long in the studio. Sometimes six hours! Any small- small thing wrong, and he would say, No! If anybody made one small mistake, you had to start all over again because Fela wanted the record to sound perfect. Koola Lobitos had a strong reputation and we sometimes even backed artists visiting from out of the country. The frst one was a pop singer from England and Jamaica named Millicent Small, who had a very popular hit ska song called My Boy Lollipop. The promoter Eddie Boma gave us the job that time. That was in 67. We played ska, just the way the record sounded. Since that tour was a success, a biger promoter named Steve Rhodes brought Millie the second time, in 1968. This time, she was coming on a package with another Jamaican singer named Jackie Edwards. They sent all the scores in advance, and the music was ready for them by the time they arrived. Chubby Checker was also a guest with us, during the time of the Twist. Maybe it was around 68 or 69. A lot of accidents hap- pened at the time of the Twist. Many people were twisting in Nigeria, and unfortunately, some twisted themselves to death. Some people really twisted their intestines on the dance foor, and then fell down with a cramp. By the time they got them to hospital, they were dead! There was one night that the band almost died, too! We had gone to Ibadan to play, and we hired a Mercedes- Benz minibus. Fela was driving his own car and the whole band was in the minibus. We went to Ibadan and played, and then we had to head back to Lagos after the show. Fela stayed behind because he wanted to get some sleep. And I remember that after the concert, my stomach was feeling so bad that they gave me a seat for two people so that I could sleep while we were driving. Then we left for Lagos. Near Lagos, at a place called Majidun, there is a bridge to Ikorodu with a river running underneath. Its just like forty miles to Lagos. I was in a deep sleep, and all of a sudden I felt tumbling. Everybody was scream- ing. Myself, I wasnt screaming. I just opened my eyes into darkness. I relaxed because I didnt know where I was. The driver had slept of and run of the road, man! Everything was broken. People were passing on top of me and mashing me down to climb out of the bus. And then I got up and realized that everything was upside down and I was walking on top of the ceiling. 58Chapter 3 But the thing is, we escaped the river! Because the driver had just crossed the bridge when this thing happened, so the river was behind us and we went rolling into the bush on the other side. And I thanked my God a million times because if that thing had happened just a few sec- onds before, we would have plunged into the river and that would have been it. Nobody would have survived. They came to rescue us and bring us out. And all the musicians were broken completely. The nearest hospital was at Ikorodu and everybody was taken there. I got a broken ankle and shattered glass in my hands. Benson got broken ribs. Later they transferred us to the orthopedic hos- pital in Lagos. Felas nurse sister Dolu came to see us and to give advice to doctors and all those things. Then we all went home. When Fela ar- rived in Lagos, he went to the Afro- Spot, because it was Sunday morn- ing and we were supposed to be playing the Jump that afternoon. But he didnt see his musicians! Thats when he was told that all your musicians should have been dead! But they arent dead! So if youre still living, you should thank your God and pray that you still have a long way to go. Those were minor problems, man, because the Civil War had started in Nigeria in late 66. But even with the war on, we were still able to travel around the country, at least for a while. We even went to the East, inside the war zone, a couple of times. We went to Calabar to play for the Nigerian army, because they had invited us. They brought us in from Lagos in one of their air force jets. There were no seats on the plane, so we sat on the foor. Another time, we were invited to play inside the war zone at Port Harcourt by Commander Benjamin Adekunle, who they used to call the Black Scorpion. Ade- kunle met us at the airport in Port Harcourt with bundles and bundles of British pounds that he handed right over to Fela. Only God knows how much was there. Adekunle enjoyed the gig so much that when we fn- ished, his colleague in Calabar wanted us to come back and play there as well. So Adekunle said we should go play in Calabar before we returned to Lagos, which we did. When we fnished, it was around two thirty on a Sunday and we still had to make it back to Lagos to play the Sunday Jump at four thirty. And no plane had arrived to carry us. The air command- ers told Adekunle that there were no planes available at that time. But at that moment there was a plane passing overhead, fying toward Kano. Adekunle radioed and told the pilot that on his way back from Kano, he The Sky Was the Limit59 should land in Calabar and pick us up. And thats what he did! He few us to Lagos, and we were able to make the Sunday Jump. Another time, we were attacked in Port Harcourt by some fans of Car- dinal Rex Lawson. What happened was that back in Lagos, we had gone to do a music competition, and the four fnalists were Fela, Roy Chicago, Rex Lawson, and Victor Olaiya. So we went to do the next round at the Federal Hotel, but that night Rex Lawson decided not to come to the competition. He decided to play at the Central Hotel in Yaba instead. And so Fela and Koola Lobitos won the cup that night and we took the trophy in a procession to where Rex was playing, because Fela and Rex were rivals. Fela was on top of the car holding the trophy. We arrived at the hotel and took the trophy inside to show Rex that we won the cup. He was onstage singing his songs, and we danced around with the trophy and after that we went back home. That trophy stayed in Felas house until the house got burnt in 1977. So when we went to play in Port Harcourt, we went to hear Rex play on our of night. There was a total blackout in the streets there because of the war, but there was a big crowd in the club because they had gen- erators working. We were drinking and enjoying the music coolly until the end of the show. But outside the club, some of Lawsons fans came to pick a fght with us because of what happened back in Lagos at the com- petition. They just decided to show us what they could do on their turf, because Lawson himself was from the Eastthat was a part of it, too. Fela was the one they were going after because he was the leader and they wanted to get him. But Fela himself was not a fghter, so we were protect- ing himit was me, Yinka Roberts, and Ojo Okeji. The fght went on for about one hour. But luckily we got out of that. Those were the kinds of experiences we had, trying to play music during the war. The war was one reason we spent a lot of time in Ghana. Ghana was like our second home. I would have loved to stay there because Nkrumah was there at that time. Ghana was like the England of Africa to us. It was completely diferent from Lagos. Ghana was really swinging. There was more music in Ghana than in Lagos. More clubs, too. In fact, the idea of the Afternoon Jump is something we brought back from Ghana. They didnt do that much in Lagos before then, but they did it in Ghana a lot, having concerts on Sunday afternoons. Most of the concerts we played in Ghana were in the 60Chapter 3 afternoon. We only really played a few at night. When we brought that to Lagos, everyone else started copying it. One reason it caught on in Lagos was because of the war. People were afraid to go out at night. To us, Ghana was like a white mans land, in a way, because of the cool- ness of the country and how everything was so organized. There was no laziness there. There were no layabouts there. Nkrumah did that, theres no lying about that. In fact, many Nigerians were leaving Nigeria to come and live in Ghana and do their business there. They didnt even want to think about Nigeria anymore. At that time, whenever we went to Ghana, I myself never wanted to come back to Lagos. I felt like, why couldnt we stay where things were happening? But Fela couldnt do it, because for a while he still had the job at the NBc. Ghana was full of great bands. The musicians were great because they had schools for everything there. Like music schools that you could go to even if you had no money; if you wanted it, it was there for you. And musicians were also being trained in the air force and in the army. So many great musicians were coming out of Ghana. The Stargazers band was there. There was Mack Tontoh, who later went on to form Osibisa. The Ramblers were there too; they were led by Jerry Hansen, and it was one of the most disciplined bands in Ghana, apart from E. T. Mensahs band. And then there was Uhuru Dance Band. Uhuru was one of those groups that played highlife, but sometimes they mixed it with the tradi- tional drumming, like the traditional Ashanti drumming. Fantastic, man. I think they inspired some of those younger bands that were fusing the traditional music into the highlife in the 1970s, like Hedzolleh, Bunzu, and Basabasa Sounds. They were all doing the same kind of fusion. But this type of music has disappeared completely today, man. Uhuru was one of the outstanding bands in West Africa at that time. It was a big band, about ten pieces, and the leader was Stan Plange. Stan also directed the big band at the television studio in Accra. They always bought their pieces from those jazz big bands in the States, and they played them note for note. Uhuru always had good singers, too, like Char- lotte Dada. It was a band I loved to hear. I loved to sit down in front of them and listen and watch them. Uhurus drummer Rim Obeng was one of my idols. I already had a reputation as a killer drummer by that time, and I know Rim admired my style of playing. But the frst time I saw him playing with Uhuru I said, Wow, I still have work to do! I never wanted to leave the place when he sat down at the drums. I just wanted to watch this guy play all night. The Sky Was the Limit61 And the strange thing about it was that he was playing with curved sticks, like they use on traditional drums. He was using these curved sticks on a Western trap drum set, and the sound was so fucking good! After see- ing Rim, I tried to adapt to those curved sticks too. I was trying to fnd out how he could use those sticks with so much fexibility. I played that way with Koola Lobitos for about three years. The only problem was that those sticks couldnt handle the cymbals. They broke very quickly. Rim and a bunch of other musicians left Uhuru for the Ghana Armed Forces Band. That was another great band. They were as good as Uhuru and all the other highlife bands. Rim was there until he left to go to the States. He came to Lagos to stay with Fela for one or two weeks, then went on to the States, to Los Angeles. Then that was it. I never heard from him again. Another fantastic drummer in Ghana was Remi Kabaka, the founder of a band called Paramount Eight, who were a good strong band when it came to playing highlife and jazz covers. Remi had a style that re- minded me of Art Blakey. It was Rim and Remi that were really keeping me on my toes as a drummer! Koola Lobitos played a lot of gigs alongside all of those bands. They would play before us, or we would play before them. Since then, though, Ghana has gone down. Nkrumah really tried to help his people, but they didnt know what the plan of the guy was, and they fucked it up. Its not the same country now that it was then. Theyve closed most of the clubs now. The last time I was in Accra, all the old clubs had become churches. And they are not playing highlife anymorethey are playing what they call gospel- highlife. Or they are making what they call hip- life. They have gone through many things since the days of Nkrumah. Theyve just started coming up again, slowly, recently. But its still much more stable than Nigeria, and it always was. Back in Lagos, people were starting to change their minds about Koola Lobitos around 196869 because we were getting our shit together prop- erly and we had our own fans. Around that time we were playing tunes like Ololufe, Laise, Obe, and Ako. Every week we played the Sun- day Jump at the Kakadu Club, and the place was always full. After that we moved from the Kakadu to the Central Hotel, where Cardinal Rex Law- son was playing before he left for the East. We also did a thing called VC7 with Isaac Olasugba. It was really the Koola Lobitos band without Fela, and with Isaac leading. We recorded a song called Eke and another one called Oritshe. That was great music. It was around that time that Fela and our Ghanaian promoter Ray- 62Chapter 3 mond Aziz came up with the name Afrobeat. Raymond asked Fela if this highlife- jazz name really meant anything. He said, why not name this music Afrobeat? Everything was Afro- this, Afro- that at the time. It was really just a name to help sell the music. It didnt mean anything spe- cial, at least not at that point. They just wanted to fnd a name that was catchy. And that is also the reason that when Fela went back to lease the Kakadu again, he renamed it Afro- Spot. The Afro- Spot was on Herbert Macauley Street in Alagomeji. We played a lot of battles there against other bands. Young pop groups like the Cyclops, the Hykkers, and the Clusters were the three giants of the school bands, and they used to play at the Afro- Spot sometimes. Most of them played what we called copy- right music: covers of the Beatles, Rolling Stones, Elvis, everything. I admired them a lot, because they could interpret properly. They all had good singers. Stuf like Otis Redding, they could sing it note for note. Some of the Ghanaian bands used to come to Lagos and play with us too. It was always Koola Lobitos versus the Ramblers International, Koola Lobitos versus Uhuru Dance Band, and Koola Lobitos versus the Black Santiagos (they were from Togo). Those gigs were great, because we could watch each other and learn. For example, thats where Rim and I learned a lot from each other. Thats what made the music so strong at that timeall of these bands were listening and learning from each other, and we had a ball, too. The music was great in Koola Lobitos, but the musicians were always going zigzag. When you see musicians coming and going, why do you think theyre leaving? After all, the gigs were steady, and the music was great for the ones who hung in there with us. If it was cool for them, do you think anybody would leave? They left because something was not happening. And that thing was the bread. When it comes to the bandleaders in Nigeria at that time, the bread was always a problem, and Fela was following the same system that was there before him. The bandleaders loved to spend all of their money, and then to spend the money of the musicians, too. And some of them, they didnt even want to part with any money at all, even though they were employing you. They preferred to have many girlfriends and to spend money like a big man. In most cases somebody will sufer for it, and it is the musicians that sufer. There was no chance to create perfec- tion with the music, within this business of musicians and bandleaders. Especially under the bandleaders that owned all their own instruments, The Sky Was the Limit63 because the musicians dont even have their own instruments to play. They have to play in the band to even be able to touch an instrument. Sometimes, like in the case of Fela, all the music is his, too. You see, thats why the bandleaders always underestimate the musicians, because they feel like Im the one doing all the work anyway. The typical salary system for musicians in Nigeria back then was that you got paid once a month. But the payment system in Felas band, from Koola Lobitos all the way through Africa 70, was weekly payment. And this was because Fela could not handle money, and he knew it. He was very extravagant with money, and his way of life made the money dis- appear. If he had kept the money when we made it, he would have been able to pay it properly at the end of the month. But it was even a strugle to get the proper bread at the end of one week. For example, Sunday is the day we got our pay. But he was the frst person to come knocking on my door on Monday morning, to borrow half of my money back. He just paid me six pounds yesterday, and he wants to borrow three pounds today! And because his house was so close to mine, he could just put his car in reverse and come to my door, borrow the money, and then take of. He would say, Lend it to me, and Ill pay you back tonight. Because on Monday nights we played at the Gondola. And if I hesitated, he would make me feel as if I had killed him, or as if I had done something really bad to him. So I gave it to him and told him that as soon as we fnished playing that night, I wanted my money back. But that night when the show was over, he would come to me and say, Ah, Allenko, you know that we are going to play on Thursday. So Ill give you one pound of the three now, and Ill give you the rest Thursday. That was how it worked. I could never get my money back in full. And before he paid me the other two pounds, he was coming to borrow more! Thats the kind of guy Fela was when it came to stuf like that. He had his own way of doing things; Ill put it like that. For example, I used to have very bad stomach problems. I had ulcers from the age of eight, and all my life its been a problem. Once when I had my stomach problems very badly, Felas doctor brother Koye wrote a note on a piece of paper and told me to give it to Fela. He told Fela to give me two weeks of. But when Fela saw it he asked Koye, Why did you give him two weeks of? He has to play. Koye said, Man, the guys sick with a persistent ulcer. Your work is too rigorous. You have to let him rest a bit. Dont worry him. But still Fela was coming to try and wake me up in the middle of the night. I would tell him, go get John Bull to cover for me. Or Remi 64Chapter 3 Kabaka. But no one would cover for me, because they were scared of the music. They respected it, but they could not handle it. Fela tried both of those guys when I was sick, but it didnt work out. So that meant no gigs for the band. That particular weekend, they managed with John Bull for the frst night. But the second night there was a band coming from Ghana and we were supposed to play together. Fela couldnt face one of these great bands without his drummer. So I was sleeping in the middle of the night and there was a knock at my door. It was Fela, telling me, You have to come to the club. You have to play. I asked him, What about John Bull? Isnt he there? Fela said, Hes there, but he cannot do it. But your brother said I should be resting. I know, but you have to come. He told me he was going back to the club and that I should come with a taxi and the ticket guy would pay the taxi driver when I arrived. I took my shower, dressed up, and got a taxi to Afro- Spot. Everybody was waiting for me there, and as soon as I arrived, I just saw everybody shouting and jubilat- ing. But I was fucking sick, man! After that night I told him, Please, dont call me tomorrow. I aint coming. And I was out for the rest of those two weeks. I knew the band was gonna sweat a lot without me. But I couldnt help it because I needed my health. I needed my money too, but I didnt put the music and the bread in the same category. Even though I knew this shit was wrong, I accepted it and managed because I had another job maintaining the printers at Asso- ciated Press. That was what was saving my neck and allowing me to pay my rent. Working with Fela, it was either one or the otherthe music or the money. It was a question of take it or leave it. And I knew which one I wanted to take at that point in my lifeit was the music. Because the music was improving, and I felt like I was improving a lot myself. But some of the guys couldnt take this situation. Once Ojo even pulled a knife on Fela because of money. What happened was that sometimes Ojo wasnt learning the parts quickly in rehearsal. On this particular day he played just one note incorrectly, and Fela tried to fne him. Ojo didnt want to take all that shit, you know? He was like, Youre playing with my money. So he reacted. He wasnt going to do anything to Fela, he just tried to frighten him. We cooled down Ojo and Fela didnt fre him. If he had fred him, then he would have to start all over again to train another bass player anyway. So he just had to accept that it was settled, and move on. But in his mind, Ojo had already decided that he was gonna leave one day, as soon as anything else opened up for him. The Sky Was the Limit65 It was around 1968 that Ojo left to go into the Nigerian Army Band, along with Isiaka and some of the others. Actually, many musicians were joining the army band at that time, because it was a good gig. I was going to do it, too. But when I got to the barracks, I found out that the music di- rector of the army had gone to school with Fela in London. His name was Major Olu Obokun. He knew all about the Koola Lobitos, and when he saw the list of all of us that enlisted, he went directly to Fela to say, Man, you are dead! Fela asked him what had happened and Major Obokun told him, Dont you know how many of your musicians have enlisted in the army? Because Major Obokun was Felas mate from school, he came to talk to him about it frst. That meant this guy really didnt want to de- stroy Felas band. He wanted to make sure before he signed all of our en- listment papers. Fela summoned everybody and asked us if it was true. And we told him yes: Ojo, Isi, almost everybody had enlisted. He asked me if I had enlisted too, and I told him yes. That day was the frst time in my life I saw Fela cry, right in front of all of us. He really bawled like a baby, because he fgured he was completely fnished. But by me seeing him cry that day, I thought this thing was hitting him too hard. So I just stopped going to the barracks. And in the end, Major Obokun didnt sign everyone. He just signed Ojo and Isi, and we kept the Koola Lobitos going. We replaced Ojo with a bass player from the East named Felix Jones, and we replaced Isi with a percussionist named Henry Kof. Kof was Nigerian, but part of his family came from Togo or Benin, which is where the name Kof came from. Inside the band, we called him Perdido. In a way, the type of music that Koola Lobitos was performing was too far ahead of the coun- try. It wasnt straight highlife, so there were no tunes that anybody knew. Theyd rather go for the straight highlife that they already knew. Or soul music, which had a very big impact. That was our bigest challenge. For example, people loved James Brown, and Brown was a big star in Africa. Then Geraldo Pino came in doing his thing, imitating James Brown. Pino had been in Ghana in 66 and 67 with his band the Heartbeats. And they were playing a real carbon copy of James Brownsinging, dancing, everything. But at least he was doing it in Ghana, so it wasnt a problem for us. But then he started to have problems in Ghana, I think because he was messing around with the wives of some of the top politicians there. So they deported him from Ghana, and he came to Lagos with his band. 66Chapter 3 And they completely took Lagos, man! This was another big challenge for us. We were already strugling to establish our feet in the middle of the highlife thing. Now we had to deal with the soul thing. Fela tried some things like arranging Eddie Floyds song Knock on Wood and some other soul numbers in our own highlife- jazz style. But really, we needed to escape Lagos, because Pino had it and there was nothing we could do. So it was around this time when we met a guy named Tunde Fademolu. Hes the brother of the guy that runs Jofabro, the label that recorded the Music of Fela album with Trouble Sleep, Roforofo Fight, and those tunes. A lot of our fans were students, and many of them went on to study in places like the States. Fademolu was one of those students. He was living in Washington, DC, and he wanted to promote Nigerian music in the States, but he didnt want to take Pino to the States. Pino owned Lagos at that time, but it would have been a big joke in the USafter watching Pino do his James Brown thing once, the people would never come back again, because the master himself was there! Fademolu liked Fela and he liked the Koola Lobitoss music, so he wanted to take us to the States for a tour. He came to the Afro- Spot to negotiate with Fela one day in the beginning of 1969. At that time, the band was eleven pieces plus one dancer, so we really had twelve per- forming every night. Fademolu only had a budget for ten people, so we had to lay of the clefs and maracas players. We needed the dancer to go with us to animate what we were playing for the audience, because they werent going to be familiar with the music. And even before we laid of the percussionists, Fela used to look at my drumming as if I already had maracas and a shaker in my drumming, because of the way I played my hi- hats. My hi- hats are constantly going, so its like theyre representing the shaker. We missed the real one in the band, but not too much. So we were going to the States with a nine- piece band, plus our dancer Dele. We decided to leave Lagos to Pino and give the US thing a try. Fela felt that highlife- jazz needed to be exposed in the States anyway. We didnt really have any opportunities there aside from what Fademolu was promising us, but Fela wanted to go for it. Plus, the civil war was really on in 1969 and that was afecting every- bodys movements. Like the tour in 68 with Millie Small and Jackie Edwards. The gigs in the western part of the country were okay. But then we were supposed to go east, into the war zone, and it was more danger- ous now than the time we went to Port Harcourt to play for Adekunle. At The Sky Was the Limit67 the airport in Lagos, the promoter Steve Rhodes got a call from General Ojukwu, who was the leader of Biafra. Ojukwu told Steve that although he himself would like us to come, he couldnt guarantee our safety. So Steve said, Lets go back. We cannot go to the East because we are not guaranteed any safety. The next scheduled gig was in the North. We had the Hykkers as the opening group to play before us, and they were all Igbos. So now we had to take these Igbo boys to the north, where they had been massacring Igbos! We didnt know what might happen. But we did it, and they were safe because we were like a shield for them. And I even remember that some people in the audience were trying to jump in and start something because of the Hykkers. They wanted to attack them right onstage! When we were in the van leaving after the show, we barely escaped. The war was also killing of the nightlife in Lagos. There were black- outs in the night, no streetlights, and no lights in peoples compounds. You could only have lights in your individual rooms. Imagine us going to play in the night and coming home in the darkness, in the midst of all this. Sometimes we encountered soldiers from the federal army, and we had to deal with all the atrocities they committed. They would just take women from the men that were driving home in the night. They would pull the man out of the car and take him away, do whatever they were going to do with the woman, and later they would release her. And this woman, who is she going to complain to? There was nobody you could complain to! But even with this shit, people were still going out in the night, at least at frst. But after a while bombings started happening, ter- rorist attacks. Like someone would drive a car full of explosives into a petrol station, and when the mechanic lifted the hood upboom! At the Yaba bus stop near my house in Lagos, a Mobil petrol station was blown up like this. Another time, they parked a big petrol tank truck right in front of a cinema, and when the audience came out, the truck exploded and killed a lot of people. So Lagos was becoming like a ghost town at night, and we all felt like Let us get our asses out of this place! GODS OWN COUNTRY We left Lagos in early June of 1969. We had a stopover in Dakar, and Miriam Makeba few over from Lagos with us. She was on her way to Guinea, but she always liked to visit Fela. That was because Fela was Hugh Masekelas friend, and Masekela was Miriams friend. Miriam told us that it might be very tough in the States, but we were all looking forward to the tour anyway. We landed in New York and changed planes for Washington, DC. When we arrived in DC, I thought about the fact that the money was never paid properly with Fela and that I didnt really know what we would face in the US. So after fve days, I de- cided to look for a job. I knew that my former boss at Associated Press, Mr. Zeitlin, was now in the New York ofce, because they rotated them every three years. So I called Ap and Mr. Zeitlin asked me, Where are you? I said, Im in Washington. He said, Did you come with the band? I told him yes. He told me that if I came to New York, there was a job waiting for me. The job was maintaining the printers, the same job that I had done at Asso- ciated Press in Lagos. It was a good job. But I told him it wasnt possible because we were in the US on group visas. He told me not to worry about that. He said, If you can get yourself to New York, Ill give you a job and Ill get your papers, passport and everything. I told myself, This is big. Because many Nigerians at that time saw America as Gods own country and dreamt of getting 4 Gods Own Country69 a good job there. It was a serious decision. If I had done that, it might have meant the end of the band. They would all have to go back home. Theres no way they could do it without me. Even if they found another drummer, there would have been no way that Fela could pay the per- son in American wages. So I told Mr. Zeitlin that we were going on tour and that Id get back to him when we were fnished with the tour. But in my heart I knew that although that was a good job ofer, and although I thought about leaving the band, I was meant to play music. We had some buddies in DC who put us up for a while, diferent Nige- rian people accommodating us. That was lucky for us because we found out very soon that Fademolu didnt know shit about promoting. It was as if we came to the States to only play for Nigerian parties! Why are we in the States if it is only Nigerians we are playing for? We could have stayed home and done that! This went on for two months with this guy. Going back and forth between DC and New York. He did get us a few good gigs. We played for one big party at the Roosevelt Hotel in Manhattan. That was good. But most of these gigs were in small basement clubs, and it was too slow for us. We werent making any bread. Fela told Fademolu, Look, I never came all the way from Africa to America to play for a handful of Nigerians. Is this a joke? And thats where the problem started between them. Later, an African American guy named Michael started to help us get club gigs, because Fademolu couldnt handle big clubs. He didnt have the connections for the big clubs. I cant remember this Michaels last name, but he came with us when we left DC. We rented some Chev- rolets and a U- Haul and drove out west caravan- style. First we stopped in Chicago and did a week there, playing mostly for Nigerians. Most of the students who were our fans back home were studying there. It felt good. Everywhere we went, the Nigerians there came out and gave us a good welcome and opened their homes to us. Thats one thing that I liked. For example, they used to take us to strip clubs to see the dancers. Nowadays, there are a lot of strippers in Nigeria, but not at all back then. That was new for us. Chicago was really cool, but I wanted to go back to Nigeria. First of all, I was sick. I still had an ulcer, and it was getting so painful one night before a gig in Chicago I was rolling on the foor. Who was going to pay for a doctor there in Chicago? There was a bed there, but I couldnt even handle the bed. It was too painful. Actually, I had been scheduled for an operation before we left Nigeria, but Felas doctor brother Beko con- vinced me that I shouldnt have it. He told me that I should leave it alone 70Chapter 4 and take medication. He said it was a dangerous operation and that I might lose too much blood. That night I remembered that there was no grass smoking in Nigeria at the time we left. The military government was very heavy about that. And we hadnt been smoking in the States. The point is that I had gone a long time without smoking any grass. But when one of the Nigerian stu- dents saw how much I was sufering because of my stomach, he went out and came back with one joint. I took just three or four pufs, and it was like magic. That night, everything came back to normal and I was feeling good. The pain diminished completely and that was it. I slept like a baby. From that time on, whenever it came back, it wasnt as strong anymore. So I didnt go back home. We continued the journey. After Chicago we took two and a half days of driving to reach San Francisco, and we stayed with some Nigerians in Palo Alto. I liked Frisco. There were a lot of foreigners there, not strictly American whites. It was a mixture of people. At this point we had been touring for two or three months, but we hadnt really met many African American people yet besides our manager Michael. But there was one African American girl who saw Dele dance in Frisco. She got so excited by the music that she jumped onstage and asked us to repeat the same song that Dele just did, because she wanted to dance to it too. We were playing Ako. And so we repeated it for her and she tore the place up completely! By the time we arrived in Los Ange- les, Dele had combined that girls style with her own. And she became the best dancer aroundthe best. It was a great experience, and it was all because of that African American girl. Dele was from midwest Nigeria, from a town called Obiaroko. Thats in the Benin area, going toward the Igbo area. She was a natural dancer. She never went to any school of dancing, because there wasnt anything like that in Nigeria at that time. But Dele could dance to anythingshe could dance to solos, and she could even preview where you were going in the music. You can imagine such a dancer in front of youshe inspires you all the time. Fademolu was still involved, but it was our manager Michael who ar- ranged for us to live with a judge named Morris Washington. He was a black guy who lived in Inglewood, and he saved our necks because he had connections and he knew an African American woman who owned a club called the Bill of Fare. Michael was able to pull some strings for us to get into this place. The woman really liked us and we were well treated. We Gods Own Country71 were playing every night except Monday, and we were living with Morris Washington in his house until we could fnd our own place. Morris had a big house with a champagne fountain in the middle, and we slept two people in a room. It was around this time that Fela met Sandra Smith. We went to play this open- air party at a big place on Wilshire. I think it was a beneft for the NAAcp. Thats where they met, and they hit it of immediately. Sandra was just coming of the Black Panther thing, you know, and Fela believed in Pan- Africanism. He was a family friend of Kwame Nkrumah and he liked Nkrumahs ideology. So he and Sandra gave each other ideas and that really started to bring the political side out in Fela. Besides that, it was like she was the only woman who could handle Fela, because Fela liked to have many women. Sandra was the only one able to handle this guy. And thats why they fell in love with each other and lived together. Even though he still went out to play around, she was his number one priority. We were working six days a week, so we didnt really have time to go out and see other bands. If we did, it was just by chance. For example, we wanted to see James Brown, but Fela and James never met while we were in the States. In fact, we were supposed to play a gig at a place called the Factory that was owned by Sammy Davis Jr. It was a big place, like a complex, and we were supposed to play along with diferent bands. James Brown was supposed to be there, Sly and the Family Stone were supposed to be there, and the Temptations also. We were supposed to play one after the other. We were really looking forward to seeing Brown, but at the last minute they announced that he was not turning up. That was our only op- portunity to see him and for him to see us. But one band I did get to see live that I really dug was Dizzy Gillespies quartet with Kenny Clarke on the drums. We heard them one night in Orange County, and I remember Dizzy asking me about one of our ministers in Nigeria that night, a man named Njoku. I think they had studied together somewhere in the past. So Dizzy actually knew about Nigeria and Africa. We played for a lot of those Beverly Hills parties, birthday parties and wedding receptions. I remember playing at a party for the famous African American footballer named Jim Brown. Another time at the Bill of Fare, Muhammad Ali came down. He had a good time with us. We discussed a lot. He had been to Nigeria before then, and he knew what Nigeria was like. He was very interested in talking to us. At least I can say met him 72Chapter 4 face to face. That was during the period in which he was not fghting. They had taken his belt away because of the Vietnam thing. So he was just going to parties, having a good time. Eventually we moved to a better place called the Citadel dHaiti, owned by a guy named Bernie Hamilton. And we started to make a name for ourselves and to pull a crowd. Fela was enjoying himself. In fact, no- body back home had heard anything from Fela for a very long time. One day I got a letter from my parents asking me what was I doing in America now that Fela was in jail? Somehow a big rumor had gotten started in Nigeria that Fela had been sentenced to seven years in jail for commit- ting rape. That wasnt true, but the truth was that in all those months we hadnt really accomplished shit. We were always driving around to Capitol Records and meeting with them, but nothing ever happened. The main problem was that we had bad visas. With the type of visas we had, they shouldnt be discussing business with us at all, because legally we couldnt work. All of this was Fademolus fault. He hadnt even arranged the proper work visas for us! After a few months, there were some Jewish businessmen who were friends of Morris Washington. They liked our music. They bought brand- new instruments for the whole band and took us to a factory where they showed us the costumes they wanted us to appear in. They wanted to sort out all of these immigration problems so they could get the business straight. Everything was set up. They had even arranged visas that said we could bring our wives from Nigeria. But Fademolu came again to spoil everything. He felt he was losing control over us, even though he never did a fucking thing for us! He said he had paid the money for us to come to the US. The Jewish guys were even asking him, How much did you spend on these guys? They wanted to pay him of. But he refusedhe didnt want it. He said it was the principle behind the thing, and he re- ported us to the US immigration authorities. The Jewish guys had to drop the whole afair. They said, We wanted to help you out of these problems, but your guy has come in and fucked up everything, so we cant do any- thing anymore. Our big problems in the US started there. After Fademolu reported us, we were detained, and Immigration scheduled us for a deportation hear- ing. They could have taken us to prison that very day, but they let us go. The hearing was going to come after the beginning of 1970, and we even got a few temporary visa extensions, so we did what we could before the hearing. The main thing was that we wanted to record, and luckily we got Gods Own Country73 a break from a Ghanaian guy named Duke Lumumba. Duke wanted to help us record the music that ended up on The Los Angeles Sessions. Thats when the problem came with Felix Jones, the bass player. Felix left because of the Biafran situation. The war was still going on and he was an Igbo from the East. He came with us for the tour, but in his head he wanted to stay in the States, and the only way he could do that was to declare himself to be a Biafran. He told the US authorities that he didnt want to go back with us, because if he did, we would kill him once we got to Nigeria! So even though we were all having visa problems, the Ameri- can government took him aside and he was treated diferently than the rest of us who were just hanging on. They told him, Youll have no prob- lems with these guys anymore. So he disappeared. How were we going to play Koola Lobitos music without the bass!? Shortly after Felix split, we had a gig at a place called the Bayoux, and on that particular night Frank Sinatra and his people passed through. We were hoping that if we impressed Sinatra, we might get some kind of a break. But Fela was really sufering that night without a bass player. He had to try to play the bass and sing at the same time. Believe me, it was a tough night. We managed in the end, but after that night it was hard for him to play the trumpet for a while because his fngers were all fucked up from the bass. So the Sinatra thing was blown. Meanwhile, the recording was coming up and Duke Lumumba was ready to pay for the session. He had even paid us a session fee in advance. We had to go and beg Felix and drag him back. We told him, Just come and do this recording with us, and when we have to go back, if you want to stay, stay. But help us fnish the recording. Because there was no way to bring in any bass player in the States that could play this music prop- erly. Even if Fela wrote the music out for the bass player, it wouldnt be easy. So Felix came back and did the recording with us. We recorded on eight tracks in a small studio, and that was the frst time Koola Lobitos re- corded on multitrack. Then Felix disappeared again after the recording. When we were coming back from LA to Washington, he stayed behind, and hes still there today. I loved the music the band was playing, but Felas latest tunes were still too busy, in a way. He himself didnt think of it that way at that time. For him, it might have been that he was showing what he had learned, showing that he knew what he was doing. But from the point of view of selling our music, it wasnt really working. In fact, we had a friend named Mr. Wendell, a black guy who always came down to the club and 74Chapter 4 listened to the music. He was a musician from Beverly Hills. After one show, he asked, Fela, do you want to make money? Fela said, Yes, I want to make money, of course. So Mr. Wendell said, Well, your music is great but youre wasting music. Too many ideas in one tune. He said, One of your songs is like three songs. Mr. Wendell advised him to keep it simple. Fela listened to him, but he never really applied that principle while we were in the US. He started experimenting with tunes like My Ladys Frustration, but really he waited until we got back home. And it was almost like instant success after that. As for me, I also changed my drumming in Los Angeles. When I got back to Nigeria, my playing was completely diferent because I got some techniques in LA from a guy named Frank Butler who used to play with Miles Davis and John Coltrane. Frank Butler was my good friend, man. He heard me play almost every night. When he told me he was a drum- mer and he had been playing with Coltrane before, I became very inquisi- tive, because Elvin Jones was one of my heroes and Frank had subbed for Elvin sometimes. And with Koola Lobitos, even though we played the highlife- jazz stuf, we also used to play some twelve- bar blues tunes just to show that we knew the rudiments of jazz. So one night Frank But- ler was in the club and I told Fela, I want to check out this drummer tonight. Lets let him play a twelve- bar blues. I stood there and listened to this guy play andwow! It freaked me out completely. I told myself, Youve got a long way to go, man! After he fnished playing, I called him aside, and I said, Look, man, you are wonderful. He said, No, you are wonderful. Too much! I told him that I didnt see anything that I was doing that he couldnt already do. But Frank loved my playing, and he was looking at me like I was a magician for the way I was playing all of those Koola Lobitos songs, like the way I could change things from one section to the other, and the way I was syncopating with the horns. He thought I was wonderful, and me, seeing him play, I fell in love with his playing immediately. His hands were so fast and fashy. And he was even using all of his fngers individu- ally on the snare. With the sticking and combination, everything was just cooking! I asked him, How did you develop those things? Oh, he said, its simple. You just have to do it every day. By the time you do it for one month, youll be okay. I said, What is it? He told me, When you wake up in the morning, take some pillows and play on them. Play until you can make your sticks bounce on the pillow when youre rolling. Then he Gods Own Country75 told me that when I started to roll, that I should roll, land on the other pillow, and come back. Land and come back. Land and come back. Land and come back, without breaking the roll. And he told me that I should try to do everything with my wrists. That I shouldnt try to push it, but let it fall. It sounded simple, but I began to try it. Its not easy for a stick to bounce on a pillow. But every morning when I woke up, I did this pillow thing for one hour until I started to see my sticks bouncing on the pillow. And it was trueit started to change my playing. My wrists loosened up and became less stif. That pillow game made me become very free, and more in control. One night Frank came into the club and he was stand- ing right in front of the stage watching me play, and he ran up to me and said, You got it, man! You fucking got it! Because I really did get it. It was like a month later that I realized that yes, it was happeningmy drumming was diferent. But I learned about some other things from Frank, too. He used to come by my house at maybe six oclock in the evening, like a dead man. He would say, Tony, Im sick. I didnt know what was wrong with him. I would try to get him some aspirin and he would say, No, just give me ten dollars. I didnt know what he was after. I just knew that this guy was sick and hes telling me, Ten dollars. Ten dollars is gonna make you be alright? Yeah. I wasnt looking at the money at all. I was just pitying him. And then two hours later when I saw Frank, he was bouncing like a ball! He was a normal guy again, not the guy I saw two hours earlier. I didnt know what was happening. But Henry Kof had a girlfriend from the Philippines named Annette who worked there in Bernie Hamiltons club. And Annette told me, Dont you know anything, man? Frank is a junkie! Hes a heroin addict. Hes sick because he needs the stuf. I didnt really know anything about heroin and shooting up and what it does to you and all that, so that was when I found out. And the way I used to see Frank looking so sick and pitiful at times, I would never believe that I my- self would be tested by this same shit later in my life! But I will never for- get Frank because he taught me what I wouldnt have known. He never charged me for this knowledge, but I was able to take care of him a little bit. I respect this guy so much. I added what he taught me to my own style of drumming, and when I arrived back in Nigeria, I was untouch- ableno doubt about it! The other way I found out about heroin was one night when we were getting ready to go play. You see, the band had moved to a house that be- longed to Bernie Hamilton. The place had an upstairs and a downstairs. 76Chapter 4 Some of our musicians lived upstairs, like Christopher and Tunde. Me, Isaac, and Henry, we were in a diferent building in the backyard, kind of like in a compound. But there was also a black American guy named Joe living downstairs in the main house. The cab was waiting outside to take us to Hollywood to play, and when we came outside, we saw that the police had the whole compound sur- rounded. Actually, it was the fBI! They stopped us and started asking us many questions, but when they heard our accents, they decided that we were not the ones they were looking for. So then they cornered Joes room and started to break in. They broke in there and found Joe hiding under the bed. It turned out that Joe and his whole gang had all kinds of shit going in there, man. First of all, they were pimps. But they were also transvestites and they were selling heroin. They would dress up in the night like women, pimp women, and sell heroin. We didnt know anything about this shit, so the cops let us go. But Annette later told me that Joe got fve years for that. So that was the other way that I found out about heroin. A few of the musicians in Koola Lobitos smoked grass like myself, Fred, and a few of the others. But Fela himself was still totally clean when we got to America. He was Mr. Straight. The only thing that was in his life was maybe too many women. But smoking, drinkingno way. In fact, smoking was strictly forbidden in the band. Fela would really give you a big problem if he knew that you were smoking in his band. For ex- ample, one time back in Nigeria, we were getting ready to play the After- noon Jump in Kaduna, and a joint dropped from Freds pocket onto the stage. Fred picked it up quickly, but Fela saw it and said, Hey, what is that? And he started calling for the police, to have Fred arrested right there on the stage! At that time, one joint could get you ten years in prison in Nigeria! We all jumped in and stopped it. So he just fned Fred. But he was always telling us, When you smoke, you dont play properly. He was watching everybody, because he knew we were smoking. Any wrong note, even just slightlya fve- shilling fne. Five shillings was a lot of money, man! I remember one day in Ghana the saxophonist, Christo- pher Uwaifor, went to smoke his joint in the toilet, and then came back onstage. Fela went to him and noticed the way his eyes looked, and he said, Come, I want to smell your ear. He was not smelling his mouth, it was his earand from that he concluded that the guy smoked! Thats how straight Fela was at the time. We laughed about that. But that was another fve shillings gone for Uwaifor, in Ghana. Gods Own Country77 I was the only one that was really able to smoke. Because Fela was always watching us during set break, to see who was smoking. And I always had my bottle of beer and my joints, sitting and smoking and doing my thing. But he never said anythinghe just waited for everybody on- stage. Waited for them to come back onstage and start messing up, so that their money would start fying away. One day he said, Allenko, I watch you every time you smoke. But every time when you smoke, you play wonderfully. Your playing becomes super! How can you do that? You are the only one that delivers positively after smoking. I told him, I dont know. I think the smoke stimulates me positively. Then he told me that the reason he didnt want people to smoke is that when he got his diploma in London, he went to a jazz club with his friends JK and Wole Bucknor where one of the popular jazz bands was playing, and he asked to sit in. JK made him smoke grass before play- ing. And Fela went onstage and he said he remembered his fngers were running faster than his brain. His brain was not controlling the fngers, so he was just playing nonsense. The musicians stopped him and kicked him of the stage and told him never to come back again. Meanwhile, JK and Wole had disappeared because they were so embarrassed, and since they were holding his trumpet case, they took it with them! So Fela had to walk out of the club holding a trumpet without the case. Thats the humiliation he got as a result of smoking that one time, and thats why he didnt want any of us to smoke at all. I told him, Well, everyone has a diferent constitution. If your body doesnt like it, then your brain cant handle it. So dont touch it. Anyway, Fela was living with Sandra, and that is where all the political and cultural awareness came from. But it was also through Sandra that Fela started smoking grass. The frst time he really shocked me with it he came to my house late in the night and asked me for two joints. Sandra was waiting for him outside, in the car. Out of the blue like that. Two joints, not one. And he was not even dabbling in this stuf before. I said no, but he insisted. I rolled two joints for him and he left. Then I started to notice that if I went to Sandras place to visit him, he was smoking even if he was still in bed. When Fela started smoking, he told me he loved it so much that he couldnt believe that he had been missing out on that all along. But if you knew the Fela of the frst fve years and this new Fela, it was a big contra- diction all of a sudden. The diference was too big. Grass does diferent things to diferent people, and the old Fela was gone overnighthis per- 78Chapter 4 sonality changed completely. And the frst time he bought grass when we were back home in Nigeria, he bought a cement bag full! Its like now he had to be the king of grass, giving it out to everybody, and he wanted it to be legalized in Nigeria. And thats what gave him the most problems, because the government didnt want him to challenge them. The race thing was very heavy in the States at this time, but personally, I didnt experience a lot of problems. The only incident I really remember vividly was when we were on the road driving from the East Coast to the West Coast, we passed through this place called Wyoming. We had been driving over- night, and in the early morning we just parked at the petrol station to fll up the tank and have breakfast. There was a caf there, so we went in to eat breakfast, and fucking hell, maneverybody was just staring at us when we came in, like we were coming from the jungle, or maybe from outer space. We felt that this wasnt gonna be cool, but we went to the counter to order. The waiter wasnt even answering us, he was just ignor- ing us. And when he fnally had to face us, he just said, Do you know where you are? We said, Yes. He said, You are not wanted here. So we left. There was another time in Watts when a black taxi driver stopped me because he saw me walking on the sidewalk with a young white girl. He just pulled up his cab next to me and said, Hey, brotherwhat the fuck are you doing? I said, What have I done? He said, You dont know what youre playing with, man. You better leave that girl alone. Go your way, and let her go her way. He said that if the police happened to pass at the time, they werent gonna take it kindly. He said, They will give you problems. So I left her to go, and I went back home. This incident happened after we had moved to the house in Watts that Morris Wash- ington found for us. For most of the trip, we lived in that run- down house in Watts, and we really sufered in that place. When we frst arrived there, there was not even any gas, only electricity. There was no way that we could cook until one of the ladies in the neighborhood lent us a hot plate. Watts was rough. Where we were living was only blacks and Mexicans. And these were not the kind of successful black Americans like Morris Washington. I never saw a white American there except for the police, and they didnt live there. Friday night used to be dangerous, especially for the old guys that had just received their pensions. The thieves would grab them right Gods Own Country79 in front of me. I used to see the way they handled them, ripping the old guys of right there in the street or in telephone booths! And every night there were gunshots. We didnt even know where they were coming from. LA itself was hot when it came to race, but when we were in Watts, it wasnt really the whites that did anything, because the whites werent really there. It was the blacks, our neighbors, that sometimes made prob- lems for us. They would ask us shocking questions like, did we fy here to the States, or did we swim? They asked us, Do you have planes in Africa? Ridiculous questions! I would ask them, What did you learn in the school? You never learned any fucking history or geography?! Thats when I discovered that not all Americans know geography and that many African Americans didnt know anything about Africa. At least, not at that time. They just know where they are, where they live. Many Ameri- cans in general dont really want to know about any other place. If you say, Im from Nigeria, they will ask you, Is Nigeria in Ghana? They dont even know the diference! The kids from the neighborhood came into our house all the time. And I remember one morning they were just bending down, pretending to fall down on the foor, looking under the towel of Fred, the guitarist. And so Fred said, What the fuck are you doing down there? And one of the boys said he was just trying to check and see if Fred had a tail! So Fred told him, If you want to know if I have a tail, go back home and check your father. If he has one, then I have one. Some of the guys in the band got agressive and mad. I had to keep telling them, Its not their fault. They were never taught anything about Africa. But these same small boys came back to turn our house upside down and steal our money. We had gone to play one day, and they broke in and messed up the house completely. Every box and every suitcase was thrown upside down. Corn- fakes, rice, everything, they sprinkled it around everywhere in the room. They smashed all the egs on the wall. They poured Clorox all over Isaacs room, on his clothes, on his bed. A few days later, they came back to tell us that it was they that had done it. They said it was because they saw a white girl come into the house in the afternoon. And actually this girl was Sandras friend! She used to help us drive to the gigs. There was another funny incident at the Bill of Fare. This African American woman put up a huge banner which said, You are here now, but where were you four hundred years ago, when you were selling us into slavery? She put the banner across the front door from one side to the other. And when we arrived she pointed at us and told us, Yeah, the 80Chapter 4 banner is for you! We didnt say anything, we just went inside and spoke to the club owner. We asked her, Weve been playing here for weeks, and why are we getting this treatment tonight? She came out with us, saw the woman and the banner, and she told us that we shouldnt worry about it. Just leave her alone, she said, because this womans a nutcase. But after the gig we went back and asked the woman, Where were you? Where were you four hundred years ago? She told us, Resisting. So we told her, Look, you were not there. We were not there either. So why are you asking us this ridiculous question? We cant answer this. Sorry about that . . . So she packed up her banner and took of. We had a lot of fun in LA, but overall it was a lot of sufering. We were supposed to be living on allowance in the States, and Felas allowance was only fve dollars a day, paid out on a weekly basis. And it wasnt even possible to get that because for many months we were not even working! So maybe out of a week, we would get two or three days of payment. And when we started working, Fela was not paying us properly. He told us he was getting a certain amount from Bernie, but we found out he was actu- ally getting more. It became a small argument between Fela and Fred, and Fred decided he wasnt going to play one night and he took of. Fela and me chased Fred along Sunset Boulevard for about six to eight blocks that night. We caught him, carried him back to the club, put him onstage, put his guitar in his hands, and he played. The way Fela wrote his music, if even one part was missing from the band, it was a big problem. Fred knew we couldnt do it without him, so he played that night. But we were all getting fed up with the money situation, and we went on strike for a while until we got this shit straightened out. Meanwhile, I had been working in a record- pressing plant owned by a white guy from Texas. He and his wife had never even heard of Nige- ria! One night I invited them to hear the band. They watched us play, and then I went to have a drink with them at their table while we were on break. They asked me, What time do you fnish here? I told them two oclock. They said, You mean you do this every night and you get to work at seven thirty in the morning? I told them yes. The wife just shook her head and said, Tony, you cant continue like this. When do you sleep? Youll be dead soon. They told me that from then on, I shouldnt come in at seven thirty. He said, When you get home, just try to sleep. And when you wake up, you come to work. I told him I appreciated that, but that I needed forty hours a week, and if I do as hes saying, theres no way Im going to get my forty hours. But they insisted, so I took their advice and Gods Own Country81 started to come later. That week, I only clocked in twenty- eight hours, and that wasnt enough money for me. So, after going to pick up my check, the boss asked me, How many hours do you have there, Tony? I told him I had twenty- eight hours. He said, Make it forty. Just write forty there. So they took me in as one of them and tried to help me and treat me with respect. They were very nice people. If it werent for people like that and the Nigerians who helped us like Yomi Willington and Olade Dos Santos, we would have starved in Los Angeles. It got to the point where when I told Fela, Look, what are we doing here? Lets go home, man. We havent achieved what we came here for. What do we have to show for this trip until now? I told Fela that this whole thing had become too much. After all, I had my family back home, my wife was pregnant, and we werent making any money to send back. Plus, the civil war had fnished by 1970. If the war had still been on, we could have stayed in America, because the US government wouldnt have sent us back to Nigeria with the war going on. They had already given us voluntary deportation and renewed our temporary visas several times. But now that the war was over, our status had changed and we had to leave. Why not at least go visit home? Fela refused. Then I told him that I had gotten a job ofer and that if this thing got too crazy, I could always take of for New York. I told him that the reason I hadnt already taken the job was because if I quit, the band would be fnished. Either they would have to go back home or they would have to change their professions in the States. And he agreed with me. We were sad to leave LA, but between all the strugling, the end of the war, and the immigration situation, we knew it was time to go. Fela few from Los Angeles to Washington, DC, but I drove the band back and we had to rent a camper for the trip. Man, that was the most driving Ive ever done in my life! But we only covered a few miles before the camper broke down. This was supposed to be a brand- new camper, but the rental company had never put oil in the transmission, so the thing was rolling dry without us knowing it. We were just a few miles outside of Flagstaf, Arizona, when the camper just stopped and refused to move. The next morning, heavy snow started falling and we were stuck in the middle of the road, with snow falling like water. We were stuck in that spot until about ten at night when one guy fnally passed. He told us that he would go to Flagstaf to fnd a tow vehicle. After a few hours, a very strong tow truck came and towed the camper with all of us in it. Since 82Chapter 4 it was Sunday, the driver told us he was just gonna drop us at the front of the Dodge garage, since it was a Dodge camper. That way, they would see us there on Monday, when they arrived. That meant we would have to spend the night in the camper, and there was no heater in this fucking thing! I never sufered like that in my life before. Im talking about cold, man! When you stepped out of the bus, there was three feet of snow. We took all the paper we had and made a fre on the foor of the bus. It wasnt enough, because the papers burned up quickly, so we had no choice but to add some of our clothes to the fre. When the garage guys arrived in the morning and opened the bus and saw that there were people inside, they freaked out! The frst thing they did was send all of us into a warm room, with hot cofee and hot tea. They told us that we were lucky to be alive, and they said the only reason we survived was because there were so many of us inside the bus. It took them one whole day to fx the bus, but we were going to have to sleep in the bus again the second night. Fademolu was with us in the camper. We all told Fademolu that he had made us live this miserable life in the States and that we were not sleeping inside that bus again. We made him get us a motel for the night and pay for it himself. When we fnally got to Washington a few days later, we had a couple of weeks to kill before our fight from New York. Even though we were living with some nice Nigerians again, I worked for two weeks in DC, be- cause we didnt play any gigs until we went back to Nigeria. I was working at a Howard Johnsons restaurant, just to have some small change on me and to buy gifts for people back home. The day we got to Kennedy Airport in New York, I called the Associated Press ofce in New York, just as I had planned. The new guys name there was Mr. Rosenblum, and he told me, Please go back to Nigeria. Your job is still waiting for you. All the machines are broken in the Lagos ofce, so please go back and get them working again! So it all worked out in the endforty- eight hours after we arrived back in Lagos, I was back at Ap! I also remember that the same day, Tunde Fademolu came to see us of at the airport. He called me aside asked me, Are you sure you want to go back with Fela? I told him, Yes. Why not? I am looking forward to going back. We were supposed to be here for two months but we ended up stay- ing for ten. And he said, But why you are going back with this guy? I told him that we came here with Fela and we have to go back with him. Then Fademolu started telling me that he doesnt trust Fela. He told me, Tony, you are too nice to have to work with this guy. Youd better stay Gods Own Country83 here in the US. If its the passport and visa and green card and all of these things thats making you unsure, I can help you get all that. I looked at him and I said, Thank you very much. But from where I was coming from, I didnt want to desert Fela. Because the band was in a very difcult time right now. Already our bass player, Felix, was staying behind. On top of that, for me to stay behind too, no. I couldnt do that. I liked the States, I had a good job waiting for me in New York, but I never took it because I wouldnt want to stay behind on account of Fela. Fademolu tried to convince me. Its not Felas platform you came on, its my own platform because Im the one that paid for the tickets to the US. I told him that I didnt look at it like that and that if I wanted to be here in the States, I would rather pay my own money and come back on my own. Otherwise Id look like a saboteur. I already had a reputation for dropping out of bands, like when I was in with Sunny Lionheart and Sivor Lawson before I joined Koola Lobitos. At least this way, no one could say anything about me. Furthermore, Nigeria is my home, not America. I could stay in America for ffty years, but I would still have to go back to Nigeria one day. If I had stayed like Fademolu was saying, what type of reception could I expect if someday I decided to go back to Nigeria? With all the experiences I had in the States, I know I was in Gods hands. I was there to follow my destiny and to prove to myself that I wasnt being a lazy motherfucker in life. Im not someone who waits for something to come to me. Ive got to look for it. Maybe thats why I was troubled with my ulcer, but I never gave a shit, man, I just continued like that. It wasnt a mistake for me to leave the States, but people were tell- ing me that I was a fool when we got back to Nigeria. They said, You had an opportunity to stay in Gods own country and you threw it away and came back. Dont you see that even the bass player never came back? I told them, Yeah, thats him, but not me. I have a family here. Time shows I made the right decision because things took of just after we came back, and we were already on tour in England by 1971. And what I gained with Africa 70 in those eight years after we got back, I wouldnt have learned in any university in the whole world. If I had stayed in New York, I would have just been another guy maintaining the machines at Associated Press. Early in my career, I wanted to end up playing jazz. But I wouldnt reach nowhere, because this jazz were talking about had been intro- duced to the world by the Americans. If I want to dabble in jazz, then I have to be competitive with the Americans. And no matter how good, 84Chapter 4 being an African, we can never be as good as the ones in the States. Its not a matter of talent. Its because of the way of thinking about music. Its the same as if an American guy came to Nigeria. We have diferent ways of thinking about music. So to me, its better I leave that one alone. I passed through it, and thank God I got my experience from it. Jazz was the thing that enlightened me so much. And Frank Butler came into my life just like somebody who could let me go back home with something extra. So I was eager to go home, to just show all the drummers there that I was back. There was gonna be a diference between the Tony that left and the Tony that came back. I wanted them to know that from now on, its gonna be a diferent game. None of those other drummers could touch me now! SWINGING LIKE HELL! As soon as we returned to Nigeria, Fela changed the name of the band from Koola Lobitos to Nigeria 70 because we arrived back at the beginning of 1970 and everyone was feeling optimistic about the future of the country. The Bia- fran War was over and people were ready to celebrate! That was the time of President Yakubu Gowon, and things really cooled down. Everybody was enjoying the country, and even though there were lots of soldiers around after the war, the soldier boys mixed with everybody. That was when we started to grow. All throughout from 1970 to about 1977, Lagos was fucking jump- ing, man! That city was swinging like hell and so was the band! Fela remembered Mr. Wendells advice in Los Angeles about keeping it simple, and his composing started getting better im- mediately. Thats when he started writing new music like the stuf on Felas London Scene and other tunes like Black Mans Cry, Beautiful Dancer, and Jeun Koku. It was after Jeun Koku that everything exploded for us. We went straight to the top and stayed there. All those tunes are simpler, without so many freworks, and the music was really starting to move. It was much better, compared to Koola Lobitos. And thats why when James Brown came to Lagos with his band around the end of 1970, we blew their minds! They were staying at the Federal Palace Hotel, but they stopped by the Afro- Spot every night, be- cause they dug the music, there were a lot of girls around, and they wanted to smoke, too. Brown himself never came down to 5 86Chapter 5 the club, but Bootsy Collins was playing bass with him and I could see that he was a fucking genius bass player. To this day, Bootsy says that see- ing our band was one of the greatest experiences of his life. I would meet up with Bootsy again years later, when I started working with Gary Mud- bone Cooper in France. Thats also when Fela started coming out with his blackism message, which he had developed in the US after meeting people like Sandra. I supported him, because musicians in Nigeria in those days didnt have the foresight to challenge anything, such as atrocities being committed by the government. Nobody would ever sing to challenge the government in those days. They were only singing praise music. African music, on the local level, is mostly praise singing anyway. All the traditional musicians are always singing the praises of someone in a high position. And juju music was number one with the praise singing. The Muslim styles like sakara, apala, and fuji got heavily into it a little later. It was a bit less like that on the highlife side. Highlife was never heavily into praise singing. In the early 70s, though, Fela wasnt really criticizing the government. If he sang anything critical at that time, he made it into a parable. Like Jeun Koku, which was a parable about greediness. But he was mostly singing about black power, black pride, and all that. About buying Afri- can products. Songs like Buy Africa and Black Mans Cry. It was a kind of a cultural revolution, and he did a very good job at that, in the music. That made Fela kind of like a politician. If he had gone to study politics, he might have ended up somewhere in the countrys House of Assembly, or maybe even higher than that. But he didnt want to be part of them, because he wouldnt have had a chance if he had been a strict politician. No politician in the country could have been so outspoken, not to Felas extent. Nobody even tried. So the music was good for him, because it allowed him to get his messages through. Even some of those guys that would become future heads of state, like army guys or business guys they knew Fela and they were passing through the club, listening to what he had to say. Im talking about guys like Murtala Mohammed, who later became president, or M. D. Yusuf, who was head of the police in Lagos. These guys were our fans. They didnt have the same politics, but they loved the music, and even when Fela was singing about them, they would laugh. Like when Fela would sing a song such as Shenshema, he was singing about those guys. But they still liked it, and later, when they be- came powerful, some of these guys never touched him. I even remem- ber later in 1976, when things were hot between Fela and the govern- Swinging Like Hell!87 ment, Fela recorded Zombie for Phonogram and their A&R lady kind of freaked out. She didnt want the company to release this thing and have the military government come down on their heads. So she frst sent it to Shehu YarAdua, who was chief of the army at that time, second in com- mand to General Obasanjo. And YarAdua actually approved the release of the song! I think he looked at it like a caricature, or a humorous song, because in Europe or America at that time, people in the newspapers could caricature the government or insult them freely, with no conse- quences. So maybe deep down inside, YarAdua might have felt that even though Fela was singing against them, a song like that might be good for the country; maybe he thought it would help keep his own guys in line. It didnt stay like that forever. But it shows you how optimistic people were about the future of the country in the 70s. So things were looking up. The public started to pick up the vibes properly. Our records were selling and there was only vinyl back then no tape or cd or anything like thatso there was no piracy and that meant that we fnally started making some real money. We were very busy at the Afro- Spot, too. We played Tuesday, Friday, and Saturday nights, and we played the Sunday Jump in the afternoon. That meant more money was coming in at the gate. From way back, even before the States, Fela owed us a lot of money, and when we got back home he told us that he would start paying us the back money bit by bit, along with the new pay we would be earning. In fact, he told us he would pay us half of every old week, along with every week of our current pay. But Isaac calculated that it was impossible for Fela to pay all this back money. He said that at the rate Fela was paying, he would only get all the money he was owed when he was nearing his grave! Theres no way any- body could get all the money they were owed. Isaac was not the kind of person to fuck around. When he said something, he meant it. So as soon as we arrived back from the States, Isaac resigned. And it turned out that Fela never paid what he promised, because sometimes it was even tough to get our normal pay after that! For myself, I said, okay, lets forget the back pay and just go for the fresh one. And I started to get a little more of my own money because Fela made me the bandleader after we got back. But some of the others started to leave. Besides Isaac, Dele also left. Dele confronted Fela about money, and Fela asked her why she couldnt make some extra money by hustling, since she was a woman. Of course Dele didnt like that. When we went on tour in Ghana, she met Ebenezer Obey and then they fell in 88Chapter 5 love. So she left. She is now one of the wives of Obey, and they have a daughter together. Fred Lawal also left. We replaced him with a guy from Ghana named PeterI cannot remember his family name. Tunde Williams left too, but he came back later. And since Felix Jones had left in the States, we re- placed him with a bassist named Morris Ekpo. Meanwhile, we replaced Isaac with Igo Chico, a tenor player from the Midwest who played great solos on all of those early songs we cut after we got back. Chico was a big name in the country, and everyone knew him in Nige- ria. There were a lot of saxophonists in the country back then, but Chicos style was unique. He was a very good musician and his solos always had feeling. Chico was the best tenor player Fela ever had, but the problem was that he had a drinking habit and he was sick. Sometimes when he came to play, he couldnt play. And sometimes he would play and then lie down somewhere on the side of the stage. Fela didnt like that, and he was always telling Chico to get up, but the guy was in pain. Fela felt like he was in pain because of what he was doing to himself, so thats why he wasnt accepting any excuses. One day Chico resigned from the band and went to play at the University of Lagos with Akin Euba, who was a big composer there. And since he was at the university, he went into the teaching hospital there, free of charge. He got well in the hospital, and when he was going to be discharged, they told him, No more drinking dont touch that stuf again. If you drink again, please dont come back here! Because it wasnt regular alcohol Chico was drinking, it was ogo- goro (native gin), which is much stronger. But the day he arrived home from the hospital, the frst thing he did was go for a bottle of ogogoro, and that was it. He died from liver problems very soon after that. One thing that was difcult for Chico was that he was living com- pletely of of his music for a living, and when he got sick he couldnt play, so it was hard to make ends meet. So for me, even though I was now bandleader, I always had something else going on, just in case. Associated Press Lagos gave me my job back, even though I had told them I was only going for two months and it turned out to be ten. When we arrived in Lagos, I went straight back to the job. I ordered the parts and got all the machines working again. The subscribers were all getting their news properly again, so they knew I was back. I started that job in 1963 and kept it all the way until 1973. Soon after we got back, word started to get out about my drumming. Everybody was saying I was now like a magician. Felas brother Beko Swinging Like Hell!89 couldnt believe it. He told me, Its like you took everybody to the States, instead of Fela. He could hear the diference in my playing, and he told me it was like I had gone to the States to study. So that was my pride. But you see, it was really just the beginning for me. I had developed the drumming concept for Afrobeat from many things that I heard while I was growing up, and now I was starting to put it all together. It was a fusion of beats and patterns. There was highlife, there was local Yoruba music like apala and sakara, there was jazz, and there was Western popu- lar music like funk and R&B. There was atilogwu, which is an Igbo dance from the East of Nigeria. There was also some of the traditional music from Ghana that you could hear in the fshing villages in Lagos in the early days, like kpanlogo and agbadza. So the techniques I learned from Frank Butler were like the fnal piece in the puzzlethat just made everything catch on fre. I had discovered certain things, and now that we were back, it was time to develop them. I could never have done that if I had stayed with Ap in New York. I tell you, I had gone clear of all the other drummers, completely. There was no drummer that could stand next to me! Shortly after we got back in 1970, we went on tour to Ghana. Ive already told you about the great drummers in Ghana, and how much I respected them because Ghana was where all the great musicians were. Those guys were like my idols. They all knew how I was playing before we left, and they respected me, too. But by the time we got to Ghana in 1970, they were all telling me, Youre wicked, man! A few years after that, we went on tour in Cameroon and it seemed like all the musicians were waiting there to meet us. We arrived late in the night, and they were all waiting! These were like copyright bands, and they wanted to see the guy who played the drums on Lady and Shakara and all of those songs. Because they could hear it, but they couldnt understand how to play it. There was one drummer named there Bele Njo who told me that I was his idol. He came to my room at three in the morning and wanted me to go to the club at that hour with him, because he said their whole band was waiting in the club to meet me! I told him that I had to get some rest, and to come back the next day. The next day he came back and I went with him to the club, along with Fela. All they wanted was for me to pass through and sit in with their band on Shakara and Lady. So Fela sang the songs and I played drums. They played Shakara and Lady note for note and solo for solo! Everything. It was just the drums that were the problem. And when Bele came to see me playing it, he was gaspingit was like another school for him! 90Chapter 5 We played for a long time and they were asking me how I could play so long. You see, I dont feel pain or discomfort or anything like that when Im playing. I can go on for as long as it takes. My body is used to it. And thats because when Im playing the drums, I sit straight. Im not leaning on any side. Im right in the middle. Thats how I get my balance properly. Its when you are leaning that you might be emphasizing too much on one thing. Drummers all have diferent ways of body movement. Some of them, their body is playing more than what the drums are doing! I see many drummers like this. They put so much in the body, but when you really check what is happening, its just a simple motherfucking thing that hes playing there. Meanwhile, the body is playing the whole world! But maybe thats what he thinks will make him a drummer. You have so many things in front of you as a drummer, maybe he thinks that he has to let the audience know that. Maybe he thinks he has to them show them a lot of action. But I never look at it this way. People think I dont put efort in my playing, but theres a lot of efort in what Im delivering. And if they can hear it, they know what is happening there. Forget about this fght you want to put on the drums. Dont fght the drums, just deliver coolly. I dont like using force to play the drums, because I know when I have to hit them hard. I know when I want something to be stronger. So Im playing in betweenits like a kind of caressing. And at the same time, I could be brutal. Im exercising both of those things in my playing. Thats why you dont see much movement when I play. When I was learning to play highlife from Ojo I decided that I wanted to be a smooth drummer, not a noisemaker. Because I saw a lot of noisemakers in front of me in those daysit was sometimes like thunder on the drums! I didnt want to play like that. I saw that the drums have diferent tones. And you must make those tones relateits just like singing. Thats the way I look at it. Aside from that, the fow of the Afrobeat has to enter the audience easily. If you dont catch them quickly with this feel, they might just be standing there and looking at you. Mostly what I do when Im playing is that the music is in my head up there, and I just use my hand to supply what is coming from my head. If its a pattern that Im laying downokay, I could repeat the pattern every time, if thats the pattern I want to use for that song. But I cannot repeat myself when it comes to soloing. Because its like my solo work is coming as things appear to me at that moment. So you can never see any of my solos being repeated like the one you heard yesterday. And my solo work was much better with all the stuf I learned from Frank Butler. Me (left) with my friend Bashola, around 1957. credIt: toNy ALLeN My parents with my brother Kunmi and my sister Jumoke, around 1960. credIt: toNy ALLeN My wife Ibilola in 1970. credIt: toNy ALLeN My daughter Nike. credIt: toNy ALLeN My daughter Kehinde. credIt: toNy ALLeN My daughters Abidemi (left) and Ibiyomi (right). credIt: toNy ALLeN Me (left) with Sivor Lawsons Cool Cats, 1960. Lawson third from left, with tenor sax. credIt: toNy ALLeN Playing with the Cool Cats at the Cool Cats Inn, 1960. credIt: toNy ALLeN Playing at Tip- Toe club with Koola Lobitos, Accra, Ghana, 1966. credIt: toNy ALLeN Koola Lobitos in Lagos, 1967: (left to right) Ojo Okeji, Adisa, me, Fred Lawal, Isiaka, Christopher Uwaifor, Seyi. credIt: toNy ALLeN With Nigeria 70 in Los Angeles, 1970. Top (left to right): Me, Lekan Animashaun, Henry Kof, Fred Lawal. Bottom: Tunde Williams. credIt: toNy ALLeN Me with the Koola Lobitos dancer Dele in Liberia, 1970. credIt: toNy ALLeN. Me with my friend Sola backstage at Afro- Spot, 1970. credIt: toNy ALLeN. At Apollo Theater in Accra, 1973. Top (left to right): Tunde Williams, female friend, Igo Chico, three male friends. Bottom (left to right): Henry Kof, female friend, me, Patrick (Africa 70 road manager). credIt: toNy ALLeN Relaxing in front of Felas house, 1975. credIt: toNy ALLeN Me (middle left), Kologbo (front center), Henry Kof (back right), and Laspalmer (middle right) with some of the area boys at Kalakuta, 1976. credIt: toNy ALLeN Tee- Mac Iseli. credIt: toNy ALLeN Drum Convention at National Theater in Lagos, 1979: (left to right) Remi Kabaka, Kof Ghanaba, me, Bayo Martins. credIt: gerwINe BAyo- MArtINS Me with Jumbo van Renen and his wife Marie during the recording of N.E.P.A., 1984. credIt: deNIS LewIS My band The Mighty Irokos, Paris 1986. Top: Jumbo, Olivier, Claude, Udoh, Sami. Bottom: me, Martin, Shirley, Ben. credIt: chrIStIAN MAuvIeL Me in Paris, 1987. credIt: toNy ALLeN Martin Meissonnier (center) and Sunny Ade (left) at Olumo Studio in Lagos, 1984. credIt: MArtIN MeISSoNNIer Me in 1993 with Martins wife Amina and her group. credIt: toNy ALLeN Me and Tunde Williams in San Francisco, 2000. credIt: toNy ALLeN Me and my keyboardist Jean- Phi composing, 2000. credIt: toNy ALLeN Tony, Damon Albarn in Lagos, 2004. credIt: toNy ALLeN Being interviewed in Lagos by reporters from Music magazine, 2004. credIt: toNy ALLeN Me playing at La Cigalle in Paris, 2009. credIt: toNy ALLeN My sons Segun (left), Baptiste (middle), Arthur (right), and Remi (front). credIt: toNy ALLeN My family in 2011: (left to right) Arthur, me, Baptiste, Sylvie, Remi. credIt: MIchAeL veAL Custom snare drum made for me by Guillaume Carballido. credIt: guILLAuMe cArBALLIdo Custom drum set made for me by the Ghana Arts Center in Accra. credIt: guILLAuMe cArBALLIdo Swinging Like Hell!91 With all those techniques I had brought back, it was just too much for these drummers! Plus, all those subtle things I was doing inside the groove matched up beautifully with what Kof was doing on the congas. Kof played the congas with his hands and with sticks as well, and he was a master at getting all the diferent tones out of the drums. He played on the head, he played on the side of the drum, and he played on the rim. We sounded great together. We were very disciplined. If youre talking about discipline, it was very strong in that band. Even though nobody liked Felas system of fn- ing them for mistakes, the point was to get his music right. Thats the way I looked at it. And I think the discipline was refected in the music, because the music in that band was untouchable. Nobody in the coun- try came near it. It was much too heavy for them! When Shakara and Lady came out, we went up to another level. But even that wasnt the limit, because Fela just kept on writing and writing. And it was like that all through the 1970s. I really considered Fela to be a genius when it came to composing. Confusion was one track that really had people talking about my drumming. That was around 1974. When we played it live, people would stand next to my drum kit to try and see how I was keeping that pattern going. I was proud of Open and Close, even though I wasnt happy with my solo. But the groove was very nice. That was around 1972. I liked Un- necessary Beging, with that nice slow groove. Colonial Mentality was very good too, because of the triple- kick drum pattern. We were playing that around 1976. I really liked that one because Felas composition was so nice that it made me fow. Those were some of the good ones. Then there were the really fast ones, like Roforofo Fight, Slap Me Make I Get Money, and Alu Jon Jonki Jon. Alu Jon Jonki Jon was over 120 beats per minute! You had to dance in half- time to that one, because it was so fast. Everybody used to watch me on that one, because the band was like a locomotive. Question Jam Answer was another great one. In fact, Fela had a close friend named Kuster back then who used to hang with him all the time. Kuster would spend twelve hours with Fela in the house sometimes. One day after the release of Question Jam Answer, we were all sitting around joking, and Kuster said, Fela, lets speak the truthif Allenko were to blackmail you now, what would you do? Be- cause he didnt think he had ever seen a drummer who played like I played on that song! Fela just laughed and said, Allenko is not the type. He would never blackmail me. 92Chapter 5 And those were just the records. For me personally, I preferred play- ing live to recording. In the frst place, look at the recording timeits not the normal time, its in the afternoon. The studio atmosphere is not the same. Even though weve been playing a song onstage, its very dif- ferent when its time to record it. In the studio all the small details count and you can get bored when you keep on repeating the same song. When youre playing live, you dont repeat anything twice. You play it once and you put your everything inside it to make it go properly. But when youre in the studio and you do the proper one, the producers say its not right, and they ask you to repeat it again. Then its deteriorating. Each take, its deteriorating. So at the end of the day, when they say, Yeah, its good, thats bullshit to me! We have thrown away much better takes than that one, in my own opinion. Well, its not my recording, so its not my busi- ness. But when we played those songs live, it was a real kick in the ass, man! The record always limits you, but live is dangerous. The live of Con- fusion? Dangerous, man! The live of Alagbon Close? It was so heavy you cant even imagine it! You know, one had to spend time with Fela properly to understand his way of composing. He would sit down, looking over here or over there, staring of into space, and all of a sudden youd see him clucking his teeth together in rhythm. Then he would quickly pick up a pen and some paper and jot something down there. By the next day, he would have all the parts for the songs; rhythm section frst, and then the horns. That means he was going to call a rehearsal for the following day, and he would tell me to get everyone together. The rehearsals themselves were like shows. We would rehearse in the Shrine and the public was allowed to attend, so many people would come from the area to watch us get the music together. Manu Dibango once told Fela how lucky he was to have a band like that, ready to go at all times. Because Manu himself was living in France at that time, and its not easy to keep a band together in France. Everyone there wants to get paid, and if they get a better- paying gig, you can believe they will take it. So Fela was lucky to have us on call like that. Anytime he came up with a new idea, we were there to play it. For a while, Fela wrote out the horn accents for me, just like he did in Koola Lobitos. But then he stopped doing that and started to ask me, Allenko, what are you going to play on this one? I would try out difer- ent patterns, and all a sudden hed stop me and say, Keep that one! So I had a lot of freedom now, but I never used my freedom any more than to make sure that things were tight, man. I decided to just keep the groove Swinging Like Hell!93 instead of accenting so much. I heard the way he was writing, and it didnt need a lot of overplaying. For example, when he was playing a solo I kept it steady, but at the same time, I was interacting with him, like a jazz drummer. It was really like telepathy between the two of us. Some- times when we were onstage, he would turn around and look back and give me a thumbs- up, to say like Man, youre great! And sometimes he would just shake his head while we were playing, because he too could not understand how we could communicate like that. It was like we were seeing inside the head of each other. But the point is, that musical con- nection came out of our closeness. If any drummer wants that kind of connection with the bandleader, he must know the person inside out musically, his way of life, things like that. I was a crucial part of the band. If I was sick with my ulcer, that meant no gig that night. Even if it was a full house, Fela wouldnt even come to the club. He would just send a message to the gate man to return the money back to everybody and cancel the show. I never felt good about that, because some people in the audience had come from far away, plan- ning to return back home in the morning. Plus the little money the other musicians would make that night, they werent gonna get it, because Fela will tell them, We never played, and he would refuse to pay them. Thats why I always had my sodium bicarbonate next to me onstage. That was my ulcer medication and sometimes I would start drinking it right there onstage, while we were playing. It was Felas doctor brother Koye who advised me to do that. The Afro- Spot was packed every night. We toured Ghana in 1970, we toured all of Nigeria in 1971, and we went to the North, the West, and the East. Thats the tour when Ginger Baker flmed us in playing Calabar. The people loved it all around Nigeria, and they began to see that this was diferent from what all the other bands were playing. Rex Lawson and all those guys, they were still playing highlife, but ours was something completely diferent. It was like another education for the people. But it wasnt always easy. Some people already had a problem with what Fela was singing, and then he began to talk between the songs, what we used to call yabis. That wound them up even more! Sometimes people would disagree with him and call out from the audience. For example, Fela was always talking against the Koran and the Bible, and since he was known as the son of a reverend, many people just found the things he was saying unacceptable. 94Chapter 5 That made him be even more agressive in what he was saying, and that meant that sometimes when we were leaving the gig, we had to fght our way out of there! We were becoming so hot that we toured England in 1971. It was Gin- ger Baker who organized that tour for us. I dont really know how Ginger and Fela got to know each other, but I think it was through eMI. Fela had never told me anything about Ginger before 1971. Ginger was really get- ting into African music, and he loved Felas music and his way of life. He was also getting ready to set up a new studio in Lagos, so he became very close with us. When we got to London we were living in Bayswater, which is near the center of town, and we played at places like the Speakeasy in London. We also toured some other cities like Reading, and we went to Wales. We were playing mainly for British people, plus some Nigerians who knew us from back home. The reception was great everywhere we went and they were all good concerts. Ginger was guesting with the band throughout that tour. Usually he and I would play together for one song each night. Sometimes Mitch Mitchell guested with us too. Mitch was Jimi Hendrixs drummer. On that live album that we did, Gingers play- ing with me on the song Egbe Mi O. The rest of the album, Im play- ing alone. I liked Ginger and we became good friends, but personally, I wasnt crazy about the double drum arrangement because it just sounded like a jam, and we played with precise patterns in Africa 70. I could see that Ginger and Mitch were both great rock drummers, but on the Afro- beat it sounded kind of cluttered. So I just laid back and let them do the driving on that song. I was mainly playing the hi- hat part. On that tour I met a Nigerian guy in London named Dusty, through another Nigerian musician named Johnny Haastrup, who was a member of a group called Monomono. Dusty and I became good friends, and he hung out a lot with me and Fela. He was always at our side while we were in London. After he discovered the kind of music we were playing, he said that Fela was playing militant music, and when we were leaving, he gave Fela a book called Black Man of the Nile, by Dr. Yosef Ben- Jochanan. That book really infuenced Fela and you can hear it in many of his songs. During that tour we were able to record the London Scene album, which we did at Abbey Road studio. Then after the band left, Fela invited Sandra to London and they did Gingers Stratavarious album together. The tour was such a success that we planned to go back to England in 1972. But that was canceled because of a problem between Fela and the authorities in England. What happened was that one guy was fying from Lagos to Swinging Like Hell!95 London and they caught him at Heathrow with a big African drum that was flled with grass. When they asked him where he was coming from, he told them, Fela. And when they asked him who he was visiting in the UK, he told them JK and Ginger Baker. JK was Felas old friend who was now living in England. So we had to abandon the 72 tour. It was not too long after our England tour that Ginger drove the equip- ment for the studio from London to Lagos, all the way across the Sahara desert, in a big army truck. The complete studio was in there, so all he needed was the land and a building. Thats when he went into partnership with one of those big businessmenI cant remember the guys name, but I remember that he was the uncle of Remi Kabaka. They managed to get ffty or sixty square meters of land in Ikeja and they built a very good studio, which was called Arc. We already had Decca in Akoka and eMI in Apapa, but Arc was the frst sixteen- track in the country. The others were all eight- tracks. When the band frst got back to Nigeria, we did most of our recording at eMI, on eight- track. But once Ginger set up Arc, we started recording there a lot. Arc started a lot of competition among the studios in Lagos, because when Ginger set up his sixteen- track, every- one else had to go for sixteen tracks. Then eMI upgraded to twenty- four. Ginger was in and out of Lagos all the time in those days. When he fnally left, it was around 1973 or 1974, and thats when his studio was bought out by Phonogram. After a certain point, there were some problems with the ownership of the Kakadu, which was where we had the Afro- Spot. That place was run by a guy named Landa, and we had been leasing the spot since be- fore we went to the States. While we were away our band manager, a guy named Felix Osijo, handled it for us and we resumed playing there when we came back. But now Mr. Landa wanted to take the place back. So we had to look for another place, and we ended up moving to the Su- rulere Night Club in 72. That was where Fela started the Afrika Shrine. The proprietor there was a guy named Mr. Balogun. We moved there in 1972. Thats where Paul McCartney came to see us while he was record- ing at eMI. But because of a big argument about money between Fela and Mr. Balogun, we had to leave there after about a year too, and thats when we moved the Afrika Shrine to the Empire Hotel, which was right across from Felas house on Agege Motor Road in an area called Idi- Oro. All during the 1960s, the Empire Hotel was a place that was rocking, so it was a known place. Idi- Oro existed in the 60s, but for a person like me coming from 96Chapter 5 Ebute- Metta, going to Idi- Oro was like traveling out of town! You would never say that you were going from Ebute- Metta to Idi- Oro unless there was someone specifc that you were going to visit. The roads were not wide there back then. The main road running through the area was Agege Motor Road, which leads to the airport. The other main road running through there now is Ikorodu Road, and even that road wasnt existing in 1964, when Muhammad Ali came to Lagos. But later, development made it become part of Lagos. We moved there around 1973. The proprietor of the Empire Hotel was a guy named Mr. Kanu. He knew Felas family and I think Fela had known his sons since they had all been teenagers. The Empire would ft about eight hundred, with a full house. The organization was getting bigger now. It seemed as if Fela wanted to develop things just by making them biger. Up until Jeun Koku, we had kept the same forma- tion, which was a ten- piece band plus one dancer. Then the band started to grow, because Fela started to recruit more dancers and singers. We soon had about forty people around us on payroll. Then Fela decided that, since he was recruiting so many people, he wanted to bring the whole thing under his control inside his house. Thats when he changed his way of living. After that, the house on Agege Motor Road became like Felas headquarters, not just his home. All of Felas friends that he studied with in school were passing through at any time and staying as long as they wanted. Im talking about high- level guys like Wole Bucknor, who led the Nigerian Navy Band, and Olu Akarogun, who was a journalist. Felas brother Beko even had a clinic in the house. But with all this stuf going on it was quickly becoming rowdy, and he could not aford to have his family in the house anymore. It would have been like an invasion on them. He knew that he had to get them out of the mess that was about to start, so he found Remi and the kids an apartment in Aguda, and they moved out of his place on Agege Motor Road. Remi didnt leave Fela. In fact, the kids were still coming to the house every day after school to play with their father and Remi had to drag the kids back to Aguda! Thats really how it was. Since we were now playing right across the street in the Empire Hotel, the whole area was becoming kind of like Felas area. Thats when things began to get crazy. Nineteen seventy- three was really the beginning of the craziness. I could see Felas attitude changing, and his way of dealing with people. Back when we started the band, you remember Fela had Swinging Like Hell!97 promised me that we would share everything as a partnership. But once the machine started to roll, its like he forgot about that. Its true that he made me bandleader when we got back from the States, but it was still difcult to even get my basic payeven after we were the most popular band in the country. And when Fela had that money dispute with Mr. Ba- logun back in 1972, the police had to be called because Fela jumped be- hind the counter of the bar, went crazy, and broke up everything! That wasnt the Fela I knew, because Fela wasnt a fghter. He had his own fghters who stayed with him in his house. Fela didnt have to do any fghting himself. But he was changing now. Some people have put blame on his mother, but I wouldnt blame her for anything. Felas mother was just a nice lady that was supporting him, and she could not stop him any- way because she was old by that time, and Fela didnt want anybody tell- ing him what to do. She wasnt what she used to be before, as the famous Mrs. Ransome- Kuti. Fela began to be surrounded by a lot of parasites, people who were hanging around but werent contributing anything to the organization. But even though he was surrounded by these people, what he didnt like was yes men. I mean, he liked to have them around him, because he was a guy that could not be alone. He wanted to have people around him at all times. But secretly he saw them as his enemies. Because as soon as it turned out that someone was with him every day, his attitude inside was Who are you? If you can come and sit down, wait for him to wake up and youre going to be with him for twenty- four hours, that means you have nothing else doing. So now he can treat you the way he likes, and you cannot even open your mouth. That started a lot of the craziness. Another thing that made everything crazy was all the girls that were coming around. They came on their own because when Fela was looking for a dancer, plenty of girls came. Our frst four dancers after Dele left were Kemi, Adia, Paulina, and Eva. Adia we called Yansch Controller. Kemi was called Shakibo. But many others came, and some of them didnt want to go back because the house was big and there were so many things going on. The music was exciting for them. But with all of those girls around, there was bound to be a lot of craziness, and sometimes it got to be too much. For example, Ginger Baker once gave an interview where he said he subbed for me when I was sick. But thats not really how it happened. What really happened was that on this particular day, it was my mothers fftieth birthday and my family had a big party for her. I wasnt even supposed to come to play that night, but I knew that by not 98Chapter 5 coming to play, the band wouldnt play. I didnt want to disturb the busi- ness because of my mothers birthday. People would say that I was dis- rupting business for luxury. Plus, it was salary night and I needed to get paid. So I went to my mothers party and then I went to the gig after. I dont know what was going on in town that night, but for some reason the club was not flling up quickly. But it was just the beginning of the night, so there wasnt anything special about that. The people were just coming in slowly. So I arrived and started up the band. After we had played for a while, Fela came in and he saw that the place was not full. That was about eleven oclock in the night. And so he spoke to some of these stupid people he used to have around him. Fela always put the wrong people in the right place. He always put thieves there to guard his money. He would never let any normal person take care of his money. He always let thieves do it. That was because of what he called his politics. He would always choose the raf of the street to handle his money, and most of them were robbing him. One of these motherfuck- ers was in charge of collecting all the money of the night and telling the fgure to Fela. And whichever fgure he tells to Fela is what Fela believes. It wasnt even written anywhere. So a lot of the money that came in at the gate, that was money that we would never see. And on a slow night like that, theyre already taking care of themselves, you know? So when Fela came, he asked that guy What time did Tony start playing with the band? He thought the place was not full because we had started playing late. And that idiot there told him that we had just started at that mo- ment. That way, he could pocket all the money from earlier in the night. Actually, we had been playing for about 45 minutes to one hour! Fela came over to my drums and told me that when we fnished that song, I should see him backstage. So when we fnished I went backstage, and he asked me Why are you starting now, at this time? Why are you starting late like this? And then he started saying a lot of crazy things, man. I told him Hey Fela, its not like that. Its the politics of these guys up front. And I told him You never even asked me about nothing, you just started on me with this shit! Why didnt you come to me coolly and ask me yourself? I dont like the way you are talking to me! He told me that if I didnt like the way he talked to me, I could resign. I said, What? I could resign? Then Im doing it nowI resign! And I just walked away from him. Then he ran into the club and told the gate guys that they should return the money back to everybody, so that they could Swinging Like Hell!99 go home. No show that night. Everybody was asking, what is the matter here? They had been enjoying the night coolly before Fela came, and all of a sudden they have to go back home! But Ginger was in town at that time. And it just so happened that as I was getting ready to leave the club, Ginger was coming in. When Fela saw Ginger, he said, Ginger, man, come on and play with me, man! And he yelled at the gate man Stop, stop, stopdont give them the money back! Ginger was asking, What happened to Tony? Because I was standing right there. I told him Look Ginger, I cannot say anything right now. If he wants you to play, the drums are right there. Go ahead. So he took over that night, which was a Saturday night. I just stayed back- stage and sat down, smoking and doing my thing. Ginger knew all the songs anyway, because hed been hanging with us all along. But to actu- ally get up and play them was a diferent thing. Well, Fela just happened to be playing rock music that night. It wasnt Felas music anymore, it be- came something else. Fela was trying to play his music, but he sufered a lot to have Ginger behind him, playing it in a diferent style. But that wasnt even the end of it, man. Right in front of Felas house, I had set up a small boy there, to sell some small things like omelets, yams, and tea. Because when we came back in the middle of the night, everybody wanted to snack on something. It was just to make some small change. He knew that that was my own business there. So, when Fela came back home, you know what he did? He told his bodyguards that they should go and kick over all of this boys egs, yams, pots, that they should just break up everything! And they did that. Meanwhile, the next day was supposed to be Sunday Jump. And be- fore the starting time, his so- called friends that advise him came to my house. They saw what happened the night before, and they told me that the music was not happening. And they asked me, was I going to remain at home like this? I told them that I wasnt going back there. These guys beged me and beged me. So fnally I told them that I could come to the Jump. I had nothing to do at home at that moment anyway. I could just come to the Jump and watch like any other person. But I wasnt play- ing any fucking drums. And they told me that, no, they dont want me to go there like anybody. They want me to go there and play! Because they were my fans and they loved what I was doing. I got there and the musicians were waiting to start. So, who was going to start them? Ginger couldnt start up the band. Animashaun could not 100Chapter 5 do it at that time. So for their own sake, I went and tuned the band. Then I played the warmup tunes with them. But as soon as Fela and Ginger entered, I walked of and left the drums for Ginger and went backstage to smoke my joint and drink my beer. Fela did not have the guts to call me to come and play. So, they managed again that night, but the people were getting crazy in the club! Fela himself heard all the people shout- ing out my name, asking what was going on? So when they fnished that night, he announced to the audience that from that day, there would be no more music and that the next show would be announced. And only God knew how many months that was going to take, for him to regroup! Well, the truth was that all this bullshit happened because of all those girls that were around. It was just a question of me screwing one girl that was his favorite. But nothing stopped him from screwing that girl also, because she lived in his house. So, who was the masterwas he not? If the girl followed me, it was because she wanted to. I never draged any- body by force! She was not my wife, and I never put any emblem on her, so why was he making a problem with me? And on that very night that the shit went down, that girl was standing right behind me when he was facing me and talking to me like that backstage. So he just gave it to me properly in front of that girl, to let that girl know that he was the boss. Which everybody already knew, anyway. So I went back home and relaxed. Then, Fela slowly started to send his delegates to me. The frst one he sent was Wole Kuboye, who was his lawyer and his friend. We used to call him Feelings Lawyer. And Wole came to me with allegations that I have fucked some of Felas girls. I have fucked this one. I have fucked that one. I have fucked the other one. It was all true. But you have to understand something. These girls were not his wives at that time. There were girls coming and going all the time, and they were there for anybody to pick. In fact, Wole himself was picking one any time he wanted. It was only that particular one that was Felas favorite that caused the problem. I told Wole that, since these allegations have been made, that we have to go clear this up. I told him, lets go to Fela now. But as soon as we entered Felas house, Fela ran up to me and said Allenko, lets forget it. Lets forget about this completely. And he said Im very sorry for what happened with your shop there. How much did all that stuf cost? He told me that I should just give him the bill and he would pay it. And I asked him, But what about the matter that brought me here? He told me that we should forget about it, that we should not even mention it. Swinging Like Hell!101 And then he asked me So, when are we playing again? Are you still play- ing? I said Alright, fnitoits fnished. It was very seldom that Fela apologized for anything. But he did it that time because he could not aford lose me at that time. Especially over some stupid bullshit like that. I think he must have checked the level he had reached with me, and realized that it would have crippled him for a while and when he woke up, he wasnt gonna get his machine rolling the same way anymore because there is no drummer in that country or from any part of the world that will replace me when it comes to play- ing Afrobeat. So after I accepted his apology, he ran out to call his press attache, to put it in the newspapers quickly that we were back on. Thats what really happened when Ginger subbed for me. It had nothing to do with me being sick. Between the two of us, there was always a lot of ego tripping, man. For example, any time Fela came and saw me with a new girl sitting in front of the stage, I knew it was gonna be a problem. Because in his mind, Im sure he was thinking Ah, this one must be with Tony. My job as bandleader was to make sure the band was in tune. And then we would play our warm- up set. We would start maybe one and a half or two hours before Fela came, playing my own instrumentalsno singing, just groove and solos. And I would keep the crowd on their feet dancing the whole time! Some people would tell me that when I was playing was when they were enjoying the music the most. It wasnt competition with Felas music, it was just that when Fela came, many talkings were going to go on. He had his politics business and sometimes it took the whole night for this. One song would last like maybe twenty- fve or thirty min- utes and with all the talking between songs, he might only play four or fve songs in a night. So some of the people commented. Its not that they didnt like Felas show, its just that there wasnt too much dancing going on anymore. It became what they used to call mouth dancing, they used to be yelling out that Fela was dancing with his mouth! But when he came onstage the frst thing he had to do, if I had a girl there, was to show everyone that he was the boss. He would turn around to me and say Allenko, did you tune up the band? I would say Yes. And then hes gonna start his shit: Ah, the band is not in tune! You didnt tune them well. I mean he would say this publicly, on the mike! And the band was right in tune, anyway. So I laughed and told him Okay, if they are not well tuned, you are the bosstune them yourself! I play my drums, and my drums are in tune. You see? I gave him back the answer like 102Chapter 5 that, publicly. Then he had to walk over to tune the guys guitar for him or whatever, and the guitar was already in tune! All this shit just to show of in front of the girl. So when we fnally started the tune, I would just play it straight and clean. Fela would be playing his solo, and I wouldnt be giving him any extras to make it exciting. That means things were slipping, and that was a problem for him. He would start to look back at me, to see what was happening. And me, I wasnt going to look at him! I just turned my head to the side! I felt like You are the leader, so go ahead and drive the ship . . . ! Then he had to try and fnd a way to bring me back to life after insult- ing me. So after a song, he would start to ask me questions. Okay . . . Allenko . . . hmm . . . what do we play now? I would say, Well, whos driving the ship? He wanted me to say well play this tune or that one, and I wouldnt say it! And sometimes when we fnished a tune, hed come back to me and ask How did it go? And it was his own music he was ask- ing about! The point is that it was some psychological shit he was tripping on and you couldnt fall into his trap, man! This small stuf was nothing compared to what happened when we went on tour in Cameroun in 1974. Thats when I really began to see how much this guys attitude had changed. It seemed like everybody in that country was screaming for Shakara and Lady, because those were our big songs at the time and they were very big hits there. So our frst gig was in the big stadium in Douala. The stadium was completely full with about 60,000 people and frst of all Fela was very late, as usual. He would never come onstage until everybody was screaming for him. But I was there al- ready with the guys, warming up the crowd up with the bands set. Finally he came, and we started to play all the songs that we were doing at that time. The gig was going fne, but after a while people started shouting for Shakara. In fact, the whole stadium started shouting for Shakara. So I said to Fela, lets play Shakara now! But he went to the mic and told the entire stadium that he wasnt going to play Shakara and that if they wanted to hear it they should go home and play the record. That was always Felas policy, you knowhe would not play any song live that we had already put on record. He would always tell the audience that if they wanted to hear those older songs, they should go and buy the records. And then he turned to us and said, Lets play another song. The audience actually thought he was joking and that he would come back to it. But we played for a long time and eventually we had to fnish Swinging Like Hell!103 the gig. We never played the song. And after we fnished, it took us about three hours to get out of the stadium with an army escort, because the audience wanted to tear the whole stadium down, they wanted to destroy the place! It became a big problem between Fela and the promoter be- cause he had brought us all the way to Cameroon and Fela refused to play our most popular song. But we managed to escape that situation. The next gig was in Yaounde, which is their capital. When we arrived there, the promoter put us in some kind of shitty hotel, maybe a one- star or a no- star hotel. It was just a place to sleep and wake up, and we started to complain about that. But the president of Cameroon at that time was a man named Ahidjo, and Ahidjo was a big fan of Felas music. Ahidjo heard that Fela was in Yaounde and that we were going to play in the sta- dium. He asked his people, Where are they staying? And they told him that we were in that no- star hotel. So he told his people that they should go check all of us out of that shitty hotel and take us to the fve- star hotel in Yaounde, which was the Hilton. The Hilton was built up on the moun- tain, and it was like a paradise up there. There were three days until the gig and Ahidjo told us that we should eat anything and drink anything we wanted, as much as we wanted. Open tab. We were having a ball, man! The day of the concert, you should have seen the stadium. It was totally full up, like for a football match. There were about seventy thousand people there! And the presidential stand was up there, too. And Fela did the same thing he had done in Doualano Shakara, no Lady. He told them that he didnt play anything that he had already recorded, because he was trying to move forward and that if he kept playing his old songs, he would not move forward. And afterwards, it was another fucking riot! I could understand his principle, but I thought that we shouldnt have applied that in this type of situation. At least he could have bent just a bit. He could have told them, I dont usually do this, but Im doing it for you people because you gave us such a good reception. Especially when the president gave us this red carpet treatment, you know? But he refused, and we never played those two songs on the whole tour! So that was the last time we ever played in Cameroon. They never brought us back there because of all the bullshit! After the Cameroon tour, some of the musicians really began to get fed up. Going through all of this shit, and we werent even being paid properly. All of this stuf was building up and the result was that there was a strike after we all came back from Cameroon. We were supposed to be playing at the Gondola in Lagos, and the musicians decided to send 104Chapter 5 a petition to Fela. Animashaun was the one that drew up the petition. There were nine of us then, not including Fela. The other eight all signed the petition, and then they brought it to me. I myself didnt want to agi- tate. What could one tell Fela anyway? You couldnt tell him anything. He was a person that had his own way of life, he knew what he wanted, and he was going to do things his own way. I didnt want the same things as him, but if you want to work with a person like that, you have to be ready to compromise. I knew everything that I myself was doing for the orga- nization, and every time I would see all of the bread just fying past me, and none of it coming my way. And I had also stopped working the job at Associated Press at the end of 73. It was getting kind of tiring, and after ten years of working two jobs, I was not really getting richer, either. So I told myself, okay, let me just face the music, and thats when all this shit went down in the band. So I could have been the frst person to agitate. But I was the bandleader at that time, so it kind of put me in the middle. I had to be very diplomatic. Anyway, the majority carries the vote. At that time, Fela was earning ten shillings per album sold, as a royalty. So the band asked for one penny per album. To give you an ideaif you have nine pennies, it is not even adding up to one shilling yet. So the band was petitioning for less than 5 percent of what Fela was already earning. I thought that this was minute. They never asked for anything exorbitant or unreasonable. You have to remember also that the band was not paid for recording sessions. It was part of our expected duties, and the record- ing fee was part of our salary. Thats the way it was back then. So I signed the petition and it was taken to Fela. When it came time for the Gondola show, there was no gig and I stayed in my house sleeping. But Fela came to my house in the middle of the night with his whole troupeall the singers and dancers and everyone elseand parked the bus at the petrol station near my house. It was about two in the morning. I got out of bed, and Fela asked me, Allenko, whats happening? I told him, Did you see the petition? He said, Yeah. So I said, Thats whats happening! He said he wanted to see me in Kalakuta, in his house. My wife asked me where I was going at that hour, and I said, To Felas. So I got myself together and drove there. When I arrived, Felas mother, his lawyer Kanmi Osobu, his friend JK, his friend Benson Idonije, and he himself were all there. Mrs. Ransome- Kuti was a woman that I used to dialogue with a lot, because she knew my family from Abeokuta. She asked me why I should be inside of this matter of the petition, since me and Fela were very old friends. I told her, The Swinging Like Hell!105 majority carries the vote. And Im not sure theyre asking for too much. Then Fela said we had to close this matter, that he was going to talk to all the musicians the next afternoon. The next day, everybody was there. Fela said that his reply to the peti- tion was that he was not going to give anybody one cent from his royal- tiesno way! He told us that the only way to make money is to write your own songs and that if any one of us wanted to make our own money then we should do the same thing as him and write our own songs. And he told us that as long as we were in the band, he would be part of the project and he would support it. He would participate for free, he would take it to the record company, and he would not ask for any pay or any royalty. He made his point very clear, and he put the ball back into our own corner. So thats where many of my own songs came from at that time. Like Hustlereven though that song was an instrumental, it was my way of saying that Fela had put me in the state of hustling for my own survival. As long as hes not going to give anybody any royalties, I had to do my own records to be able to get my own money. Progress was the next album after Jealousy. In between, we did a few more of Felas albums. What I was saying on Progress was that, instead of fghting with Fela for money, I was trying to progress and create on my own. If I kept waiting around for money from Fela, I would still be in the Egypt 80 today! And where I am today, I could even have a legal case because my name is documented on all those Africa 70 albums with Fela. But I think I would be wasting my time instead of progressing and trying to create something for myself. You see? Progress is what a hard worker is looking for. I had to look for it for myself. The lyrics tell you that. Later on, I did No Accommodation for Lagos, which was referring to the housing shortage at that time. Well, at least Fela gave me the chance to have those on the market. Anytime I told him that I wanted to rehearse with the band, he would tell them, Allenko wants to rehearse tomorrow and everyone is required to be there. So at least he was supporting me that far. It was around this time that things really began to change between us. I was still part of the organization, but at the same time I was far. I had to operate this way be- cause the truth is that Fela messed many peoples heads up. I remember one Saturday night that we were doing what we used to call the Com- prehensive Show with all of the dancers and everything. And I dont know how he managed to come up with this that particular night, but 106Chapter 5 he stopped the music and told the audience that he was gonna preach to them. He asked them what they believed in, and most of the people there answered that they believed in God. So he asked them, which god? And he told them that if they thought there was any god, he himself was God. And he told them that if they thought there was any other God, that they should look up to their ceiling when they woke up in the morning and pray for God to give them their daily bread. And if they saw that bread drop down in front of them and they could eat it, then he would believe in their God. But he told them that as far as he was concerned, he was the only one that they could see in the morning and ask, Fela, Im hungry. Please give me some money to buy my bread. And since he was giving them money for the bread, he was their god now! A few people believed this shit, some didnt believe, and most of them just found it ridiculous. But they couldnt challenge him there, you know? I just kept my cool. There was another time when the band was on tour up north in Kano, and he had his boysthose ones that believed in his gospelhe had them take all the Bibles of the hotel and use the pages to roll big jumbo joints. Because they were those old Bibles where the paper is very thin, like Rizla. I didnt like that. When they gave me one of those joints, I made sure to take that Bible paper of and use my own paper. When all of these things were happening, I was just talking to my own God inside of myself and saying, Please, you know I never did any kind of shit like this . . . So please spare me any time youre going to drop the axe! Sometime around 1976, Fela made everybody in the Africa 70 orga- nization change their names. Any European name had to be changed to some kind of typical Nigerian name, even including their family name. He himself took the Ransome name out of his name and put Ani- kulapo there. Everybody in the organization changed their names musicians, workers, dancers, singers. But me, I refused. I told Fela, My fathers living and Im not going to change my surname and disrespect him. Sorry. Im Allen. And thats it, period. But since my fathers middle name was Alabi, Fela started putting that name down for me on the album credits. He took my middle name Oladipo and combined it with my fathers middle name. Thats why you see me listed on some of those albums as Oladipo Alabi. That wasnt right, because my father never used Alabi as a family name. I would never be recognized by the real Ala- bis if I went around them. Allen was originally a slavery name, thats true. But I told Fela that that was hundreds of years ago and that today I wasnt the slave of anybody, so it didnt disturb me. That song Colonial Swinging Like Hell!107 Mentality was written about this name- changing business. If you listen closely, youll notice that Fela was mentioning the names of the people around him. But when he got to Mr. Allen, he sang Mr. Alien. He dodged it cleverly. If there was any kind of dispute between us, usually he wouldnt con- front me. But if we had something going on in the studio, thats when the bullshit would start. He might take his revenge in the mix. For example, if we were listening to something and I said, Theres not enough drums there, he would tell me, Well Allenko, it depends on what you want to hear at a certain time. And then he would reach over and turn me way down in the mix. After all the work weve done! Thats the reason you cant hear my drums too clearly on some of the records. For example, if you listen to that song I Go Shout Plenty, youll see what I mean. But if you can hear my drums very clearly, that means the politics were good in the band at that time! The whole Africa 70 trip is something that I saw grow up in front of me, because I was there before the beginning of all that. From the time he started smoking, Fela changed completely from the guy that I used to know between 1964 and 1970. Believe me, manmany crazy things were transpiring around him. It was chaos, and the more you looked, the less you would see. I decided that it was better for me to be at a distance so that I could see clearly. The distance Im talking about is not like the distance between people in diferent houses. Im talking about whats in the heart of the person. Be- cause even though I was the leader of the band, I wasnt going to accept everything that Fela was doing. The turning point was around this same time when I went to confront him in his house, in what they called the court. That was where everybody in the Africa 70 organization aired out their grievances. Everybody had to be there. And I told Fela in front of the whole organization that day: The one thing I will do with you for ever and ever is the music. I am with you. But the other things around it, I am not inside of them. These other things are not things I can handle. Fela then turned around and asked everyone, Did you all hear what Allenko saidthat he is not inside our philosophy? Everyone said yes. And that was that. I had to do this because with all the shit that was going on, he might think that as long as I was with him in the music, I was with him in everything. Unless I clarifed it, which I did. At least that cleared up my own side. EVERYTHING SCATTER Among the general public, Fela had some fans in the middle class. But most of his fans were either from the high class or the low class. The high class was like the intellectuals and the educated people. They appreciated his message. And the low class was like the people in the street. His songs inspired them to be able to stand on their feet. Dont let your- self be bullied around. Fight back. Lookthese messages in the music were really sung for everybody. He wasnt singing for him- self. He was singing for the public so everybody could learn from that. Because the things that those politicians would not even talk about, he was singing about them and exposing them to the public. The country needed someone like Fela at that time, be- cause we were under military rule. With the soldiers, it was like If you dont do it our way, you are against us. You understand? One- sided. No conversation. No dialogue. Meanwhile, the rich were getting richer and the poor were getting poorer. Thats why I give President Yakubu Gowon a little bit of credit. Even though he himself was a soldier, when the oil money started to come he gave out refunds for government workers from the surplus. The Udoji refund was the frst, and the sec- ond one was the Morgan refund. Gowon built bridges, so that the people could reach each other. He built the National Sta- dium with the money from the oil. At least he made something happen there. But after Gowon, the corruption started to get to the highest level. I mean, Murtala Mohammed came in after 6 Everything Scatter109 Gowon, but he was short- lived. He wanted to straighten out the heads of everybody, but they didnt want that type of person because it was too hard for them. He was making the former colonizers sweat because even though he was a northerner, he was following the politics of the South. For the most part, the ones in the South wanted the country to progress and stand on its own, and the ones in the North were in the pockets of the former colonizers. Thats why they eliminated Mohammed right away. Obasanjo came in after Mohammed, but he was a stooge for the north- erners. So you see, everything in the country was going haywire. That was the system, and it was difcult for anybody to come up and criticize the government because nobody wanted to be on their bad side. The journalists were there, but how many people read the paper to get those messages? And even if the news was on the radio, how many people were educated enough to understand it? So there was little the journal- ists could do to criticize the government, on radio or the tv. And if they tried, the director of the program would be locked away somewhere. The music was an easier way for everybody to get messages, because even if they couldnt buy the record, somebody might put Felas music on in a record shop and play it very loudly in the street, and everybody passing would stop and listen to the record. As far as I was concerned, Felas program was my program. I liked the fact that he was able to face these things squarely. It was just the crazi- ness around the program that became a problem. The police were getting irritated because he was singing against them. And then he began to sing against the military. When Fela started talking about going into politics, the truth is that he could have become head of state if he had played the right role. To do something like that, you have to go about it in a way that will make the people be on your side and fght for you. But most of the people up there in the government didnt like his lifestyle. And even if they tried to ignore his lifestyle, it was impossible because their kids were coming to Felas house, and some of them were staying! Im talking about the children of magistrates, judges, politicians, and other people like that. These people didnt like the fact that their kids were coming to the house of Fela, the crazy musician who smoked grass and all that stuf. When we were on tour of Cameroon in 1974, the cops chased us all the way there and back because of some underage girls that were singing and dancing with the band. They took the girls away, but the funny thing is that as soon as they got them back to Nigeria, the girls escaped and came back to Felas house! Many of these kids couldnt hear a single word 110Chapter 6 against Fela. If you made the mistake of trying to lecture them about Fela, you would be in a big soup! What pushed everything over the edge was when Fela began to chal- lenge the government on the grass issue. The Indian Hemp (marijuana) law was one of the craziest laws that was ever passed in our country. It even ruined many of the higher- ups. For example, some big- time doctors and lawyers went to jail for ten years, for stupid bullshit like having one joint. I even remember meeting some policemen back when we were in the States. When they found out we were from Nigeria, they laughed and said, You guys are from Nigeria? You people must have a good sense of humor over there! Isnt it in your country that for one joint, its ten years in prison? So they had even heard about this in the US! We just laughed along with them, but they were looking at it like it was complete mad- ness because in California at that time, people were smoking everywhere. When President Yakubu Gowon came in, he never changed that law. But the majority of the people would not agitate on the grass issue, because nobody wanted to be agitating on behalf of drugs under the military gov- ernment. Thats something Fela took on himself. And thats when the big problems started. It was sometime in 1974 when the police decided to jump on us for the frst time. I happened to be at Felas house that night. I was standing with Felas mechanic, whose name was Olu, when a bunch of policemen arrived. They came in regular vehicles, not police cars. And they were all dressed in normal clothesit was a plainclothes operation. There were female ofcers to take the girls away, and male ofcers to take the guys. The police went inside frst and gathered everybodyabout thirty peopleand then they came back outside. I had two joints on me and I knew they were coming after these types of things. So I was able to de- stroy the joints outside of the compound. And then they came back out and they were about to take everybody away. But frst they were asking the people outside, Who lives here? Whos not living here? The ones that said that they didnt live there, the police let them go. I myself didnt live there. I never lived in Felas house, I always lived in my own home with my family. But when they brought Fela out, he told me that they found fve sticks of grass in his house, and that made me feel something for him there. Like, it was gonna be a big shit for him now because of that ten- year possession law. So when they asked me if I lived there, at frst I just didnt answer them. They realized that I didnt live there, but then I said, I live here. But could you just let me go lock my car? They said, Yes, go do it. Everything Scatter111 So I locked my car and they took everybody to one police station. And that station refused us, because they didnt want to deal with Felas people. So they took us to the next police station, which was called Iponri, in Suru- lere. They started to put us into the cell, but the desk sergeant there also said no, he doesnt want to be responsible for Felas people. Then they transferred us to Central Police headquarters on Lagos Island, and we were refused there. They took us to Awolowo police station in Ikoyi, and we were refused there. They were refusing to take Felas people every- where, because no one wanted to have anything to do with Felas people, and also because there were too many people. Thats why fnally they had to drive us to Alagbon Close, which is another jail in Ikoyi. At Alagbon, there was just one big cell, but it couldnt contain all of us. So they had to use the ofces there to create temporary cells for every- one, except Fela. Fela, they put him in the real cell, the one with all the hardened criminals. That cell was called Kalakuta. The police thought they might break Fela by putting him there, but actually they were all his fans inside there! There was a president in Kalakuta, like the top crimi- nal in there. But when Fela arrived, that president stepped down for Fela to be the president of the place. I myself spent three days in Alagbon without going to any trial, and I was bailed out the third day. Fela was bailed out a week later, and the frst thing he did after coming out was to name his own compound Kalakuta Republic and tell everyone that the laws of Nigeria didnt apply inside there. And from that moment, things started going haywire. The govern- ment couldnt stand this republic within a republic thing. Especially because they themselves had critics all over the world because of all the craziness that Nigeria was going through at that time, with the war just ending and the oil boom and all the corruption. And people started to wonder, What kind of government is that in Nigeria, when a musician like Fela can just toy with them like that? Fela was always attacking them and ridiculing them publicly, and they were starting to write about him in foreign newspapers, like the New York Times. So the government kept trying to break him down. The raids started following each other, one after the other. For grass, for abduction, for all kinds of things. And it never stopped. But what a lot of people dont know is that if some crazy things were coming, the soldiers would always warn him by coming to tell me frst. Because the soldiers were in the Abalti barracks, which was close by on Folarin Street. And they knew I was the coolheaded one in the middle of 112Chapter 6 all this craziness. The soldiers would sometimes tell me when they were going to come and stop us from playing in the night. And many times I tried to pacify them, to say no, you cant do that, because we musicians dont have any problems with you guys. We just play music, and if you come to stop us, you disturb us from our living. And so they would always tell me that I should go tell Fela to cool down from yabbing (insulting) them. Because you know, he was yabbing them so badly by this time. They would always tell me to tell him that he should cool down, other- wise they will come and do their worst. But whenever I went to tell him, he would always say, Ah, Allenko, you have come with your theory. So what could I do? Every time I gave him the warning, he said it was only my theory. And when the shit came down, it came heavily. Each time, it got heavier and heavier. But I wouldnt be there because I already knew when those people would jump. Thats why many times I just played and went home. Between 1974 and 1977 it was a hot, hot time. It was like we were caught up in a war zone, man. Fela even electrifed the fence around the compound to try to keep the police out. I could have easily left the band then, but I stayed and I never complained because of how much I loved the music, and also because we were fnally having some fun and making some money after all the years of strugling. Also, I used to tell people, Why should I leave like a coward? The message this guy is preaching is right. Its just his approach that is the problem. But the truth is that it was getting too hot and I knew I would reach my limit one day. I didnt know when that day was coming, but I knew it was gonna come. You know, I dont take irrational decisions, just like that. I wanted to make sure that if someone asked me why I left, I had a good reason. I wanted to make sure that before I did it, I had enough proof. And as it turned out, that proof was coming soon. All of this was right around the time of FESTAC (Festival of Black and African Arts and Culture), which was held for one month in Nigeria in early 1977. feStAc was a good idea. At least for once in Nigeria, they gave some attention to cul- tural things. But the problem was that there was so much maladminis- tration around the festival that nothing came out of it in the end. All of those artists should be recognized today, wherever they are in the world. But at the end of the day, there was so much corruption that you could never really see it as a credit to the artists, to the country, or to Africa. Everything Scatter113 That was the main reason that Fela refused to perform at the feStAc. The government actually wanted him to represent Nigeria properly, and he went to a board meeting in Bagwada, near Kano, where they were planning the whole thing. But he dropped out halfway through the meet- ing because he didnt get along with anybody there. He also told them that the only way he would play was if the government would buy that book that Dusty had given him called The Black Man of the Nile and dis- tribute it freely to everybody that came to the festival. The government didnt want to do that, so Fela came back to Lagos and told all of us that we were not going to play. But the festival wasnt complete without him, and our Shrine be- came like the feStAc spot for all the foreign artists. When they fnished their performances at the National Theater, they all trooped over to our Shrine. Some of the musicians even sat in with us, like Randy Weston and Babatunde Olatunji. Randy loved Felas music. And Olatunji actually set his drums up right next to my set. Hugh Masekela also sat in with us. Masekela was Felas personal friend but he was in town for the festival and he used to come play. Another trumpeter that came through was Les- ter Bowie, from the Art Ensemble of Chicago. Lester loved Felas music and ended up staying for a few months and playing with us. So you can see how hot we were at that time. In fact, Stevie Wonder also came with his brother one night. Stevie didnt play, but they sat him right in front of the stage. Fela wanted him to try some kind of African beverage, so they brought palm wine for him to drink! And Stevie stayed there until the end of the show. He was diging the music and having fun! The Shrine was completely full every night of the festival, outside and inside. So many of the foreign artists were trying to pass through there that it was impossible to move. The government didnt like that, and they didnt like all of the attention Fela was getting. And Fela himself was yabbing them hard. Insulting them and ridiculing them publicly, in front of all the foreigners that were in Lagos. And this was being broadcast all over the world. So how long was it gonna take for them to jump again? They waited until everybody had left town, and this time when they jumped, it was a real disaster. This was in February of 1977, about one week after everyone from the festival had left. At that time, we were fn- ishing Felas Black President movie, and even the very title of the thing was irritating the government. He had already proclaimed his place the Kalakuta Republic, and now it was like he was challenging them at every corner. So he was like a big pain in their necks. We had been completing 114Chapter 6 the soundtrack at the Ghana Film Studios, in Accra. And it was really bad luck for Fela because the flm was actually fnished. The only thing left to do was to take the soundtrack to have it mixed, which they were planning to do the very next day. Another project that was planned around that time was for me, Fela, and Manu Dibango to record an album in Ghana with Ghanaian musicians. But then this thing happened and all of our plans went haywire. What caused the whole problem this time was one guy named Segun who was one of Felas driversactually, he was Felas mothers driver. Segun disobeyed the trafc police and then drove the car to Felas house. This kind of stuf happened all the time. Felas boys would cause all kinds of trouble around Lagos, and a lot of it Fela didnt even know about, be- cause he was in his house while his boys were out causing trouble. They would be breaking the law, abusing people, fghting with the police, and many other things. But whenever the police came to investigate the mat- ter, Fela would always defend the boys, no matter what they had done. He would never hand them over to the police. Like I told you before, this was because of his politics. So on this particular day when the police came to Kalakuta to try and arrest Segun, Fela and his people put loudspeakers outside and started playing Zombie to taunt them. So they went away, and Fela thought he had won. But then they came back, and about one thousand soldiers from the Nigerian Army came with them! I was actually supposed to be there that day, because usually I was there in the house every afternoon. I would wake up, drive down there, and maybe stay from two oclock until maybe twelve or one the next day. I would just be hanging and using the house as my base, taking care of diferent business, moving from there and coming back. The only day I didnt come was when we were playing in the night. Because I was tired and we were supposed to play that night, I told Fela that I wouldnt be there Friday afternoon, but that I would see them onstage in the night. But that was the gig that never happened. The soldiers came there about two or two thirty in the afternoon. But even though I didnt live far from Felas house, I didnt hear any of the chaos because I was at home sleeping. When it got to be about ten oclock in the night, I woke up to get myself ready to play, and I noticed that my wife was late coming home, because she was usually back by that time. It was only later I found out that the soldiers had stopped all the transporta- tion into the area. But a friend of mine came to knock on my door around that time because he saw that my car was still there. When I came to the Everything Scatter115 door he saw me and exclaimed, Thank god you are here! I asked what was the matter and he asked me, didnt I hear what happened at Felas house? He told me that there had been a complete massacre there by the soldiers and that Fela and all the girls had been taken to Abalti Barracks. But there were always crazy rumors and stories fying around Lagos. So I said, Lets take a trip. My house was very close to Kalakuta, like walking distance. I could walk there by Western Avenue, or I could walk by the railway. We walked down Western Avenue, passing behind Abalti Barracks. But when we got close to Felas house, there was a roadblock and we were sent back by the soldiers. So we came back and went again. This time, we went through the railway line. But there was a roadblock on that side too. The soldiers had the area completely closed down. So fnally we went back and got my car and drove over to Lagos Island, because it was the middle of the night. We went to a beer parlor and sat down and drank for a while. At three in the morning, I said, Lets try again. This time I drove my car through the Mosholasi way, across the railway line. We fnally drove in front of Felas house and I couldnt believe what I sawthe whole house had been com- pletely burnt down! The same house I was in a couple of days before! And the soldiers were guarding it. This went on for a week. Whenever you wanted to pass through that area, you had to pass the soldiers with your hands in the air. After one week, they dismantled the roadblocks. By the end of the week they had revived Fela and moved him from Abalti barracks to the hospital, but when I fnally got to see him, he was like a dead man. He was not talking, movingnothing. They had broken him completely into pieces. He was almost totally destroyed. All the girls, they had raped them and violated them every way they could think of. The soldiers had mutilated the bodyguards with bayonets and their intes- tines were falling out. The doctors had to put the intestines back in and wrap their stomachs in plastic to keep the intestines in. That attack seri- ously wounded Fela. Apart from the physical battering that he received, they completely fucked him up mentally. Because of what disappeared that day, theres no way he could ever get backphysically or mentally. I was at the tribunal afterwards, hearing all the testimony. Everything that the army alleged was untrue. For example, they claimed that Felas bodyguards had burned an army motorcycle. That never happened. It was bullshit, just a way of fnding something to put on him. Because if they could prove that his boys burned an army motorcycle, that would justify total war. And when he tried to sue the government, they dis- 116Chapter 6 missed his suit and said the house had been burnt by an unknown sol- dier. So he was left with nothing in the end. He even lost his conveyance for a piece of property in Ikeja that he had bought from my family back in 1970 or 1971. That land had originally be- longed to my grandfather. And I remember that Fela called me one day and he told me, Allenko, you know that I dont own the land your father sold to me in Ikeja anymore, because the conveyance of the land burned up in the fre. He was keeping it in his home, and when it was destroyed in the fre, there was nothing he could show to anybody to prove that he owned that land. This is when the people around me decided to give me a real kick in the ass. They asked me, Tony, are you crazy? Fela is going to sell this fucking land and its going to be worth a million naira now! They pro- posed that I should sell this land, get the money, and give Fela back his original amount, because the land was worth much more now than when he originally bought it. I didnt want to do that, so I went to my father. My father pitied Fela for what he had lost, and he agreed that we should do another conveyance for him. He didnt take advantage of the situation, because my father was not that type of person. He even paid the lawyer himself. My father never asked Fela to pay. He just went and did it, gave the conveyance to me three days later, and told me, Now Fela has his land back. When I went to give it to Fela he just told me, Thank you. Thats all. In that period after the fre, it was like one insanity after another. People were starting to leave the organization. To be a disciple of Fela and to preach his gospel, was becoming too crazy then. Like Lemi, a painter and graphics guy who did many of our album covers. I dont know precisely how he and Fela fell out, but Im quite sure it was because this matter was getting too tough for him. So he just stopped and got another job. And then some other people left because Fela was becoming para- noid. He started to accuse some people close to him of being agents from the cIA, and he would order his boys to whip these people. When everything was fnished with the tribunal, the next place that Fela and his people lived after his house was burnt was the Crossroads Hotel. That hotel was owned by a lawyer named Mr. Ogun who used to hire bands to play there. We couldnt gig anywhere else in Lagos, be- cause the army wouldnt let us. Anywhere we tried to gig, they stopped us. It was only at the Crossroads that we created a stage to do our Sunday Jump. And that was because Mr. Ogun was also an army boss, so the place Everything Scatter117 was kind of under his protection. But the Jump wasnt bringing in much money. Although the place was always full, Fela had to pay a lot of money to the hotel because the entire troupe was living there. We couldnt do anything in Nigeria, with the army stopping us every time we tried to play. So we went to Accra to try to record a new sound- track for the flm, because the original one was destroyed in the fre. That means we were trying to redo the music, dialogue, and everything. After a while we gave up, because it was too difcult. But fortunately for us, we had got a steady gig at a club called the Apollo Theatre, where we were playing three times a week and on the weekends. The band was still in- tact and still tight. So we were making money againjust a little bit be- cause we were living in the hotel for six months and we had to pay hotel bills, too. But it was still craziness. I remember that Fela actually slapped a guy onstage while we were in Accra. That was Y.D. Williams, who was the elder brother of Animashaun. Y.D. was playing tenor sax with us at that time, while Animashaun was playing baritone. Fela gave Y.D. a real dirty slap in front of the whole audience at the Apollo Theater, because he thought Y.D. had insulted him onstage. And after he slapped him, he tried to call his thugs to come and discipline him. I got up from my drums and stopped playing in the middle of the song, and I told those guys, If you touch that guy, you will all be dead! Its gonna be war for you guys! What kind of discipline is that? Animashaun himself is already older than Fela, and Y.D. was Animashauns elder brother! How could you slap somebody older than you like that? And then he was about to be disciplined again by some of Felas rifraf! Anyway, they reversed back and never touched him. And Y.D. refused to play anymore. He just left the stage. After the show I went to meet Fela, and I told him, This surprises me a lot! You can even slap an elderly guy like Animashauns brother? I said, Since Ive seen you do that to this guy, I think I myself I could be expecting such a thing the next time! Fela said, Ah, no, no, nonever, it can never be! He was trying to tell me that Y.D. had insulted him. I said, But how can I trust you now when you have done it to an elderly guy like this? That was just about the end for me. After six months we were deported from Ghana, because the problems started again. One night we were busted in the hotel when they found a big bag of grass, and another time Fela got into a dispute with a Syrian man in front of his shop. And the government in Ghana started to look at Fela like Oh, this guy has a problem in his own country and he wants to come and start another one here. 118Chapter 6 Fela went free of the weed business, but the government just waited for us to go back to Nigeria. Fela had announced to everybody that he was going back to Nigeria to marry his twenty- seven wives, and that was covered in all the newspapers in Ghana. So they just let us leave Ghana, but after the wedding we were supposed to be coming back. And luckily for me, I never left Lagos by plane with the band, because I was sup- posed to be driving. They left by plane in the afternoon and I told them that I would drive over to Ghana in the night and arrive in Accra the next afternoon. So I was still preparing myself in the evening when I ran into those same guys that had left in the afternoon by plane! And I asked them, What are you doing here? You are supposed to be in Ghana! And they said yes, they had arrived in Ghana but they were sent back with the next plane. The government told them that the musicians could come in, but not Fela. Well, if Fela was not going to come, what were the other musicians going to be doing there? I was lucky not to have taken of yet, otherwise I would have gone to Accra just to fnd out that those guys were not there. So then they all moved back to JKs house in Ikeja, and it was from there that they moved to the Decca ofces, because of a dispute. The problem was that Decca had asked Fela for eight albums a year, which is incredible! How did they want to sell eight albums in one year? So to fulfll the contract, we just went into the studio and did eight albums in three daystwo long songs on each album. Lester Bowie was guesting with us at that time, and he played on a few of those tracks. Fela was just composing those particular songs on the spot. But that caused another problem, because when the year was fnished, he wanted to record for an- other year but out of the original eight albums, only one or two had been released! The others were just sitting there in the can. Some of them are still unreleased today. Decca was refusing to release Felas music, prob- ably because they were afraid of the government. But Fela wanted his money, so he sued them for breach of contract. It became a war between him and the record company, and it was because of that that he took all of his people and moved them into Decca. They took over the whole Decca complex for about one or two months. Negotiations were going on, but Fela told them that no, he just wanted his money. But the good thing that happened during all of that craziness with Decca is that that was where the contracts were signed for the Berlin Jazz Festival, which was scheduled for September 1978. So thats when Fela relaxed a little bit and they all moved back to JKs place. By the time Everything Scatter119 the Berlin gig was arranged, Fela owed us so much moneyabout four months of back salaryand we all felt happy because this big festival gig would fnally allow him to pay everybody for the work we had been doing. Because really, things had gone completely haywire ever since the army burned Felas house down. But he promised everyone that at least the gig would allow him to pay us our back pay. And this was a huge pay- checkabout 250,000 US dollars. This was the most he had ever made for a live gig. And it was the most the festival had ever paid a performer. They really wanted him! For me, I was nearing the end of my ropenot only because of all the money Fela owed me, but because there was just too much insanity inside Felas organization. People used to come to me all the time and ask, What the fuck are you doingwhy are you staying with Fela? Are you crazy or something? Youre too coolheaded for these types of prob- lems. What is it there thats so special for you? Was it Felas mother that nursed you? Many of these people were even Felas friendsmembers of the elite that he had gone to school withwho used to tell me the same thing. They themselves knew that nothing was coming to me and they used to tell me that I should be shining too, that I should be getting some money and recognition. Because at that point, Id been putting up with diferent shit for more than ten years, and even though we were now successful, it wasnt really getting any better. It was only getting crazier. And Fela had already put me in a very difcult position, by making me bandleader when he wasnt treating the band well. That put me in the middle. But maybe he did that deliberately, because his friends used to tell me that when they confronted him about not treating me well, he would tell them, Ah well, Allenko is a weak leader. He would never agi- tate. But even after the house was burnt, I still didnt leave right away. Because that was a very crazy time for them and I never left them in the middle of shit before. And the house thing was the worst shit. The worst. So I couldnt leave. I wanted Fela to at least be back on track before I took my decision. And thats what I did when we went to Berlin. Even though I didnt tell many people before we left Lagos, I had told myself that what happened in Berlin was going to be the decider of whether or not I would stay in the band. And as it turned out, what happened there was complete bullshit. First of all, we went to Berlin with seventy- one people. That means airfare and lodging for seventy- one people, and meanwhile only twenty- eight were actually working! The others? Besides Felas family, which 120Chapter 6 was only about six people, they were all his imbecilesthe parasites and rifraf that he decided to have as part of his entourage. We should have gone three or four days before the gig so that we could see the city, done the gig, and then left. That way, Fela could have paid us all our back pay and still been sitting on a treasure for himself. But what happened was that all the rifraf that was living in his house in Lagos went on that tour, to do nothing in Berlin, and the whole troupe stayed for two weeks! Fela and his family were staying at the Palace Hotel and the rest were in the Hotel Kampinski. The festival organizers were paying for everything they knew exactly how the money was being spent, and they couldnt believe it. They werent thinking that he would come with seventy- one people! So that $250,000 became nothing at the end of the day. Then it was time to do the gig. We played in the Philharmonic Hall there. The organizers asked me and Ginger Baker and Henry Kof to open the show with just percussion, and we got a standing ovation they wouldnt let us leave the stage! And then everyone was waiting for the legend to appear. The gig was good, but Fela tried to lecture the audi- ence about his politics and there were people in that audience that were much heavier in that kind of thinking than he was. They didnt like the way he played the sax and the keyboards, and after a while they started to boo and whistle. The festival paid him that huge fee because he was a legend, but I watched him fuck it up by his manner of approach. After Berlin, we were supposed to tour West Germany and play some other cities like Hamburg and Cologne. But the tour never happened because the newspapers had already printed all the negative shit about the show. Those promoters that wanted to bring him to those other places canceled the gigs. Even Fela himself, when he read the papers the next day, real- ized that there was no way that he should proceed further. So we had to go back to Nigeriajust like that! The manager called me at the hotel and told me that at eight oclock, the bus would come to take the band to Felas hotel and then directly to the airport. This was the day after the gig. And it wasnt supposed to end like that. But the straw that broke the camels back was when the musicians came to me as bandleader and asked for their bread so they could go shopping. After all, the guys wanted to change their look, because we were in Europe. They also wanted to buy presents for their people back home because it was getting close to Christmas. But when I called Fela about this, he asked me why hadnt the guys saved their daily allowance? How could he ask us something like that when the allowance he was Everything Scatter121 giving us was twenty deutschmarks per day?thats twenty deutsch- marks to cover breakfast, lunch, and dinner! It was madness, and now he was telling us that he expected us to have money saved out of that twenty! These guys were going back with kids at home, and they couldnt buy a single handkerchief! This was Felas bigest paycheck ever, and everyone was going home empty- handed. I dont know where the rest of the money went, but at that time Fela was supposed to be running for the presiden- tial elections in Nigeria and so he had to use the money for his campaign. At least, thats what he told me. When Fela told me that I called the guys and I told them that, frst of all, I was no longer inside this Africa 70 thingas of today. And then I told them that Fela said they should have saved their allowances if they wanted to go shopping. So then they asked me, but what about their sal- aries? And I told them that Fela said he doesnt have one penny to give to anybody now. Forget about the back pay. Forget even about being paid for the gig itself! We never got paid a single cent for the gig. As soon as I gave them this news, they all entered their rooms, took their bags, and walked out of the hotel. I didnt know where they were going, but I wasnt going to stop them. Even some of them didnt know where they themselves were going. But about eight of them just took of, like that. Some of them are still living there in Berlin today. Before we left Lagos, I had already told Fela that I would be going to London after the end of the tour. Henry Kof and I were doing some work with Ginger there, and Virgin wanted to license my album Progress for distribution. And he told me it wasnt a problem. So when the bus ar- rived, I went to Fela and told him that I would meet them in Lagos, and asked him for my own money. Because while I was talking to him about the bands money, I never mentioned my own money. And he called to his assistant Steve Udah and told him, Steve, give Allenko, eh, ffty deutsch- marks. Fifty fucking deutschmarksits ridiculous, man! At that time, ffty deutschmarks was like eighteen Nigerian naira. I didnt want to ar- gue with him in the bus. And then he left Berlin without even giving me my ticket back to Lagos! I had to make the festival people call him and tell him to send me my ticket. Rememberthis was the same year that my father drew up a new conveyance for this guy! This was the fnal straw for me. At the time, I still planned to go to London, and that meant I had to deal with the German immigration people. Luckily for me, I had an old Ghanaian girlfriend named Felicia who was living in Berlin at that time. 122Chapter 6 And she told me, Tony, you cannot go to the immigration people without money in your pocket. So she took me to the bank the next morning and withdrew one thousand deutschmarks for me. But the woman at immi- gration was giving me so many problems. She acted like she didnt speak English, so I told her, You people, you come to my country, you get em- ployment, you live there coolly and nobody tells them to move your ass out of the country. So why are you giving me this problem? Do you think I want to live in this country? Im not even dreaming of it! Even if you asked me to live here, Im not going to live here. All I want from you is a reentry visa from you, so I can go to London and then go back to Nigeria. Then she spoke English with me and gave me what I needed. But once I had my ticket to Lagos in hand, I decided to stay there in Berlin for about a month and a half. I never went to the UK. The festival organizers really helped me while I was in Berlin. They liked me a lot, and one of the organizers named Bruno even told me that if I wanted to live there in West Germany, he would arrange everything for me. I thanked him, but I didnt accept their ofer because their way of life in Germany is not for me. I didnt feel the atmosphere, and after a month and a half I went back to Nigeria. When I finally arrived back in Lagos I went to Felas place. We sat down and smoked, then he asked me, So you are back. How was Berlin? I didnt want to say any- thing much. I just said looked at him and said, My money. Ah, he said, Your money. Come tomorrow. The next day when I came back, he said I should give him two weeks. After two weeks, I went back and he called his cousin Fola, the paymaster who handled the money. And he told Fola, Whatever amount Allenko is owed, give him half of it. He said this right in front of me! I said, Why half? Look, you dont remember that this is long- time- ago bread? Its not bread of now! You owe it to me. I have worked for that! He told me he was going to give me the rest, but it was that we just came back from Europe and the money was gone because of his political campaign. So I should just give him two weeks more. So they gave me the half, but when I went back two weeks later, the rest of my money still wasnt there. I went back again two weeks after that, and the money still wasnt coming. So I stopped asking. Meanwhile, every time I went to Felas house I saw him rehearsing, trying to get another band together. Some of the previous guys were still there, because in the end some of them simply werent able to leave Fela. Everything Scatter123 And some of the others stayed because they were not sure of whether or not I was saying the truth when I told them I was leaving. They were re- hearsing with four drummers, and I knew three of themGaniyu, Ringo, and one guy called Sunday. The fourth guy I didnt know. You know, Fela always had ways to trick people into doing things. Maybe he thought that by seeing all those other drummers, I would get uptight and want my gig back. But I didnt give a shit, because I had already taken my decision. So I never paid any attention to the band business. But as it turned out, nothing was happening with the four drummers and Fela saw that I wasnt coming to play. A little while after that, I was hanging with some of my friends in the old Kalakuta area in Idi- Oro, and some of Felas musicians came from practice and told me that he had disbanded because the music wasnt happening. He told them that anybody that wants to play should reapply. Thats what all the Nigerian bandleaders do if theres a dispute. They disband and then force every- one to reapply. Then everyone has to beg for their job back, usually at a lower salary. So when those boys came to tell me that Fela had disbanded, I jumped up and said, Yeah, that is it! I never actually told him that I had left, but now he was starting to realize it. One month, two months, three months, and then he was forced to disband. And that was good for me because when he didnt see my application, then hed know that I had left for good. In the end, Fela got a new band together after many months, but it was never gonna be anything like what we had with Africa 70. So I was very happy that day and I was drinking all over the place. I made sure I celebrated. Now I was properly free! At this point, some people came to me and asked me to come back to Felas band. They told me, Dont worry about Fela, we will pay you our- selves. But I just told them, Thank you, but its not your problem. You see, they were my fans that liked my playing and everything, but I was not working for those guys, man. Three months later, some of Felas wives went to complain to him that since Id left, the music was getting weak and they didnt feel like dancing anymore. And Fela told them that no, I hadnt gone, I had just decided to rest for a while. They told him, You must be crazyhes gone for good! And so Fela sent for me and I went. And he asked me, Is it true that youve left the band? I told him yes. He asked me, What is the reason? And I told him, Three reasons. One: one of your wivesas long as shes your wife in this organization,I can never be there, because we dont get along. Shes a troublemaker for me. I cannot tell you to send your wife 124Chapter 6 away. So I have to fnd my own solution. Two: I see that Animashaun is now the leader of the band. So what do you want me to docome back and make Animashaun step down again? No, I aint gonna do that be- cause Im a Lagosian and I dont want to wrestle a fght where I dont see my opponent. You see, on the plane to Berlin I had told Animashaun about my plans to leave if Fela didnt pay us. I confded in him as a friend. And he told me that it was going to be his last gig too unless Fela paid us. But on the plane going back to Lagos, he revealed everything to Fela. Animashaun did this because he himself wanted to be bandleader, and he saw that this was his opportunity. Fela himself told me this that day when we were talking. Then I reminded Fela about everything that happened with my album No Accommodation. We recorded that track at the same session as She and She (Shufering and Shmiling). It took us three days to fnish She and She, but it took us six months to fnish No Accommodation, because you insisted on redoing your tenor sax solo, even though the frst solo was excellent. It took you two months to do that! Every day, you kept telling me to book the studio, and I waited in the studio every day for two months, morning til night, and you never showed up! Finally, you came to the studio to replay the solo. This one was not as good as the frst one, but it was still okay. But you told me that that solo was still not good and that you had to replay it. That took another two months! And what could I do? It wasnt fnished until you said it was fnished because you had the contract with Decca and you were producing the album. You came in to do the third solo two months later, and it was the worst solo Ive ever heard. But I accepted it. Then when it came time to mix you told me to book the studio for the next day, and it took another two months for you to come in and mix! So in the end, I waited every fucking day for six months! But, you see, there was another side to the story about No Accommo- dation. Fela had produced my frst album in 75, which was called Jeal- ousy. He had produced the second one, which was called Progress, in 76. Then it came time for the third one, which was in the making around 78. And one night Fela came down to the club while the band was already playing. In fact, we were playing No Accommodation. He listened to it and said, Wow! Who wrote this? And they told him, Its Allenko. And Fela told me, Allenko, you are therenow you are really there! He said to me, The way you write, its going to take a jazz bass player to play your lines! That was his way of complimenting me. Because we Everything Scatter125 had two diferent ways of composing. Fela was composing like a trained musician. For myself, I never went to music school, but I was gifted my own way. You see, I write like a drummer, and if you check the way Im writing sometimes, you dont see any instruments clashing. Composing Afrobeat, everything is supposed to be interwoven. Thats the way I look at it. Its boring if its like a monologue. It should be like a conversation. And whoever is writing the music has to make sure we all have something to say in the conversation. The instruments must be talking to each other. That means the instruments are all going to be playing diferent things. Thats how the great traditional guys did it, like Haruna Ishola. You see, Ive learned my lessons from listening to traditional music, man. And it took until No Accommodation for me to really get my composing right. But when it came time to actually record it, I dont think Fela wanted me to succeed. But I wanted to end on a positive note. I told him, Let us just stay as brothers and friends. Its better like this, and Im still at your service. If you need me on your recordings, Im still available. Then he asked me, How do you live now? What are you doing for money? I simply told him, There is a God. And he said, Oh, yeah, I understand your God. And then I walked out of his room. I still saw him every day anyway, at least for a while. We would talk and discuss diferent things. One day he told me that the Daily Times was pro- moting a tour of Nigeria with him and Roy Ayers, and he wanted me to come on tour and assist the sound engineer because I knew his sound. I agreed to do it since I wasnt on his payroll anymore; the Daily Times and the tour organizers were paying me, you know? So I went with them on that tour for one month, and we ended up in the studio with Roy Ayers. Thats where Fela wrote Africa, Center of the World. It was like an in- stant composition in the studio, and he asked please would I play this one for him? So thats why I played on that song. That was the last one. And then I went my own way. When I left Fela, it was because God told me to do it. Fela used to often say that any musi- cian who left his band would never get anywhere. It was almost like he was putting a curse on them. And some of the guys that left did end up coming back. But in my own case, God just entered my mind and said, Now is the time. You dont know what youre going to do, but if you dont do it this time, youll never be able to do it. So just go. I wasnt going to 126Chapter 6 try to make Fela aware of all the things he did to me over the years. That was beneath me. All the things I did for him over the years, I was treating him like a brother. So if what he did in Berlin was the only way he could think to pay me back for all of my loyalty, then thank you very much. I never even tried to contest it. And I never looked for revenge. Revenge is not in my dictionary. I dont believe in it at all because the people that do bad always get it back. It might not be from the same person they did the bad to, but it must always come back from somewhere. Fela could have had a realization. He could have felt like Ive lost al- most everything. Let me not lose this guy, too. But I wasnt really expect- ing that from him. In 1978, he had too many problems to face. Too many distractions. One, his mother had died after the attack on Kalakuta. Two, he didnt have his house anymore. Three, he blew all of his Berlin bread on the presidential election, and in the end they did not even let him reg- ister. Four, he needed to play to make some of his money back again, and the band was going haywire. And so Berlin was my last show with Fela. In the end, all the Nigerian bandleaders have the same style when it comes to money. Fela was doing the same thing that all the other bandleaders had done before. His music was new, but not his way of handling the money. The lifestyle of a musi- cian is like gamblingit is a risk. I gave up a steady gig with Adeolu and the Western Toppers back in 1965 and jumped into a big shit with Fela. I had a good, steady life with the Toppers, but I left for where life was going to be crazy, and there was going to be a lot of bullshit! And it took me ffteen years to get that bullshit of my neck. But it was worth it for me musically. I was interested in playing with Fela more than the others because I was thinking about the future more than the present. I never felt that I lost anything by staying for ffteen years. Sometimes it seemed like a waste of time, but today I can say Im reaping the benefts. Thats the way I look at it. If its money we are talking about, even then, Im not sure I should be lamenting anything. Even when I left, it was more about principle than money. The money was lacking, but you cannot have everything at the same time. And if it had only been about money, I would have left way back at the beginning when I saw where the money was going and how it was being spent. When the army burned his property down, things were lost and there was no way anyone could retrieve them. It was impossible. But, you know, life continues. You must keep living. But after that he was getting so involved with the issue of the government and it became really Everything Scatter127 scary for everyone around him. Thats when I left. That was our destiny. It had been written that we would do something very powerful together and at a certain point we would part. I stayed as long as I did because I was musically happy, and looking back on it, I feel great about what I did with that band. Back then when I was doing it, I just thought of it as my handiwork. It was my job and I simply had to deliver. So I just kept on going. Its only when I look back on it now and listen that I start to ask, Really, is that me that played all this stuf? I can hear that Ive really done something signifcant in the past! PROGRESS It was now 1979 and after ffteen years I had fnally left Fela, but I didnt have anything happening on my own side. So I decided to do some freelancing and see what was gonna come next. After a while I thought, as long as theres music involved, let me check out whats happening in the church, just to get something going. Im talking about what they call the Celestial Church in Nigeria. Some of the guys in that church were my friends, and they asked me, If youre not doing any- thing, why not come play church music, and maybe things will be fne? Well, why not? If were talking about God, maybe the nearest place to see God is wherever hes located. At least, thats what I thought. And I can adapt quickly to anything. So I started going to this church near my house on Tejuosho Road and play- ing in the band with them. As a matter of fact, I was born Catholic, so this Celestial Church thing was not really my style. Their style is what we call a free church. It doesnt have all the rules of the Catholic Church. But its good music in that church, man! In that band we had trumpet, sax, drums, bass, guitar, and keyboards, plus a lot of chorus singers. The music was for dancing. Its not couples dancing. You will dance where you are, and when they stop the music you can pray for some time, and then the music starts up again. Its kind of like gospel music. But as time went on, I found out that there were a lot of things happening in that church that I didnt really fancy. There was a lot of hypocrisy of people trying 7 Progress129 to preach one thing and doing something else behind. For example they always say, Dont drink, dont smoke, dont do this, dont do that, and they themselves were doing all those things after church was fnished. Well, I didnt say what they were doing was wrong, because Im not going to tell anybody what theyre doing is wrong. But I dont want anybody in front of me trying to tell me this is how it should be, or this is what you should do, while they themselves are going to do something else. As long as they try to put both of those sides togetherwhat they were calling the bad and the goodthen they are part of the bad side, too. Still, I believed in God and I knew that God has done a lot for me. So I decided that from then on, I myself should be talking directly to God for what I need rather than having somebody trying to communicate for me. Thats why I left the church, and from then on I decided to have my own way of communicating with God. Another interesting thing I did around this time was organized by my friend Bayo Martins, who was my friend from the Koola Lobitos days. In 1979, Bayo organized a Drum Assembly with himself, me, Remi Kabaka, and Kof Ghanaba, at the National Theater in Lagos. That show was put together by Bayo along with the National Theater and the Rev- erend Sisters, which was an organization of Catholic nuns. Bayo was always on the intellectual side of thingsbesides being a drummer, he was also a writer and a journalist. Remi was my old friend. Kof Ghanaba was coming from Ghana. That was actually my frst time meeting him. He was like the father of African drum set playing, and we all knew him from when he was playing with E. T. Mensah, back when he was known as Guy Warren. I really respected him because when he went to Europe and the US back in the 40s, he was not playing congas or percussion, he was promoting himself as a drum set player, and he played with some very heavy jazz musicians like Charlie Parker. Even just seeing his own drum set up showed me that this guy was a real original. He had invented his own style of trap drums using traditional Ghanaian drums instead of tom- toms, but with kick drum and cymbals. I saw that as like the opening of what we are all supposed to be doing with the traps in Africa. It was a beautiful show. The frst part was a choir and the army band from Abalti Barracks, directed by Olu Obokun, playing the Hallelujah Chorus, with Kof accompanying them on his drums. Seeing him play those drums with the Hallelujah Chorus was great, man! After that, it was just the four of us playing for the rest of the night. All of us played trap drums except Kof, who was playing his own set. One of us would 130Chapter 7 solo while the other three just kept the groove. That was really a fantas- tic show! So you see, I was even playing some religious music now. Fela would be totally against something like that, but I didnt give a shit be- cause I just wanted to be myself and I didnt want to be under the um- brella of anyone dictating to me what I should be. It took me a long time to be able to reach that conclusion in life. After that, I stayed at home a lot, and also continued freelancing. Sometimes I would work with a juju band led by a guy named Oludayo who had a group called Oludayo and His Rhythms, but I cannot remem- ber his last name. I did some recording with them in the studio, and I also worked a little with one of Sunny Ades guitarists, a guy named Bob Ola- deniyi. Later on I started to play with a guy named Tee- Mac Iseli at a club called the Lords which was near Ikorodu Road. Tee- Mac is a fautist and he had an Afro- rock band called Tee- Mac and the Afro Collection back in the 70s. He also did some other things in the music business. Tee- Mac is a very successful businessman and a guy that always treated musicians with respect. His band was the best- paying gig in Lagos. We were play- ing gigs at the Lords, and we also recorded television programs there. We actually recorded thirteen weeks worth of television programs that were broadcast on the Nigerian Television Authority (NtA). So I hung with Tee- Mac until that year ended. That was around the end of 1979. In that period when I was freelancing, I also did some gigs with a guy named Steve Rhodes. Steve was a writer and arranger and he had his own band. He was also putting on some shows on the NtA, so he was record- ing on location in the main hall at the University of Lagos. One day he told me that there was a part of the show where he wanted to use two drummers together, along with a guy named Jimi Solanke who was sing- ing a type of traditional music that we call ewi, which is kind of a Yoruba native blues type of thing. The other drummer was Remi Kabaka. But what happened was that Steve only gave us notice like two weeks before the thing was supposed to be televised, and in the meantime, Remi had gone away to London. On the day of the show, I arrived there with my drums, and Steve had another drum set there already, waiting for Remi. I kept on asking Steve Rhodes, Uncle Steve, where is Remi? It got later and later and Remi still wasnt there. So fnally I asked, Since Remi is not here, can I play double bass drums? That means two bass drums, two pedals, and all the drums. Actually, Steve himself was asking me if I would be able to do that. Progress131 Well, I had never played double bass drums before, even though I had seen Ginger and Mitch Mitchell do it. So I said, lets give it a try! I put my snare in the middle, and switched back and forth with my left leg onto the hi- hat. I tried it and balanced it for the television engineers, and the show came on. I really enjoyed playing like that, but one thing I didnt like about it was that I was missing my hi- hat at times because of all the switching between pedals. But it was a nice show, with Jimi singing his ewi music. Just singing and drumming and no other instruments, and it was really something, it was actually fantastic! But since then I havent played any double bass drum stuf. Its not really my thing. It was during this freelancing time in 1979 that I got my album No Dis- crimination together. The album came out on a label called Shanu- Olu records. Mr. Shanu- Olu was the proprietor, and he had a chain of difer- ent businesses in Lagoslike a bakery, and he also made cement bricks for building. He had also built his own recording studio, which was a huge complex out in Ijebu- Ode, which is about one hundred kilometers from Lagos. Mr. Shanu- Olu heard that I had left Fela and he knew that I had already put out three strong albums. So my vocalist Candido Oba- jimi and me went to meet him and he gave the money for the recording. So this man kind of rescued me. It was because of him that I had my own record out and I could continue into the 80s with my own band, and my own original music to play. That No Discrimination album is Afrobeat, but its got a very diferent and a very unique sound. If I wanted to continue doing this Afrobeat thing, I was going to have to make it completely diferent from what I was doing with Fela, because theres no way I would be able to do Fela better than Fela. Now that I was free, I was trying to put in things that were not usually there in Afrobeat. I was trying to use more modern in- struments like synthesizers, for example. If you program them and fnd a good sound, its good for the music. Fela refused to use them in his music, but me, I wanted them. Actually, I sugested them when we were producing my own albums with Africa 70, but Fela said no. I also in- cluded some guitar solos on that album. Thats why the No Discrimination album sounds like that, and its a great album. Not everybody in Nigeria liked it, though, because they were used to Felas typical Afrobeat sound. Unfortunately, Mr. Shanu- Olus studio was only running for about two years, and then it went down the drain because of mismanagement. After that his headquarters burned down, with all of our printed records in 132Chapter 7 there. It was like his lifes work went up in smoke, manjust like that! Mr. Shanu- Olu died shortly after that. It was sometime after that, probably in early 80, when Animashauns brother Y. D. Williams called me. You remember that Y.D. had left Felas band after Fela slapped him onstage in Ghana. But Y.D. had a friend in Lagos named Mr. Lawal that he had schooled together withI think it was in Manchester, in the UK. Mr. Lawal was a marketing manager of one of those Indian factories in Lagos where they print cloth, like for cloth- ing. He was a nice guy that had some money. And because Y.D. had left Felas band, he needed money. Mr. Lawal felt that the best way to help Y.D. was to help him get a band together. It takes bread to get a band together, man. Someone has to buy the instruments and everything, and thats why every band needs a sponsor or a patron. The band also needs someone who knows how to compose. Y.D. was a player, but he was not really into composing and all those things. So he asked me, why dont I come meet his friend and give him the list of what we need as instruments, and start a band? Y.D. also wanted me to write the music for the band. It was time for me to try to do my own thing anyway. So I went to meet Mr. Lawal, who was just living walking distance from my house, and we arranged everything. Soon after that I met him in his ofce, we went out together to the bank, and he gave me the money to buy all of the instruments and amplifers and pA system for the band. I already had my own drums. And that was it. It was really my band, and I named them the Mighty Irokos. The iroko tree is a huge tree in Nigeriaits so big that you could build a house inside of it if you wanted! Its kind of a spiritual tree that is so mighty, it looks like it could live forever. Thats where I got that name from. I wrote all the compositions, and my friend Candido was the vocal- ist. I also got Tunde Williams to join, from Felas band. I rehearsed them in a club just near my house called Club Chicago that was owned by the highlife musician Roy Chicago. I asked them to let me rehearse there to get the repertoire together, and then we would play on weekends. Meanwhile, another contract had come in from Calabar for a gig at a place called the Maryland Hotel. The proprietors were Mr. and Mrs. Oku, and they wanted discuss a one- year contract in Calabar. They wanted a guy named Willy Bestman to sing, because I guess they had heard him in Cala- bar before. Actually, Willy Bestman was a very good singer. So we decided to go on to Calabar and leave Lagos alone for a while. We were supposed to go for one year, but I stopped it at six months, because things were not too good with Mr. Oku and his wife. They started to play tricks with the Progress133 money, and I didnt want to pass through that bullshit again. We needed money to eat, and they were only thinking about their commission. We also started to have problems when we went on tour to the North, because Tunde Williams and Y.D. got into an argument in Kaduna and it ended up that Y.D. was refusing to play the concert that night. I told him, Look, we have only two horns. If you let Tunde go up there alone, its not funny, because we are playing in a nice club. I was mad with him and I didnt care whether the instruments were coming from his connection or not. I just told him, You cannot continue to blackmail me like this. If you dont come to play tonight, its going to be the end of you in this band! But he never came for the gig. He stayed in the hotel and didnt play. So the band had already started falling apart. We also all got locked up in Jos. Jos is a city with so much corruption, but we werent involved in anything. It was just that we were playing a club and they also had call girls living in there. That was none of our busi- ness, but when the police came to raid the place, they arrested us too as musicians. All these ups and downs with the band, manI was thinking that I couldnt do one whole year with these people! And it wasnt really happening on the musical side anyway. So after six months I got tired of all the hassles and told everybody that we had to go back to Calabar. Y.D. took of straight to Lagos, on his own. But when I told Mr. and Mrs. Oku that I was going back to Lagos, Mrs. Oku took all the instruments and had them locked up in the police station and said that only Mr. Lawal would be able to retrieve them. Well, I had my drums with me anyway. So I went back to Lagos and dropped the musicians of, and then went to meet Mr. Lawal. I told him that his instruments were impounded in the police station in Calabar and that I wanted to give them back to him. He gave me a note and Y.D. and I took it to the police in Calabar. We arrived back in Lagos with the instruments, and I drove to his house and dropped everything of there. I told him, Here you are, you can give them to any- body now, to go and make money with. But me, I wash my hands of this whole deal! And I took my drums and I went back home. So that was the end of the frst Mighty Irokos. That was around the end of 1980. Back in the 60s when I was with Koola Lobitos, there was a young boy named Seyi that I had brought into the band to play shaker. Fela had asked me, How are we going to pay him? I told him, The boy is living in my house with me and eating my own food. So he can play for you but just fnd something to give him. At least, at the end of the month, you can just give him something. Then when Seyi got a little older he left the 134Chapter 7 band, and I took him to where I was working at Associated Press because he had just got a place to live and he had to pay his rent. They gave him a job taking over for me when I was not around. Well, by 1980 Seyi was a big boy. And he had all these brand- new musi- cal instrumentsPearl drums, bass guitar, keyboard, amplifers, and all these things. I dont know how he managed to get them, and I didnt ask any questions. But he wanted to get a band together. So I asked him to let me use the instruments so that we could make some money together. Meanwhile I had some Camerounian boys around that I had met while we were in Calabarthey followed me back to Lagos. Since they didnt have anywhere to live, Seyi lodged them in one of his houses. We started to work, but as soon as these boys received their frst salary at the end of the month, they disappeared and we never saw them again! Well, I had to employ others just to keep going. But then Seyi himself started to get a very big head. At least, thats what it seemed like to me, because he freaked out one day and insulted me at the club. I said, Oh yeah? If you can talk to me like this, now it means youre coming to me like a boss! Boss of who? You will never tell me anything about being a boss of any- one! Because I dont want to say I made you, but I think I made you. Whatever you are today, I made you, and so what is it that you have done to make you feel so arrogant? I just told him, Take your fucking instru- mentstake them away! I aint touching those instruments anymore! After that I went to see Tunji Braithwaite. Braithwaite was Felas law- yer, and they were supposed to be collaborating for Felas political party. But they fell out. So I just went to his ofce one day. He was always curi- ous about what I was doing, and when he asked me what I had happen- ing, I had to tell him the truth, which was Nothing. I told him, Every time someone gives me a set of instruments, theres too much bullshit around it. He asked me, Is that your problem? How much does it cost to purchase a set of instruments? I told him I should be able to do it with maybe three thousand naira or something like that. He told me that he was going to the States that night, but that I should come to his ofce the following Monday and the secretary would give me the check. I thought he was joking! But I tried my luck anyway. I went Monday and the sec- retary was waiting for me. And she gave me the checkimmediately! I couldnt believe my eyes! So I went straight to the American Bank, cashed the check, and put the money in a plastic bag because it was a lot of money. Straight away I left from there and went to Seyis house. I asked him, All your instruments, how much do they cost? He said it Progress135 was about twenty- fve hundred naira or something like that. I told him I that I could give him two thousand in cash, right there. He agreed, and I put all the instruments in my car and drove them to my house. I still had one thousand naira left, and I fnally had my own instruments! So I was ready to start up the Mighty Irokos again, and I got back some of the guys who originally went with me to Calabar, like Tunde Williams and a few other guys who had left Felas band, like Leke Benson, who was a guitar- ist; Jallo (Kalanky Jallo Clement), who was a bass player from Liberia; a saxophonist named Patiki (or something like that); and another guitarist named Idowu. Then I had Benjamin Ijagun on percussion. Ijagun actu- ally started out as a guitarist from the army band under my old friend Ojo Okeji, but before that he was one of the artists from Osogbo doing the spirit paintings, like Twins Seven- Seven, who is famous for that. Ijagun is in the States now, and Idowu also left later on to study in the States. Then I got a guy named Raimi Olalowo to play trombone, who used to play with Osibisa in London. Once I got the instruments, it was easy to pull the guys back together. So when all those guys came to join me, the band was rolling, and we started playing at a club called the Pussycat, which was on Wakeman Street (they later renamed it Borno Street), in Yaba. This was in the frst part of 1981. The only problem we had was with the singing. Candido had sung on my other albums, but he left as soon as we returned from Calabar, be- cause he said he wanted to move into sound engineering. So I had to start trying diferent guys, like Lekan Oke, who was a good singer. You see, I would deal with any singer who was on my own wavelength. But I didnt want to deal with any singer that thinks hes the leader of the band just because hes out there in front singing. Ive dealt with many singers like that, and that kind of shit drives me crazy! So thats why the band was kind of on and of. The funny thing is that around that same time, Fela had his spies to come around me and check out what I was up to. He was always sending his spies, and these people went back to him to tell him that Allenko is okay, he just has a problem fnding a proper lead singer. And Fela told them, That is his only problem? Then Allenko himself is going to sing one day. Hes defnitely going to sing. And thats exactly what happened, because right after that I started singing myself. That was a tough job, manto sing along with playing my drums. I was trying but it disturbed my regularity on the drums, you know? But I started to do that, very slowly. I didnt want to force myself too quickly. 136Chapter 7 It wasnt easy gigging in Lagos in those years, man. If I have to tell you the truth, the music thing in Lagos was fnished since around 1978 because nobody was safe in the night anymore. Back in the highlife days when we were getting started and Lagos was really swinging, I remember starting to take my shower at twelve midnight, just to get ready to go out! And when I went out, it was like daytime for meI could go anywhere, without distur- bance. Even by 1977 it was still cool, more or less. There were some rob- bers out there, like some boys that would snatch your jewelry at night when you were coming from a party. But they were just normal petty robbers. They might gang up to catch two or three people, and take their things and let them go. They never harmed anyone. But when Shehu Shagari came in with that riged election in 1979, thats when the real problems started. Although it was supposed to be a civilian government now, the soldiers never really left, and there were guns all over the place! There were already guns inside the army barracks, but now there were a lot of guns outside too. On top of that, there were many guns left over from the civil war. All the guns that came into the country for the war started to circulate. After the war, nobody could give any account of how many guns were issued. If they issued a gun to a certain soldier, and that soldier is dead, then wheres the gun? They killed so many on both sides, and the guns that were taken from the dead soldiers ended up on the black market later. So there were no more normal thieves chasing you, man. It was no more petty crime like before. Armed crime started hap- pening, and by 1978 it was becoming rampant. Because of all this, people started lynching criminals. The lynching started from around 1978. All this is why by the 80s, nobody wanted to go out. Living in Lagos was almost like living in a prison. People werent free in their own fuck- ing country. To go out to enjoy yourself at night was like looking for trouble. The only two people pulling a crowd in Lagos at that time were Fela and Sunny Ade, and they made it because they had their own clubs. Sunnys club was called Ariya, on Ikorodu Road, and of course Fela had his new Afrika Shrine out in Ikeja. What that really meant was that if you went out to Sunnys club, you didnt want to go back home in the middle of the night because there was too much armed robbery on the road. You would probably stay in the club until like six oclock in the morning, when everyone started going to work. Then you could go back home be- cause the sun was up and everybody was on the street again. It was the same thing with Felas Shrine. If you went to the Shrine, you had better stay til dawn! Some people would even decide to go directly to work Progress137 from there. And thats why whoever was playing had to be very strong to draw a crowd. Because whoever puts his feet in that Shrine knows hes not going to leave until daybreak. It was very hard for Fela around this time, too. He had been through a lot of shit, and people were starting to say he had gone mad since he got into his spiritualist stuf. It was really a witchcraft type of thing. He and his people went completely into the black magic way of life. Probably some of his wives got him into it, along with some other people. Everybody was counseling him against this stuf, including me. We had all passed through this stuf because its part of our culture. But he himself never grew up with that in his own background, because his background was Christian. I even remember an argument that Fela had back in the Koola Lobitos days with our percussionist Isiaka. Isi was talking about how these baba- lawos (Yoruba traditional herbalists) could afect youhow they could create illness or insanity, or even eliminate you altogether without being anywhere near you. And Fela jumped up and told Isi that he was talking nonsense and superstition. He told us that people used to refer to his own mother, Mrs. Ransome- Kuti, as a witch because of all the powerful things she accomplished. But Fela said that was all nonsensethat she wasnt a witch, she was just a very clever and strong woman. Isi didnt like this, and he told Fela that he had the mentality of a child and that he didnt have a deep understanding of African life. They went back and forth, but the point is that you can see how Fela felt about these things at that time. He was not the type of guy that believed in all these things. But after all the stuf he had been through, he was getting into black magic now and he wouldnt listen to anybody. I used to go talk to him as a friend at his house sometimes, and it was a big surprise for me to see them pounding diferent kinds of substances together, like herbs and tiger skin, for the things they were doing. He was believing that this stuf could protect him from the soldiers and that he could use it to commu- nicate with the spirit of his mother. Some of his friends even hinted to me that Fela was doing some little things behind the scenes to get me to come back into the band. I wasnt worried about that, but he was so much into this shit that he was hardly leaving his house anymore except when he was playing. But his music was still excellent, man. I would go to the Shrine, and the new music he was composing was so heavy, man, I would get completely lost in it sometimes. Just because I left, it doesnt mean his music died, manno! The only thing missing was the engine, and that was making his music sufer. And we both knew it. He would look out 138Chapter 7 and see me sitting there, and I knew what was going through his mind. And he knew what was going through my mind. Sometimes I would fnd myself wishing that I was up there playing those fucking drums, man! All kinds of ideas were passing through my head about which patterns I would play inside that music. But when I thought about how much bull- shit I would have to go through all over again, I chased those thoughts out of my head. People were also really listening to Felas music in Europe, and it was around that same time 1982when Martin Meppiel and his brother Stefan started coming to Nigeria. They were from France, and they were working with an Afro- beat group called Ghetto Blaster that they wanted to take to France to produce. They managed to get about three guys from Felas bandRingo, who was a drummer, Udoh, who played congas, and a guitarist named Kiala. And then they got Willie Nfor, a bassist from Cameroon. The only thing they were missing was a good singer. The Meppiels were coming to me because they wanted me to play in Ghetto Blaster. I played with them for a little while, because they were using my instruments in Nige- ria since my band was not happening too much at the time. I was also in their video. But Ringo was there, so why did I want to play as two drum- mers? It was kind of like they didnt know exactly what they wanted to do, so I just told them, Go ahead and leave Ringo there, because Im not going to Europe. So, just get this thing done and take them. That was it, and the Meppiel brothers took them on to France. It was also around this time that I met Martin Meissonnier. Martin is another French producer who was really into African music and he wanted to do something with Nigerian music. He really helped me a lot in my career. Actually, he wanted to do something with Fela at frst. They started on some things, but then they fell out because Martin brought Fela to Europe two times, and the second time was his downfall. He went bankrupt the second time he brought Fela to Europe. But he kept going. After that he worked on a project with Felas old friend Sandra, from Los Angeles. Sandra had her own project going as a singer, and Martin was going to produce her. They went to Fela and asked him to write eight songs for her, and he told them that they would have to stay in Nigeria for eight months and that he would write one song a month. They felt that was unreasonable and they didnt want to do that, so when Martin came to Nigeria, he and Sandra came to watch my band at the Pussycat. Progress139 Martin told me afterwards that he didnt like my band. He thought that it was me alone that was happening in the band. But we had made con- tact and he said he would fnd me when he came back to Lagos, because he wanted me to work on Sandras project. Tee- Mac was involved too. So even though I was having a lot of problems keeping my band going, it was really at the Pussycat that things started happening for me. When Martin came back to work on Sandras project, it was some- time in 1982. Chris Blackwell and Island Records put up the money for the project. We started rehearsing in Lagos, and then we went to do the recordings in Lome, Togo. After we fnished our work on the backing tracks in Togo, they took the tapes away to London to put Sandras vocals on and to mix. But Sandra later told me that it was very strange, what happened in Londonevery night when she went to the studio to record her vocals, she lost her voiceit just disappeared and she couldnt sing anything! Chris had already dealt with these kinds of strange things in Jamaica, and he felt suspicious that something was going on somewhere, and he decided to forget about the project. But they did eventually use one track that I wrote, called Trafc Jam, as part of that documentary about Fela called Music Is the Weapon. They used it without the lyrics, under the flm credits. I dont know what happened after that because the rest of that music was never released. That was the business of Martin and Island, and probably the music is still there in their cupboard. Were now around the beginning of 1983, and I was still playing with the Mighty Irokos at the Pussycat. Martin came back to Lagos, and this time he was working with Sunny Ade and having a lot of success in Europe and America. I knew Sunny from back in the old days when Koola Lobitos used to play with them at island clubs for the elites. At that time, he was very rootsy. Not like the Sunny of today with all the electronic stuf. Martin wanted me to play on a track on Sunnys album that he was producing. So one night when I fnished at the Pussycat, I went over to Sunnys Ariya club and I was supposed to be featured that night on the song that Sunny wanted to record the next day in Lome, at the same studio where we worked on Sandras project. There was also a French girl there named Catherine that was working with Martin as the sound engineer. So I went there and played the song with Sunnys band, since my house was not too far from there. But as I was driving home past the Yaba bus stop, I got into an accident and I lost control of my car. That was very strange. I wasnt drunk and I was driving coolly. Leke was in the front with me, and Ijagun was in the back. Those boys got some serious 140Chapter 7 bruises, man. And for me, the windshield shattered and went directly into my eyes. It was heavy pain for me, but I didnt want to go to the hos- pital. I just tried to treat myself with some eyedrops. The next day was Sunday, and Martin and I were supposed to fy to Lome. I told him what had happened, and I tried to explain to him the strange way this accident happened. There was like some kind of trickery involved, as if someone didnt want me there at the club that night. It was like someone among Sunnys people just didnt want me to participate in that project. I didnt want to mention anyones name specifcally, but I knew. When Martin saw my eyes, he said that maybe it was best if we didnt travel that day, that we should go on the following Tuesday. That gave me time to relax at home properly and treat my eyes. Tuesday came and Sunnys guys had already gone to Lome by bus. Martin and I arrived later by plane. Just as the taxi drove up to the studio, Sunnys guys were coming out the door, and the person in front was the drummer, Moses Akanbi. Akanbi was playing drums for a long time before he got with Sunnys band. He was coming from Eddie Okontas band to Orlando Juliuss band and from Orlando Julius to Sunny. Akanbi was good for the type of things we were playing back home. But theres only one pattern that he was able to take of me. And he was playing it in reverse. When Akanbi saw me there, he was shocked! He said, Ah, so you are here! I was standing there with a patch on my eye and I said, Yeah, Sunny said I should play one track. Ah, he said, that would be very good. We set up the studio that day and then everybody left for the hotel. We came back the next day for the recording. Sunny was in the con- trol room with the engineer and Martin. And suddenly something inside my head told me, You havent learned your lesson yet? You want more? So I called Martin outside and I told him, Im sorry for this inconve- nience and for the money you have paid for the fight, and I know youll be shocked by what I want to tell you. But I just decided that I wont play that track. Im not going to play it. He asked me, Why? I told him, You are a white man and you dont live here. You are going back to your France and Ill be left here with the consequences. If you dont under- stand what Im trying to say, Im sorry. But Im not playing this track. Thats all. I really didnt care whether Martin understood or not, because Im a Nigerian and I knew what I was talking about. So he said in that case, I should go tell Sunny. So I went back into the control room, and I tapped Sunny and told Progress141 him, I want to tell you something. He said, What is it? I said, Just at the last minute, I decided I dont want to play this track with you today. I thought he was going to get mad. But he looked at me and told me that I had taken a very nice decision. It was as if he had felt my vibes and he knew just where I was going. All of his guys were inside the studio, and Sunny was looking at them through the glass. He pointed at them and said, Do you see all of them there? They are all devils. Its only God, my mother, and Jesus Christ that are protecting me. You know, it was just Yorubas talking to each other; we didnt have to say too much. It was very quick. He understood completely. So I walked away from that coolly and I never touched those fucking drums that day, man. I just went back to Lagos. Timewise it was still 1983. Besides my own band I was still doing some work with other people too, like some juju bands and some other people. I also had some old fans, like people who had been following Felas music since the Koola Lobitos days. They were students back them and now they were grown up and working, and some of them were making a lot of money and living the fast life. I didnt want to know how they made their money, and I didnt really care. Seyi was one of those guys. Another one was a guy named Kobena Stephan, and he approached me around this time. Kobena wasnt a musician, but he grew up around Koola Lo- bitos and Africa 70. After a while he went abroad to study, and then he came back with a white woman and a son. Kobena used to see me when he would come to the Pussycat to play cards, and one day he told me that he was thinking about doing something with his money. So I went to see him with Candido. At that time, Candido had come back and he told me that we should start again. I said alright to that, since I had never really groomed myself properly for singing. That took a load of of me. So we went to meet Kobena, and he told us that he was planning to open a club in a place that used to be the Amusement Park Hotel in Apapa, near the Apapa wharf. He was going to renovate it and reopen it as a big club called Grandpas Moustache, and he asked me if I wanted to bring the resident band. This was going to be a step forward, to have someone coming behind me with support and not leave me alone just hanging in the air. Because of this new gig, I wanted to add more instruments to my band. I wanted to add percussion, a very good conga player, a keyboardist, and a good pA system this time around. I also wanted to add horns, just to make the sound full. I told Kobena this, and we agreed that it was best 142Chapter 7 to go abroad to buy some instruments. I got my visa, and he gave me fve thousand dollars to travel and buy whatever I could with that money. So I few to the UK, and I was supposed to be going on to Paris to buy those instruments. But I passed through some small problems at the customs because I only told them I was carrying two hundred dollars. The cus- toms and immigration people searched my stuf and detained me for one hour because of all the cash I was carrying from Kobena. The immigra- tion ofcer said, You only declared two hundred dollars but you had fve thousand dollars on you. Why did you do that? Why didnt you tell me that from the beginning? I told him that the law in my country is that you cannot just transport foreign currency. For me to smugle fve thou- sand dollars out of the country, I said, its a lot of money and its a big risk. Then he asked me what my mission really was, and I told him that he could look at my visa and see that I was continuing to Paris to buy musi- cal instruments. Then he asked me, What do you want to buy? I had a list of things and when he saw the Prophet 5 synthesizer on the list, he said, Wow, Prophet 5? My advice to is not to go to Paris. The instruments are more expensive there. Stay in London and check the shops around. I think you will do better that way with your list. He just advised me like that and then went ahead and gave me the visa. I went around London and bought the instruments. But then the prob- lem was that I had to get the instruments back to Nigeria and I couldnt reach Kobena. Did he think I was going to carry them back on my head? Because I knew that at the airport they would say it was excess lugage, and even if I sent it air cargo, I would have to pay a lot for it and the bread was already fnished. Fela was in London at this time, and I asked him for some money to help with the instruments, but he told me everything had been spent on his tour and money was tight. Actually, I used to pass by Felas hotel every couple of days with my old friend Dusty. Fela told me, Wowif I knew that you were coming I would have called you because we just fnished recording and we had a problem with James Meneh. I guess he was having a problem with his drummers so he called James to help him. I ofered to help him out, but it was too late because he had already sent the band back to Lagos. You remember that James Meneh was one of the guys that really inspired me to play the drums in the frst place. Fela had used him on some record- ings that they were doing in London, but it wasnt working out. James had been living in Europe for many years by that time. Fela knew James as one of the best drummers in Nigeria back in the old days when he was Progress143 in London studying, and he thought that since James had been playing in Europe for so many years, he should be even better now! I couldnt understand what kind of problem Fela would have with a drummer like James. But there was one boy that used to play guitar with Fela called Laspalmer Ojeah. He got stuck in Italy when the band left him behind, so he came to London. Laspalmer was trying to start an Afrobeat band there in London with James Meneh as the drummer. And it became a big argument between James and Laspalmer because Las- palmer wanted James to play his hi- hat separately on the ofbeat, like in my style of playing, and James told him that that was impossible to play. Laspalmer told James, Tony plays this easily! and James kept saying, Its not possible! I walked into the studio just as this argument was going on. James told me this hi- hat thing was impossible to play. I told him, No, let me show you. So he got up, and I sat down and played it for him, just like that. It was simple, what I call the frst pattern of Afrobeat. Then I said, James, come ontry it, man. But he couldnt do it. This guy was one of my idols before, and I found out that he himself cannot even touch what Ive done! So I knew then that I had done a good job for myself by trying to work out something unique over all those years. Even though I was strugling, it made me feel a little better. It showed me how much I had progressed since the old highlife days. While I was in London, Martin Meissonnier phoned me. He was living there with his wife and daughter while they were working on the Sunny Ade thing. Thats one reason why I went to London, because I thought Martin could help me with the instruments. He called me one day and said, Hey, Tony, were in the studio with Sunny! Do you want to come down and have a play? I said, What? Martin, you must be kidding, man! Did you forget what happened last time? He said, No, dont worry, its not what you thinknone of the guys are around this time. Its just Sunny alone. Just take a taxi to Island Studio and we will take care of it. So I went to the studio. It was just Sunny and me, and I started to lay drums tracks down, and Sunny sang Oremi, which came out on his album. We spent three days in the studio and we did a few other instrumental tracks. It was Martin producing. He just made some work for me, to help me out. At the end of the session, I went to see him in Sunnys hotel and he gave me one thousand pounds. One thousand pounds was a lot of money for methose instruments would defnitely go home now! I got the money and went directly to the air freight company to send everything to Nige- 144Chapter 7 ria. I arrived back in Lagos, and I made Kobena go and clear it. I told him how much the money I had spent for freight, just so he didnt think that his fve thousand did everything. And he told me that at the end of the day, those instruments belonged to me anyway. So that was a good start. Now all I had to do was to get the band together. Kobena had fnished renovating this Grandpas Moustache club, and my band opened that place. I had some guys from before like Ijagun on congas, Raimi, Candido, and some others. But I also got some new guys, like Showboy on baritone sax. Showboys real name is Rilwan Fagbemi. He used to be like a contortionist, back when he was a teenager. He used to perform onstage at the old Shrine, before the music started. When he got a little older he went into the Nigerian Navy Band, where he played under Wole Bucknor. Later he went on to play with Fela for many years, but my band was his frst gig. In fact when he joined up with me, he was still working for the navy. Showboy also learned how to repair saxes in the navy. Hes a master of thathe can break a saxophone completely to pieces and put it together again. But to actually play music practically, it was my band that he started from. So the band was on and we were sounding good. But it became a prob- lem to get the musicians salary at the end of the month as Kobena had promised, because he was starting to go crazy with drugs. He was taking coke and heroin together, and he started to go haywire. He was doing it a lot, its like his whole day was taken up with this shit and he got fucked up in the head. What happened was that some Hausas from the North snatched his wife, and when the woman left, she also took the son. Maybe it was connected to his gambling, because he used to play a lot of cards, and there was a section in the Pussycat for serious card playing. It was a real professional thing and he was very good in that, he loved to do that. So maybe he was heartbroken about his wife and he went to drugs, but I could tell he was starting to ego- trip because he bought his mother a Mercedes- Benz and he was driving around in a custom- built Nissan actually, he owned two of them. Soon he started telling me that he and Fela have the same way of life, because he was born on the fourteenth of October and Fela was born on the ffteenthso they were similar. After a while, he wasnt concentrating on running the club anymore, and he wasnt doing any publicity for our gigs. Then he started to get into this bodyguard business, with all of these bodyguards around him, and it was hard to even contact him. He wasnt focusing properly anymore and I saw that this was becoming a waste of time. You see the kind of bullshit one Progress145 has to go through to have their own band, man? I didnt want to leave one person that was ego- tripping and jump right into another one. I had been strugling for fve years on my own, and I was thinking that I could either stay in this shit or fnd a solution. Every since I left Fela, people had been advising me to go to Europe or America. People were always asking me, What are you doing wasting your time here? Now that you have left Fela, why cant you just go to Europe or America to have a better life? Everybody felt that with my ability, I was supposed to be abroad. But I always asked them, Why should I go there? I was born here. My familys here. All I know is here. I learned everything I knew here, so why cant I make use of it here? Youre telling me to go abroad. First of all, I dont know nobody there. When I arrive there, Im going to have to fght just to live. Wheres a job gonna come from? I wouldnt be allowed to work. Do you know all this? So thank you for your advice, but Im not really up to it. But eventually I had to start thinking that way. It was hard to be a musician in Lagos at that time because of all the crime, and it was get- ting even harder under General Mohammed Buhari and Tunde Idiagbon, who took power in a military coup at the end of 1983. The soldiers put checkpoints all over the city. To go anywhere you had to pass through so many checkpoints, so nobody was going out anymore. The whole coun- try was retrogressing. And all this shit with Kobena made me tell myself, Now is the time for me. Ive got to consider this. My opportunity came after all of the Sandra and Sunny Ade business was done, when Martin Meissonnier arranged for me to get some publishing money for my past recordings through Closeau Music, which was also the publishing com- pany for some of Felas works in France. Martin was one of the partners in Closeau. He told me to come to Paris to sign the agreement, and then I went back to Nigeria to wait for the money to come through. I was pray- ing to God every day, and one day I received a letter from Martin saying that the publishing money was ready and I had to come to Paris to get it. Just when I told myself it was time to make a move, this publishing thing came though for me. This was in 1984. So I went back and told my guys that I had to jump now. I had to put the cart before the horse and jump. I was leaving certainty for uncertainty again. I left all the instruments for them and I told them, You guys take it from here. Im gonna make my move now. WHEN ONE ROAD CLOSE . . . On the way back from Paris I passed through London, and thats where I was contacted by Pascal Imbert and Francis Kerketian, two French guys who were managing Fela at that time. Pascal was another French producer who used to work with Martin Meissonnier, but they fell out at the same time that Martin fell out with Fela. So Martin went on to work with Sunny Ade, while Pascal teamed up with Francis. Francis wanted to see me, because they were really pushing Fela in Europe around this time and now they were looking to take him to the US for a big tour, too. Francis told me that it would be nice if they could hire me to play drums for the tour, because he and Pascal didnt really like the drummers that Fela was using. I thought about it and told them that I would do it if they themselves hired me. I didnt want to be dealing with Fela with anything concerning money no way! And Francis told me that it wasnt going to go through Fela, that they would pay me directly. So since they came to me that wayprofessionallyI took the job. Francis called Pas- cal and confrmed everything and told him to go to Lagos and tell Fela. Then they started to get excited about the tour. Martin Meissonnier was already pushing Sunny, and it looked like this was fnally going to be Felas big break in Europe. As for me, I was in London and I didnt have any intention of going back to Nigeria. I wanted to stay put for a while. But Pas- cal was in Lagos and he called me to say that Fela had agreed to the deal, but on the condition that I come to Nigeria to rehearse 8 When One Road Close . . .147 with the band. Look at me here in London, and Fela wants me to re- hearse with him in Ikeja! I told Pascal nono way was I going to let this guy get me stranded in Lagos. I gave them the condition that if I came to Lagos, whether the deal happened or not, Francis and Pascal had to pay my fight back to London. They agreed to my condition, so I few back to Lagos and started to go to Felas house every day, asking when the re- hearsal was. Fela kept telling me, Yeah, were gonna do it. Time was going and they were supposed to be leaving for Europe. Actually, they were now saying it might be a world tour because all the visas had been arranged. I myself had my visas for the whole tour. And you know what? Fela never rehearsed at allthere was not a single fucking rehearsal! I dont know why he wasnt rehearsing for his own world tour. I told Pascal, You see? But he told me just to go on with the band to Europe. It was no problem for me anyway, because while I was in Lagos I used to go to the Shrine, and I knew all of those songs like the back of my hand, man. That music was great! What Fela was doing by that time was like a big band Afrobeat style. I had been thinking about those songs and I knew I was going to play some shit on them that they never heard before, man! When we got to the airport in Lagos, we had a problem with my frst visa, which was to Italy. Felas daughters Yeni and Sola had the same prob- lem. So the three of us all traveled together the next day, and because of that, I missed the frst show, which was in Milan. They told me no problem, that I should join the band at the next show, which was at the Glastonbury Festival, in England. And it was a very big show because there were hundreds of thousands of people there and they were going to flm the show. So we arrived in Glastonbury, and Pascal and Francis and everybody were happy that I was going to play. The festival lodged us in one of those Porta- Cabins behind the stage. Actually, our Porta- Cabin was right next to Weather Reports, because they were playing before us. It was like Weather Report was on the left side and Fela was on the right side. And when we arrived, the Weather Report people were standing there waiting for us, and they asked me, Are you Tony Allen, Felas drum- mer? I told them yes. So they invited me into their bus to meet Wayne Shorter and the others. For some reason, Joe Zawinul couldnt make that gig. And Wayne told me that it was really a pity that Joe couldnt be there, because he really loved my playing. Then they asked me if I was playing with Fela that night. I told them, Yes, and Wayne said, Oh wowwere gonna see the magic tonight! And since they were going to play before Fela, they went on to the stage. 148Chapter 8 But someone in Felas camp saw all the commotion that the Weather Report people made over me and went back to report this to him. Weather Report was already onstage and it was about thirty minutes until it was time for Fela to go onstage. And thats when some of his boys came to me and said, Allenko, Fela wants to see you. I went back to Felas dressing room and he said, Allenko, you know what I just thought now? I just want to ask, if you play all these shows with me, will you be going back to Nigeria at the end? I told him no, that I had never agreed to such a deal. He said, Ahyou see now? Thats why its not good for you to play today, because you wont go back to Nigeria with me! Then he told me that I could go on tour with them anyway, just to hang out and enjoy my- self. But no playing. I looked at this guy and thought, whatis he trying to give me a holiday? I said, Its okay Fela, no problem. No problem. Ill think about that and decide later. And I left the room, and went straight to Francis and told him, Since I came all the way here, youre going to pay me whether I play or not. He asked me, Why is that? I said, Be- cause Fela said Im not playing! Francis started to get crazyhe just couldnt understand. He went to confront Fela and they had a big row over that backstage. By this point, Weather Report had fnished playing and it was Felas turn. The band went up to the stage and I was just standing behind. And they started their fanfare for Fela to come onstage. The Weather Report people ran up to me and said, Whats going on, man? They were expect- ing to see me on the drums at that time. I just told them, I aint playing. Its a long story. They said, Are you sure you aint playing tonight? I said, Yeah, Im sure. All of the Weather Report people just walked down and entered their bus and drove of. They never even watched Fela play. They didnt give a shit. The band was still playing the fanfare and Fela hadnt even come on the stage yet. Well, you know, the reason all of this shit went down this way was simply jealousy. Fela didnt want these famous people checking me out. When he sugested that I could come and hang on the tour, he might have decided to let me come up and play in one of those cities when not too many important people were going to be around. This is typical for Africans, you know. Our mentality is this way and everybody knows it. In the case of Fela, he would rather sabotage his own music than to let me get some recognition! And you can watch the video of that Glastonbury concert for yourself and see that Fela was strugling to keep the drum- mers on track. When One Road Close . . .149 So that was it. The next day we were supposed to be going to Holland. We drove to the airport in two buses. The band was in one bus, and Fela and his wives and family were in the other bus. When we got to the air- port, he came out of the bus with all his women and he asked me, Are you coming? I told him yes. But I hadnt checked my lugage. I walked away and went straight to Francis and told him, I aint going anywhere. I am not leaving England, so give me my money now! He told me that he didnt have all the money on him, and he gave me fve hundred pounds. As soon as he gave it to me, I took my bag and went to get a taxi back to London. I settled back into London to try and get my own career together. We started to work on my next album, N.E.P.A. (Never Expect Power Always). When we were in London with Africa 70 back in 1971, we were living around Bayswater, which was near the center of London. But when I went back in 1984 I found myself living in Harlseden, which was in the Northwest. It was more of an immigrant sectora lot of Indians, Jamai- cans, and Nigerians. Thats what I found myself in. As a matter of fact, I found out that there were some similarities there with the Nigerian en- vironmentyou know, the ariyas (parties) and all of these things. Those Nigerians had the same style of life as back home. But me, I wasnt even into such things back homethis type of partying, it wasnt my thing. So it made me shift my movement, to move more on the music business side, which was mostly white people. After a while Fela came back, be- cause they had a gig to do in London. So I went to collect the rest of my money from Francis. And then Fela himself called and asked me, Oh, are you still here? When are you coming to Lagos? I told him that I didnt know. He said, But what will you be doing here? Theres nothing much to do musically, in London. It would be better to come back to Lagos. I said, Fela, I dont know. Im just trying some things. Let me work it out. Why are you asking me all these questions? You see, what had happened was that they had gone to Paris and the drummer disappeared there! That drummer was a boy from Cameroon that they used to call Moustique, because he was very slim. I cant remember his real name. He was a very good drummer. He couldnt play like me, but he still had enough feel- ing to make the band move. So he jumped from the band in Paris and he stayed put here. But hes dead now. He was a heavy drinker and he was beaten to death by the police in Paris. So the band went back to Lagos without a drummer, and now Fela wanted me to come to Lagos and do the US tour with him. But he wasnt 150Chapter 8 speaking straight to me, and I told him directly, I aint moving my ass nowhere. Im here now, Im here. He understood me, and said, Alright. And then he went back to Lagos to prepare for that tour. He was going to use Ijagun on drums for the tour. You remember that Ijagun had been playing congas with me in Lagos. So when it came to playing drum set, he was a complete beginner at that time, man! Actually, Fela had been having a lot of problems with drummers since I left the band. I mean, he had many drummers, but he made them just play the patterns he told them and not to fll in anything too fancy. That was all he wanted to hear and he would warn them all the time. Some of my fans would come to tell me what was happening in the Shrine. They would tell me, Last night, Fela stopped the show and asked the drum- mer, Are you trying to play like Tony? Dont even try it because you dont know what the fuck Tonys doing! Just play what I tell you to play and keep it going steady! It was a challenge just to keep the groove going that is already discipline number one, and not all of them could keep it going. Fela couldnt get the sound he had with me, so he started to em- ploy more percussion to make up for that, and he distributed the pattern among all of them. He was really trying to get something that I myself would have just played as one person. My friends were telling me that sometimes Fela got so frustrated in the Shrine that he would stop the music and ask, Are there any drummers in the audience? So in 1984 the promoters hired me to make the show brighter, but Fela refused by making that stupid condition that I had to go back to Lagos with him. If he hadnt done that, I probably would have done both tours with him. And now he was going to use a beginner to play drums for his big US tour. That tour was supposed to be his big break, but it didnt mat- ter to him. The guy was stubborn, man. He would never agree to anything that didnt come from his own mind. But in the end, Fela never got to the States. At the end of 1983 we had a military coup headed by Mohammed Buhari, and Buhari threw Fela in jail when he tried to travel to the US at the end of 1984. So that tour never happened. You see? Once again I was guided by God, man! Because if I had gone back with him to Lagos, the tour would never have happened and I would have been stuck there, and I would have lost my British chance! I never would have fnished N.E.P.A.! So I proceeded in fnish- ing my album completely while he went to Nigeria and all these terrible things happened to him. I never prayed for anything like that to happen to him, man, because he had already received enough beatings in his life, When One Road Close . . .151 and they threw him in prison for almost two years. And Nigerian prisons are rough, man. But it was just karma. Fela going to jail at that time made things slow down for me. I didnt want to start pushing anything too strongly because it would look like I was exploiting his misfortune. So I just did N.E.P.A. for a label called Earthworks and settled down in London for a while. That album came out at the beginning of 1985, and it was the frst album I did outside of Nigeria. Earthworks was run by a South African guy named Jumbo van Renen. I put the album together with a guy named Victor Addis who played bass and guitar, plus he was a sound engineer. So Victor played along with some of my guys like Candido, and we had the horn section from the regae group Aswad. At that time the Jamaican dub thing was big in London and we started to think about how we could use dub in the Afrobeat, to make Afrobeat dub. I myself wanted to trip on that electronic sound a little bit, but not too much. Later I went into it more heavily. But for now I just wanted to make a fusion. Well, you can hear that the album is dubby, but the core is tight! The kick drum is solid. And to include dub mixes was a good deci- sion because I didnt have too many new compositions at that time. I just had N.E.P.A. and When One Road Close, Another One Opens, and those two were written in London. So Jumbo felt like we should make it into an ep, just something to get my name out there in the market. Things were cool in London. I had a girlfriend named Maya that I used to live with for a while. She was a hippie and she was a lover of this mushroom business, you know? Me, I didnt know nothing about mush- rooms until one day she asked me, You want to try it? And I said, Yeah, let me try it. Actually, I was playing a gig that night with Julian Bahula, the Zulu percussionist from South Africa. And I swear on my lifeI will never take this trip again! Its longer than any trip of anythinglike eight hours! And you start to see many things, man, many colors. The colors are too many. And youre the only one seeing these fucking colors! This eight hours, I was just waiting for it to end, praying to God, asking him, Please let this mood die fast! Praying during every song, asking, God, please let me be able to fnish this song! And its never fnishing, be- cause we still got to play more! I dont know how people can play under the infuence of this stuf. I made it to the end of the gig, because I was praying to be able to make it. And when I few of that stage, my girlfriend was dancing. She was enjoying herself on the trip. I was sufering. And I warned her: Pleasefrom now on, eat your mushrooms yourself! 152Chapter 8 I didnt go back to Nigeria until sometime in 1985 and at that time, Fela was still in prison. His son Femi was leading the band, along with Animashaun. So I used to pass by the Shrine, and anytime I put my feet in the Shrine, Femi made me come up and play all those fast songs like Pansa Pansa that we used to play. I wasnt playing for the whole night, but I might play two or three tunes, and then their own drummer would come back up. It felt great because they were playing the music that I was playing before, and the people were jubilating to see me there. They were playing the old tunes, the Africa 70 stuf. I was up to it, but the point is that I wasnt trying to think about what I had done in the past. When I came from Europe, I realized that I must be broad- minded this time around, and not just stuck on one trip. During 1985, I was traveling back and forth between Paris, London, and Lagos, and I was trying to make sure that I didnt overstay my visa in London. Meanwhile Martin was living in London with his wife and kid while working on the Sunny Ade thing, but then the deal between Sunny and Island was fnished. Martin tried to change Sunnys music. He wanted to make it too electronic. They spent so much money on those recordings, but Sunny had to stop, because he never sold too many records in Nigeria with that style. The ones before it like Synchro Sys- tem were still okay. Its just the one called Aura that never really took of, because it was way out for the Nigerian people. They werent ready for modernizing juju like that, because it lost the rootsiness and it became something else. So one day Martin decided to move back to Paris. I asked him if he was going just to visit but he told me that no, they were going back to stay. This was a surprise for me. I had already fnished N.E.P.A. and it was get- ting good reviews, but I was still looking for a way to be stable in London, and Martin was my main contact there. So he asked me if I planned to stick around London and I asked him, Stick around for what? You said you were gonna produce me and we havent done anything yet! I pro- duced N.E.P.A. on my own! Then Martin asked me if I was coming to Paris. I told him I didnt have any way of going. I had some friends there like the guys from Ghetto BlasterUdoh, Kiala, Ringo, and all of those guys that used to be with Fela. But I didnt have work there and I didnt have a visa to stay. Martin told me that if I wanted to come to Paris, he would work something out for me. And when he arrived in Paris, he got me a very good letter of invitation from Barclay, which was a big record company there. I needed that letter for my French visa. So it was done, When One Road Close . . .153 and it was really Martin that enabled me to come to Paris. He was the one, no doubt about that. He really did many things to help me. I moved to France around the end of 1985. I never in my life thought I would end up living in France. Back in the Africa 70 days, we used to play in French- speaking countries in Africa, like Benin and Togo. I played there, but I never wanted to live there, because I always thought, This French- speaking place is not the life for me. Anytime we arrived at the border of Benin or Togo, the policeman there was speaking either in his native tongue or in French. We would joke with them, like a va? a va bien. But that was as far as it went with the French. In fact, I refused the subject in the school. It was just a subject that was in the syllabus that didnt concern me. What was I going to do with French? I would never have dreamt of it at that time. But I found out Paris was not like England or America or Germany. It was a place that I arrived in and felt good in right away. At frst I thought that even though the place looked good, I couldnt situate myself here because I could not speak the language. But as time went on, things changed step by step. I liked the culture, because what brought me here was the music scene and I saw that the African musicians had a stronghold here. Even Fela had already passed through Paris and he made it like his base of operations outside of Nigeria. He liked Paris better than everywhere and called it his second home. All of the people handling his afairs were also from France, and the people there loved his music. The wife of President Mitterand, whose name was Danielle, even came to meet Fela. So I guess it was destiny. Nobody really knows where their destiny could lead them. But if I had known back when I was younger, I would have tried to learn my French back in Africa! When I got to France, Martin kept his promise and immediately ar- ranged a contract for me with Barclay, because the director of Barclay at that time was a good friend of his named Philippe Constantine. Philippe was a guy that was good for all of the black musicians living in France. Anytime you hear of a black artist who made it in France in the 80s, it was because of him. So Philippe signed me on for a fve- year exclusive contract with Martin as my producer. I had used a little bit of the elec- tronics on N.E.P.A., and it was a good fusion between the Afrobeat and the electronics. N.E.P.A. was doing fne in London. Even the critics were saying that this was one kind of Afrobeat that Fela himself never played. It was completely new to them, and it got a lot of good press. So I wanted 154Chapter 8 to follow up with the same approach on my next single, which was called Too Many Prisoners, and develop it better. I worked on it and it was really happening, like real Afrobeat, and I was happy with it. But Martin was producing, and after we mixed it, he told me that the production was bad. He wanted it to sound more electronic. So he went back to Barclay for a higher budget so that they could make a slave, which means that the music we originally played was gonna be used to triger some electron- ics, even drum machines. We copied everything to another twenty- four tracks and ended up with forty- eight tracks which were completely zero! I couldnt even recognize myself in the music anymore! It wasnt my own idea to make myself sound like a drum machine. That period was the height of this thing when they were trying to put all these electronics into African music. I saw that this was something that was gonna be competing with the drummers, and thats what we were deal- ing with in the 80s. But I knew at that time that it wasnt gonna beat me because Im a human being and this thing was a machine. The machine is limited. I felt it was too perfect, and too stif. That is what those pro- ducers wanted at that time, they wanted Afrobeat drums to sound like that. It wasnt to save money alone, it was also the vogue at that time. But it cannot work. Because there is fexibility in playing Afrobeat. It can never be the same intensity all the time. I know that Im creating patterns myself, and varying them. So to me, all that was just like an ex- periment. I was passing through diferent experiences and I knew that I would get to a point where I had to do my own thing myself, my way. Martin tried to do the same thing with me that he did with Sunny Ade. It was a big fucking mistake with Sunny, and it was a mistake with me too! So thats what happened to Too Many Prisoners. It came out in limited copies in 1986, and it never went nowhere. Plus there was no response to the record because even though Martin produced the record, he never stayed with Barclay to give them directions of how to promote it, so it received no promotion. He went on to work with some other artists and kind of left me hanging in the air with Barclay. But because of that con- tract that Martin got for me, I was able to get my carte de sjour, which is like a resident work permit in France. Now that I was settling in France, I put a ffteen- piece band together because I still wanted to be on the road. Imaginemy own ffteen- piece band, manthats biger than what I had back home in Nigeria! I had three singers with me. One was named Sami Ama. He was from Rivers State, in the Delta region of Nigeria. He had his own band later, called When One Road Close . . .155 the Bushmen. Then I had a Malian girl called Asitan Dembele. She was actually French- Malian, because her parents were from Mali, but she was born here in France. The third singer was a Senegalese girl called Julia Sah. She was the coolheaded one in the band. I was still calling the band the Mighty Irokos, like I did in Nigeria. It was a little more difcult because I wasnt working with Martin as much now, and I was more on my own. I was spending my own money for rehearsal, for instance. Even when there were no gigs, we rehearsed because I wanted to keep the band tight for when the gigs did come. But I had to pay for that. I had to pay for the rehearsal place, pay the musicians for their transport, and in the end they had to believe that something would come out of it. Later I found a manager to help me, a Camerounian guy called Joe Pando who lived here in Paris with his French wife. Joe was getting us gigs and keep- ing us working, plus he fxed me up with festivals. Then one day, some of my musicians happened to run into Martin on the road, and they told him they were on their way to rehearse with me. The musicians told Martin that the band was sounding good, so Martin went to meet a guy named Jean- Louis who was the proprietor of a club called La Chapel de Lumba. That club was in Paris, near Bastille on rue de la Roquette. Jean- Louis wanted a band for his club, and Martin told him that he should go and check out my band. So Jean- Louis came to our rehearsal, introduced himself, and said he was sent by Martin Meisson- nier. We just played two songs before he jumped up and said, Fantastic! He didnt want to hear any more, and he told me to come see him in the ofce the next day to discuss business. I went in and Jean- Louis told me that he wanted to give me weekends for one monthFriday, Saturday, and Sunday. So that was the frst gig we had, at La Chapel de Lumba. And my musicians started to believe that the band was really gonna hap- pen. Our frst job was a steady thing for one whole month, and thats a good beginning! We were pulling nice crowds. Every night when I played there, it was full up, man! After that gig, Joe Pando got me a big tour in Italy. And we kicked their asses, every night! But to be a bandleader trying to keep ffteen musicians in line was difcult because the more successful we became, the more the musicians started to get big heads. They started making demands on tour, like demanding more money when they already knew how much they were supposed to be paid for the tour. We had already agreed on that before we left Paris. But once we arrived at the gig, they started to agitate for more money. Especially when they saw the reception of the people, 156Chapter 8 then they thought they could force more money from me. For instance, one would suddenly come to me before the show and say that she was not going to sing the song that she had been singing all along. Weve been playing this song and everybody knows what they are doing, but all of a sudden somebodys going to start to say, Im not going to sing this song tonight! This happened several times in Italy. So I just told them, OkayI dont want no problem. If you dont want to sing, dont sing. But if you dont sing, you are going back to Paris di- rectly from here. You are not going back to the hotel to be incurring bills while you are here not working. Thats my deal with youas soon as we fnish this program, you are going back to Paris. And bamI close my door and just wait for that song not to be sung! I conclude that Im not gonna get this song today, so I will have to play something else. But in the end the motherfucker will sing the song! In fact, once were onstage she will probably be looking back at me asking, How come we arent playing my song? Even some of the Nigerian guys in the band that were supposed to be my friends, they made more trouble for me than anyone, especially when they were drinking. Another problem was that the musi- cians could not take Pando as my manager, so I was stuck between him and the musicians. Fucking hell, man. Its like sometimes I could become brutal and jump on somebody physically, because of their attitudes! Be- cause of all these problems, I decided to disband when we came back from that tour of Italy. We played one more gig at La Villette in Paris, and after that I disbanded. That was around February or March 1988, right be- fore I left for Lagos for the funeral of my father. That was it for the Irokos. I was struggling, but one person who helped me a lot when I arrived in Paris was a Senegalese lady named Awa Ba. Awa used to be a girlfriend of Fela back in Nigeria, in the 70s. Thats Awa with me on the cover of my album Jealousy. This is a woman that I had a lot of respect for right from Nigeria, because she was one of Felas women that wasnt playing his Kalakuta game. Whenever she came from Senegal, Fela actually put her in a hotel with her girlfriend. She would come and visit Fela, but she never lived in Kalakuta. She was outside of all that Kalakuta craziness, completely. Awa left Fela after all the madness started and he decided to marry those twenty- seven women. But they remained friends and Fela eventually helped her open a Senega- lese restaurant in Paris called Le Senou. Every time Fela came to play in Paris, she would cook Nigerian food for him. When One Road Close . . .157 As for me, I never saw Awa after she left Nigeria. I didnt know where she went; I thought maybe she went back to Senegal. So it was really a shock to run into her in Paris, because I didnt know she was here at all! But one day I was just taking a stroll along the street and who did I see standing in front of a restaurant therewas I dreaming? Was it Awa? She said, Tony! Wetin you do here? I told her my situation and that I had just arrived in France. It turned out that Awa actually owned that restau- rant and it was only a block away from where I was staying at that time. So, boomshe took me inside for some food and drink and she told all the workers that even if she wasnt there, if I passed by they should give me whatever I want, free of charge. Awa knew I was strugling, so that was a lifesaver for me, man! Even though she was younger than me, she was like a mother fgure to me, almost like a guardian angel when I frst got to Paris. And she is still a very good friend to me today. During 1985, I also met Sylvie Nicollet. I met her when I went to visit another friend of mine, an artist named Babatunde Okanlawan. Baba- tunde did some of my record jackets like N.E.P.A., and he also did one for Fela. Babatunde had a friend named Esther, and Sylvie was a friend of Esther. I liked her direct, in other words, immediately! And so I invited her for dinner a few times, and thats how we got started. After this I went back to London for a few weeks, and then I came back to Paris around December 1985. Sylvie and I started to live together in early 1986. We were living in the 5th arrondissement on rue Guy Lussac. I did the recordings with Barclay during 1986, and every time I went to record, Sylvie was there with me for the session. And during this year, she was pregnant. Our frst son, Arthurwhos also called Toyinwas born in February of 1987. But this happened just as I was getting to the end of my carte de sjour. The problem was that my contract with Barclay was for fve years, but the carte de sjour was only good for one year. At that time, I was still using my Nigerian passport. And as far as the immi- gration authorities were concerned, they didnt give a shit about the fve- year contract! To them, I only had one year to stay in France. Eventually it ran out. I had to leave the country to play, and every time I came back to France, they would only renew me for two or three months. This was really getting me mad because I wasnt even making any fucking money in FranceI always had to travel outside the country to make money. And still, I needed their permission form to be able to go out and come back. To make any money abroad, I had to travel quickly, while the card was valid. And if I knew that I was going to spend a long 158Chapter 8 time away, I had to obtain a new card before I left. That meant I had to go and spend a lot of time fghting with these immigration people, in their mairie (town hall). It was the same shit every time. They told me to bring my bank state- ments for three months, but there was no money in the account, because I wasnt making any money inside the country, and what I made when I traveled, thats what we were using to live on. The money I made outside of the country, I was spending here in France! So what was the point of bringing a statement when there is no bread in the account? They didnt understand this and they continued giving me their shit until one day the lady saw that I was not going to move out from in front of that desk. I created so much trouble in there that the real boss called me into her ofce. I told her, Look, I make money in the States, I make money in London, I travel and bring money back here. Now I want to go out to play in Switzerland, so I need to have my carte de sjour. She said, But you never brought your bank statement in, so theres no proof of how you live. I told her that I had been living and Ive never made any problems in France and that they were depriving me of my income. Then she asked me where the proof was that I had really been to London and all of those places, as I was claiming. I handed my passport to her, and she opened the pages and saw that the stamps were all recent. In fact, I had just come back from New York, where I was collecting money from Jean Caracos of Celluloid, because they had released N.E.P.A. in the States. I had also been to London to collect my royalties from prS, a British publishing agency. That was for my old royalties from my old Africa 70 recordings. Once I even went into the ofce with Sylvies sister. And she asked them, What is the problem? This guy has a son with my sister! Toyin had already been born at that time. She narrated everything, because at that time I didnt speak one word of French. But the woman told us that having a son does not mean anything because I wasnt married, and I could disappear at any time. She told me that she was gonna give me two more months. Not even three months! And that anytime I came back there, I must make sure I came back with a bank statement. I told her, Thank you very much. But if you ever see my feet in this ofce again, cut them of completely! It was a Yoruba parable, whether she understood or not. Fucking hell! I was dying to kill her, you know? That was a very bad day, because I saw an African guy right in front of me that this same woman was dealing with. He had almost the same situation as me. They started to argue, and the next thing I saw was this When One Road Close . . .159 guy in handcufs! She called the police and they took the guy right out! So I left. When I arrived back home, I was facing a decision, man. Sylvie asked me, What is the result? And I said, The result is that we have to get married for sure, and we have to do it within two months! Sylvie agreed, but when you start processing marriage here in France, its not that fast. You have to be under valid paper when you register for that. And even after that, you have to leave another twenty days open for any- one who will contest it. Anyway, we did all the processing and it hap- pened. Within two months it was done. We were ofcially married on December 19, 1987. And on our marriage day, just a few days were re- maining on my sjour! There were no hard feelings with Ibilola when I left Nigeria and got married to Sylvie. If we are talking about a marriage certifcate, I never got that back home in Nigeria, because whether you get married or not, if you are living with a woman who has kids for you and the kids are bearing your name, its automatically like marriage for us. Ibilola and I never went and said, Let us document it, and went to the registry or to the judge or to the court. Even if we had got the certifcate, it only means so much in Nigeria. So it was just a matter of continuing to main- tain the mother of my kids, and working in Europe helped me to do that more easily. The frst time I actually got married with a certifcate was in France. At that time, Sylvie and I were still living in Paris. So I went back to the authorities to tell them that my sjour had expired and that they should extend it. But they looked at my marriage papers and told me that my situation was changed from now on and that I didnt need this paper any- more. Actually, they already knew, because the computer showed every- thing. They told me that I should go back to the mairie to get the new type of extension, which was for fve months. And I needed that extension be- cause I wanted to travel to Nigeria for the burial of my father, who passed away around March of 1988. He was seventy- four at that time. So I went to Lagos for three weeks. My fathers burial was a big deal, man. The house was full upmy family from my mothers side, my family from my fathers side. Full up. And my friends and my brothers, their colleagues, their wives and their wives family, and so on. You know that Fela was the neighbor of my father, because of that property that my father sold to him on Gbemisola Street in Ikeja. So Felas house is right next door to where we had the ceremony. And I remember that on the funeral day, the only person that 160Chapter 8 came to the burial from Felas people was his photographer, Femi Foto, to take pictures. My father was buried in Ikoyi. And then we came back home, for the reception. We were right next door to Felas house. Fela was there in his house, but he never came down to pay his respects. There was a live band, and the party was going and food was going. The place was full up and people were dancing. But it was on a Friday night and Fela had to go play at the Shrine. Well, somebody came back from the Shrine while the party was going on to say that Fela announced to everyone that he was stopping the show because somebody that was very important for him, that made him have his own abode, is dead and they are celebrating, so he had to stop. And he announced that the per- son was Tony Allens father. He announced that and he came back to the party to pay his respects, but the body was gone already. The body had been buried by then. With all my family seeing Fela at the party, they thought he would have given me a good present, moneywise, which is our tradition. All my brothers and sisters thought that yes, its normal that I would have got a good envelope, as we say. Fela and his wives came and enjoyed the party, and when they were going home, Fela asked for extra food and drink to take back. So my people prepared the food and everything along with a bottle of whisky and a bottle of wine. And that was it. They left. But later Felas good friend JK came back to my house before I left to come back to Paris. JK came to my house and asked me that day at the party, how much did Fela give to me? I said, He never gave me noth- ing. Well, JK was just looking at me like Dont make a joke, man. Dont joke. He must have given you some envelope. I told JK, He never gave me no envelope, never gave me nothing, whether you believe it or not. Hes there in his house, so go and ask him if you dont believe me. JK didnt believe me, so he went to meet Fela and he asked him, Is it true that you never gave Allenko any envelope that day? And JK came back to tell me that Fela said, Give Allenko money, give him envelope? How can I? How can I give envelope to Allenko that lives in Europe and has the hard currency? Luckily for me I didnt need to focus on these ridiculous things, be- cause when I arrived back from Lagos, a letter was waiting for me from the immigration authorities, saying that I should bring back the fve- month extension. When I arrived there, everything was donemy ten- year carte de residencethis time, in a plastic card. And the law said I had the right to become a national in two years. But I didnt do it until the ten When One Road Close . . .161 years expired. I know it sounds crazy, but I wanted to keep myself open because at that time in Nigeria, if you took the nationality of any other place you automatically lost your Nigerian citizenship. And that would mean that whenever I was going to Lagos, I would have to queue up for a visa. That would be a nightmare! I didnt want to pass through some- thing like this. Because the Nigerian embassy is one of the worst places in the world, man. They will treat you badly and suck you dry, because they know you are coming from Europe. So I decided not to go for the French citizenship immediately. I left it as is. And then fve years later, President Babangida said that we could have triple nationality, not even just dual! Another reason I waited is that when you start to go for your citizen- ship in France, you have to get a police clearance from your country say- ing that youve never been to jail before. The police clearance in Nigeria is coming from the Alagbon, the central police station where everybodys records are. If youve been in prison at home, they are not going to accept that in Francethey dont want any criminals! Well, I had been caught up in some stuf with Fela, but I was never prosecuted. I never faced any judge at any time to defend myself. I passed through police interroga- tion, yes, but no convictions. Still, I had to make sure. One could pay for that, you know. Its a racket there in Nigeria, for the police to make some funny money. I did it through a friend of mine. His wife is a judge and his son used to stay with me here in France for a while. They did it for me and eventually I became a citizen of France. I was really there solidly from 1988, but the ofcial date that I became a citizen of France was June 3, 1998. And thats when my strugling really started! PARIS BLUES Now that my papers were ofcial in France, I wanted to keep giging, but I knew that to have more gigs, I needed to have a new record out. I was receiving so much praise for my music, but I never had a full- length album out since I did No Discrimination back in 1979. So I got a loan from Sylvies father to do a record called Afrobeat Express. I got Victor Addis and the other guys from Addis Ababa studio in London, where we did N.E.P.A. We got the basic tracks done, and they sounded fantastic! The problem was that we couldnt fnish it up com- pletely, because Sylvie and I had to use some of the loan money to live on. So I went to my publisher, who was Emmanuel de Burtel. He was later the head of Virgin. I hadnt received any publish- ing money in a long time, and I asked Emmanuel for a budget to go back and fnish this production in London. But he proposed that instead of giving me the money, he could fnish the album up here in Paris for me. That means we were gonna be ffty- ffty owning it and he was gonna be part of the business now. He booked a studio in Paris called Antenna, and he brought in his own engineersone guy called Pascal Koziarek, whos dead now, and another guy named Martin Ingle. Im sure Emmanuel thought he was being nice to give me the studio here in France to fnish it up, but thats where the whole album was fucked up! Pascal was a nice guy, but he was really a freak for computers and electronics, and they killed the music with it. By the end of that 9 Paris Blues163 production, it was not my music anymore. They did the same shit like on Too Many Prisonersthey used the original tracks to triger their com- puters, and then they erased many things out of the original tape. The engineer was saying that the levels of the original tracks were not high enough, telling me all kinds of bullshit to make me think that I had to go with their electronic tricks. But at the end I asked them, Where are my drums, man? The whole thing was originally done with drum set, from beginning to end. But they took that of and replaced it with machines, and it sounded terrible now. The one thing you cannot hear on there is the drum seton a Tony Allen record! I would never have gone to Emmanuel if I knew that they were gonna fuck my album up like that! If I knew what the result would be, I would have just gone back to London to bargain with the people at Addis Ababa studio so that we could fnish it there. It would have even cost me less and I would have come out with the production I wanted. Then when the album came out on a label called Cobalt, it wasnt really promoted. Cobalt was run by a guy named Phil Conrath, and he was recording eight artists at the same timeeight artists! I didnt know what he was trying to dohow did he expect to promote eight artists at the same time? Im- possible! After this, the whole situation fell apart. Emmanuel de Burtel dropped everything, because he wasnt getting along with the record company, which was Cobalt. He didnt like my manager, Joe Pando. The record company also didnt like Joe Pando, and Pando didnt like the record com- pany. And meI was the middle of the sandwich, being squeezed in be- tween everyone. So at the end of the day, I was the one that got the blow, because it was my money lost. Thats the way I looked at it. This electronics thing also made me to see how difcult it was to be an African drummer in Europe, because it was like one extreme or the other. Either you have to do the electronics thing, or they want to force you to do some kind of traditional thing. Even before I arrived in Europe, Fela used to talk about the African musicians coming to Europe. They would ask the guy what instrument he played, and if the guy told them he was a drum set player, they always say, Oh, you play tambour? You know, like hand drums, jembe or something. They never considered that any African guy would be able to sit down on the trap drums and play them to the ex- tent that they will be able to respect. It seems they always want to force the African drum set players to go down to that level of jembe or talking drum because thats what the Europeans expect of him as an African. 164Chapter 9 Check how many of us that were trap drummers in Africa that arrived in Europe or America and maintained it. Very, very rare, man. When they arrive here, most of them change to hand drums. Look at Remi Kabaka, for instancea wicked drum set player, man! You need to hear him, man. Hes thunder! But now that hes in the States, no more trap drums. I was challenging him last time I saw him. I asked him, Why did you leave trap drums? You should be playing trap drums, just even if its highlife you have to play! Just maintain something Afri- can and do it on these drums for them. Why are you playing talking drum now? You never played this instrument back home! For me, I will not accept it as a job. If it is hand percussion that you want me to play, I pre- fer you give that style to another drummer that can do that style. Its not because I dont know how to play that style, but I dont want to play any- thing that will make me leave my drum set. I detest that completely. The point iswhy cant we maintain what we came here with? Thats why Fela himself was not really convinced when any African guy was going to Europe as a musician. He always asked them, What are you going to do there? This time was hard for me, man. It was a lot of frustration. Even when I was in Africa, I was still playing. But in France I was having a lot of prob- lems playing my music. I knew many musicians, its true. And people were always proposing things. But 90 percent of what musicians talk about backstage after concerts is bullshit: Man, we got to get together to do this, we got to do that! Ninety percent of that stuf never happens, and I got sick of waiting. I started to realize that I was in the house more times than not. It got to the point that I had to sometimes ask myself, What the fuck are you doing in this country, man? I was just sitting and waiting for things to happen, and thats dangerous, man. A lot of times, thats where the trouble comes insitting and waiting. And it was be- cause of this boredom and frustration that I slipped into some shit that took me four years to get out of. A drug is a drug. Either you use it for curative measures, or you are using it for kicks. Either way, it has something to do with the mind. In the end, its the mind that wants this thing. Me, I dont believe in thatlike feeling a headache and taking aspirin, and when the headache is gone you still want more aspirin. Thats what people are doing to themselves with this addiction thing, and they want it harder every time. They want it stronger every Paris Blues165 time. Impossiblethe body has got enough at a certain point! So see- ing these things made me say Fuck it when it came to hard drugs, man. The only heavy thing I touched in Africa was freebasing cocaine. But you see, I can be in the middle of people taking this shit, and I see the way they are behaving, and from there I will be asking myself, Would I want to behave like this? So its something that I could say, No, stop. That was my own way of dealing with that shit. So forget about cocaine. Coke is a rich mans game anyway. You want to get high, your pocket must be okay. But heroin, you can get it quicker, and the quantity you need is not as much as coke. I had never tried heroin myself. But in the 1980s before I left Nigeria, heroin became something that was fowing too much. It was so common there, you could even get it faster than grass, because they were trans- porting it through there. A lot of people were taking it in Nigeria, but they had the money to follow up their habit, so you wouldnt know. But those ones that didnt have the bread to follow up the habit, you could see them all the time. They were just strung out, they became nothing, and their lives were ruined. This is what it was like in the 80s, before I left Lagos. I was seeing the lesson right in front of me every day. People that I knew before that were up, I saw them go down through this shit. Heroin ruined many people in Nigeria, man. So wasnt that lesson enough to learn from? Did I want to be like that? Especially after what I saw with Frank Butler back in Los Angeles, I never thought that I myself would end up dealing with this shit. It was the only drug that I thought, Never. I never touched it in Africa, because living is too hard there. I never touched it when I was in England. Even after I came to France, it took me a long time to touch heroin. But eventually I took it, and right away I could see that taking this shit is like ruining your life. As soon as this thing enters your bodyoh God, I just pray for those that are in it. Be- cause frst of all the high is fantastic, so one gets pulled in easily. And afterwards, every motherfucking day when you are getting up from your bed, its the frst thing you have to put in your body to be able to face the day. Whatever kind of work you are doingwhether you are a bank man- ager or the director of a businesswhen you are into this shit you have to maintain it. Maintenance means maybe you have to have a lot of it at home, to fx yourself every day. Me, I never tried to inject anything into my body. Needle business, I never tried it in my life. Maybe if Im sick in the hospital, and the doc- tor injects me, okay. Thats the only way any injection has ever entered 166Chapter 9 my body. Not through wanting to get high. Even snifng it came later, just a few times. I didnt like snifng, because I looked at it like the sister of shooting. That was just something I just passed through quickly and I stopped. Because you never know what they cut it with. I never chased the dragon. That means putting the heroin on a piece of tin foil and then burning it from under and smoking it. I hate it whenever I see them doing that. Its the look on their faces that I hate. So what I did was to put the heroin in my cigarette. If I had to take it, I took it when I smoked. I always took it this way. Because even then, if theres any other shit inside that they have cut it with, it has been burned of through the fre. But the truth is that whether you smoke it, snif it, or shoot it, somethings gonna happen to youyoure gonna be hooked and its the same fucking sickness youre gonna get. Just one week of constant taking, and boomyoure in! The next week, if you dont have it, youre miserable. Its going to be as if youre dead. Even for that one cigarette that I was taking daily. Youll be sick, and nothing can cure the sickness. Thats what happened with me. I smoked it every day for a week and then I smoked it every day for four years. I was able to maintain my habit during this time because some people brought me the stuf from Nigeria. So I could sell it of and make their money back for them, because I had some musicians around me who used to take the stuf. And this way I could take a few grams for myself. So instead of me spending money buying, I maintained my habit through selling a little bit. But I had to come of of heroin, because this sickness is not a joke, man. Its not any sickness that you can compare with others. No, its fuckery. Pure fuckery. Besides that, I didnt like the way people were dealing with me. They were shipping a lot of heroin through Nige- ria at that time, and I was beginning to be known in Lagos as someone that the drug people back there could use to sell their stuf in France. And my reputation was sufering here in Paris because I was beginning to be known more for selling this shit than for my drumming. I really had to ask myself what I was doing. What was happening to my music? When one is hooked to that, its really something to try and come of of it. But fnally I did come of of it, with the help of some tablets that they have here in France. Sylvies father is a doctor, and he gave me a prescription for the pills because he knew what was happening. When you take these pills, they make you not feel like having the heroin. It kills your appetite for it. They told me to start with four tablets, drop it to two the next day, and then drop it to one for the last two days. So I followed Paris Blues167 up the instructions, and kicked it from home. Because when I wanted to quit this shit, I wanted to be on my feet, not in bed. Not hospitalized. Not going through any goddamn thing in some hospital in front of the govern- ment in France that they could use against me. It was tough, but I did it. I was never hospitalized to help me get out of this shit. I knew the frst three days were going to be a bit hectic, but I had the pills to soften it. As long as you can stand a whole week without relapsing, you have gone out of it. Because its in your mind. You wanted to do it. No amount of curative measures can help you if you are not ready to stop. And you know what? After those three days when you see the outside, even though its the same sun you see every day, its going to seem like another kind of brightnesssomething you were really missing. And you ask yourself, Was I missing all of this brightness? I was jubilating, and I never want to miss that brightness again! You also begin to get back some of your power. When you stop the shit, you also start having abnormal erections, that you dont even need! The thing is just jumping down there! Thats because your life force is coming back, and thats when Sylvie got preg- nant again with our second son, Baptiste, who is also called Babatunde. Baptiste was born in July of 1990. Then in 1995, we had our youngest son, Rmi, who is also called Oluwaremilekun. He was born in April. So I was fnally of the stuf, but I was still smoking grass. Thats one thing I never stopped. Even that could be complicated sometimes, be- cause I was traveling a lot. Ill tell you a funny story about that. I remem- ber once when my band arrived at the Helsinki airport, in Finland. Every- body was waiting at the carousel for their bags, and all of a sudden I saw my sound engineer being taken aside by the border police, because the drug- snifng dogs had come to him. The next person was my bass player, Cesar, who doesnt smoke anythinghe doesnt even smoke cigarettes, but the dog went for him anyway! So now I saw that the two of them had been taken aside, and I myself I had just a small stash of some grass that I had hidden in my underpants. When I saw these actions of the dogs, I quickly took the grass out and I held it underneath my three small fn- gers. Before I knew it, the dog had come to me. And the border police told me that since the dog came to me, I must follow them after I picked up my bags. My bags came and I followed the police into their ofce. Once we were in there they opened up my bag, and two diferent people searched it. Meanwhile two other people took me inside a room and told me to put my hands up in the air while they searched my body and pat- ted me down. Then they asked me, open up your trousers. I still had the 168Chapter 9 stuf under my three fngers. So I took my trousers down, and then they asked me to take of my underpants as well. I did and they said I should bend over. Finally they said, Okayput your clothes back on. As soon as I was pulling my underpants back up, I coolly dropped the stuf back in there. They never saw it and I walked out of the airport. They never even thought to look under my fngers! They never thought that it could be there, that somebody could play this type of game with them. Prob- ably because they were looking for quantity. But that was my lucky day! While I was going through all of these changes, I was also engaged by Martin Meissonnier on the project of his wife, who is a French Tunisian singer named Amina. The recording lasted about eighteen months from 1992 into 1993, and the tour went on until about 1994 or 1995. We giged all around the whole of Europe with Amina, and it was great. Martin is my good friend and he was trying to help me all the time. He understood my situation from day one, going all the way back to Nigeria. And he knew what I was facing here in France. It was just the follow- up which was the problem some- times. So when the tour with Amina ended, it was time for me to try and stand on my own two feet again. I kept my own band going through all of this. Around 1995, I put a new band together because I was still getting some small jobs. But I cut down to a quintet. I had a few of the people from before, like Claude Dib- son, who is a guitarist, and Caesar Anot or sometimes Hilaire Penda on bass. I was just shufing between small gigs around Paris, caf gigs and things like that. I wasnt getting many gigs around this time. Joe Pando was out because nobody could get along with him. Sylvie was managing me around this time, while we were doing the caf thing. The caf gigs were sometimes good money, but also badly handled sometimes. It all depended on the place. And it was on- and- of like this until I started to do a gig at a club called La Citea, which was on rue Oberkampf near Menilmontant in the 11th arrondissement. Thats where I met Eric Tros- st around 1996. Eric was already a fan of my music, and he wanted to work with me. He became my manager, and the frst thing we did was a production called Live in Citea. It wasnt me alone; it was a live com- pilation of the artists that were playing at the club. So it was from there that he started having the idea of doing the Ariya ep that was released on vinyl. Eric wanted me to work with Doctor L., who is a big electron- ics guy. Doctor L.s real name is Liam Farrell. It was a big argument be- Paris Blues169 tween us from the beginning because Eric and Doctor L. were telling me I needed to be more electronic, and I was still bitter about that shit of Afrobeat Express. Here I was facing the same road again, and I asked my- self, When will I be able to do my music properly, and do it my way? Most of those guys in the business who have been calling the shots told me that I should leave it that way and that I shouldnt contest what they have done with the electronics. So I told them, okayin that case, let us do one straight mix so that the public will know what is happening. That way they can hear Doctor L.s contribution and they can hear my contribution. So thats what weve done on that one, because the ep has two versions of the track there. When the record came out, some critics said it was good, some said it was bad. But it did good enough so that Eric could follow up with a full album deal. Thats when we did Black Voices, and thats when Eric started his label Comet Records, with a guy named Manu Bouble. This was around 1997. Eric had his assistants come in, and we all started to write again. Plus, I got a couple of the singers from Parliament- Funkadelic who were living in France at that time. Gary Mudbone Cooper was on there, and so was Michael Clip Payne. Actually, Mudbone still lives here. But the frst time I met him was with Bootsy Collins, because he sings with Bootsys band when Bootsy comes to Europe. Then I ran into him again when we were working at a small home studio near Republique called Corduroy, and Mudbone and Clip were friends with the owner, who was a French- Algerian guy. A little after that, I also worked with Mudbone on his own project, which was called Funky Juju. It was really a good time back then, working with Mudbone. Hes a great singer and its nice to work with him. Thats where we got everything together, right there in Corduroy. We had the electronics, but it didnt overpower the Afrobeat. With Afro- beat Express, it was too heavy on the electronics side. But now with Black Voices, we were starting to get it more balanced. What I was hearing on Black Voices was Afrobeat mixed with dub again, but deeper dub than what we did on N.E.P.A. The dub spaces it out a little bit. You dont want to put too much space so that the music is not interlocked properly. It de- pends on who is doing the dub. If Im doing the dub, I know how to con- nect it with the music properly. You know, you must have a good groove to make good dub. The groove must be rolling down there correctly. I was trying to make a fusion using some things that are happening right now, but I didnt want to go of my root, which is Afrobeat. We started to blend the electronics with the band, in the studio. We wanted 170Chapter 9 things to sound live, like we were all altogether, but at the same time, it sounded cleaner if we overdubbed and avoided all of the sounds bleeding into each other. It was a small studio anyway, and there was no room for all of us to play together. I went in and laid down the basic rhythm tracks. Then my keyboardist, Fixi, came in. Fixis real name is Jean- Francois Bos- sard. We wrote the music together, and Mudbone and Clip were passing by from time to time and singing. Then we overdubbed the horns. But we were still in the spirit of the live band because when the horns did their overdubs, they were hearing the band behind them while they were play- ing. Then Doctor L. came in and did the production, and he helped to fnish the whole thing. Doctor L. was really the guy who helped to bring that electronic sound into the Afrobeat, and I have to give that credit to him because that is his speciality. Hes known for that. It was like an ex- periment. If you listen to the raw Afrobeat of Fela in the Africa 70 days, it was cleanno efects. Black Voices was diferent. I was trying to play Afrobeat the way I heard it, but adding some things, and the album came out of that mixture. That album was released in 1999. People liked the album, and because of that, I took my band to the States in 2000, for the frst time. It wasnt easy playing that music onstage. The problem was to repro- duce this music live as it sounds on the record, because of the role the electronics were playing in it. Even with Doctor L. on the stage, it was a very diferent thing. Onstage, if you are not careful, theres no discipline with the electronics. I tried to control it and make it appear professional to the audience, but it was getting completely out of hand because Doc- tor L. was doing crazy things that were not supposed to be there. You know, the electronics is a diferent trip, so it was kind of difcult for me. That is why later I knocked of all those extra gadgets and put the em- phasis on the keyboards. The keyboard too has many sounds, but it was more musical. The sounds were in the music now, instead of on top of it. So there you can get the best of both worlds in a way. It was during that US trip that we composed the music on the tour bus for Psycho on Da Bus. That was Afrobeat patterns, and we were still trying to push the electronics into it. And later I gave some of my drum tracks to diferent producers to put their own feel on it, and we came up with the Allenko Brotherhood album. I just gave them the tracks and said, Do what you want! Thats why we called it the Brotherhood. It was still Afrobeat. But it was a very diferent type of Afrobeat than what I had done with Fela. Paris Blues171 Fela himself was supposed to do a show in Paris in the summer of 1997 at the Elyse Mont- martre. And for that show, it was the heaviest publicity he ever had in France, with big posters everywhere. Everybody was waiting for him to come. And his son Femi came before him, earlier in the summer. Femi was playing with his own band at a club called Trabendo. I went to the show, and there was one boy there named Segun Damisa that played per- cussion for Femi. So after their show, I just happened to say to him, Fela will be coming next, after you people have left. But Segun told me no he didnt think Fela was going to come, because he was very sick. But I didnt understand the gravity of the sickness, because it was fve years since I had seen Fela. Since I came to France, I had been visiting Lagos every year until 92, when I stopped for a while. Then I remembered the last time I had seen Fela. I went to Nigeria back in the spring of 92 and I saw him in his house and at the Shrine. And then he came here to Paris that same summer. I went to his gig here at the Elyse Montmartre and it was a full house. He was lodging down at Chatelet with some of his people at the Hotel Ibis. It was summer, and it was fucking hot that dayParis was on fre! I was waiting for Fela there in the sitting room, and frst of all, he had made the hotel people turn the heat on in the suite! I was only wearing a cut- of T- shirt, and I was really sufering in there. And then when he came out, he was wearing a big fur coat! I asked him, Why are you putting on a fur coat in the sum- merits fucking hot out there, man! And he just said to me, Oh, but Allenkodont you know that Im sick? I didnt know that he was sick. I noticed he was kind of thin, but I didnt want to start thinking any nega- tive thoughts. Fela had always been a thin guy anyway. Anyway, about one month after he was supposed to be in Paris in 97 was when Fela died. It took me some time to believe that he was really dead. I couldnt believe that he was gone. For one month, I was not myself. I just stayed in my house feeling fucked up, because in my heart, I always thought that one day we would get back together and make some more great music. But the question was, why should Fela die like that? It wasnt because he was old. No, it was this spiritual stuf he was into, because he didnt look at it properly. He was dabbling into things that he didnt really have any knowledge of. You see, these Yoruba herbaliststhey call them ba- balawosthey work with herbs for healing, but they are also into some black magic stuf, and thats what Fela got into. He never separated them out from each other. He wanted everything to be real rootsy and African, and he didnt believe in any orthodox Western medicine anymore. In fact, 172Chapter 9 he completely detested Western medicine, to the point that if something was wrong with him, he would only accept African traditional medicine. But that traditional medicine cannot cure everything. And the things it can cure, sometimes it works very slowly. They said that Fela was sufer- ing from AIdS, but even lesser things like syphilis and gonorrheathe traditional people will be running to the penicillin for that! Because if you try to cure them the traditional way, with herbs, it takes a long time and you will still be sufering and spreading this stuf around in the mean- time. I couldnt go to Felas funeral, because to go to Lagos means I would have to spend some thousands and I wasnt able to do that. But did you see how many people buried Fela? Nobody else in the country would ever get that kind of burial. There were millions there, man! I saw it on tv, because they showed the whole thing here in France. Fela was a guy that was loved by the people. And when he disappeared was when everything he sang about started happening. In the end, I look at Fela as kind of a spirit being that passed through Earth, who was sent to do many beau- tiful things and some ugly things too. He had a lot of powertheres no two ways about that. It was a spiritual power. A lot of it came out in his music, but he also had the power to lead people directly. He was a person who could make people follow him, and Im sure he was born that way. It was a built- in power. Look at my own exampleI was not jobless when I met Fela. And I was the type of person that left bands very easily, if I got bored or if some small thing went wrong. The most time I ever spent with any band before Fela was one year. But when I met this guy, I ended up staying for ffteen years, and putting up with a lot more! So I think that Fela was a natural leader of people. He had to be, be- cause even with all of his crazy doings, people were still following him. He wanted to be president and all that, but he was not meant to be a head of state. He was meant to be a militantsomeone that can agitate and make a whole country go crazy against their government. He could do that, and he did it. For me personally, I wouldnt say that I was able to believe in everything he was doing at the time. Because some of those people, they were misled by his philosophy. Even when you are a leader, you have a choice. You can choose to lead people the sane way, with good ideas, or you can choose to have them follow you like zombies into a lot of craziness. Fela chose the radical way. What I believed in was his music. He still remained Fela, and the respect that I must give to him is as a musician; he was a genius composer to his very last day. Even when he Paris Blues173 was facing his blues at the end, he was still writing some mind- blowing music, man! His way of thinking about music was very diferent. You can- not copy his music. Nobody should try to copy his music, or his lifestyle, because he was one of a kind. I know that Fela respected me until the end. Not only musically. Some of his friends came and told me that Fela told them that when I left the band back in 1978, it was the best thing that I could have done for my own life. So deep down, he knew. Whenever he came to Paris, he would always call me, and I would go visit him with my wife. He was treating me extra nicely. In fact, the last time I saw him was the frst time I saw him yell at his wives on my behalfGet your ass up and let this man sit down! Dont you know that this is Tony? So I have no hard feelings or regrets, because at least I had one person pass through my life that I was able to achieve greatness with. But it wasnt until after this guy died that his music was properly ex- posed! I never thought it would happen that way! I never thought that when Fela passed away, it was fnally going to happen. The way I looked at was, why now? It should have happened years ago. Because people are now wanting to listen to Afrobeat, but when this thing was stronger, back in the 70s, nobody really recognized it. It was recognized in a way back then that, yeah, somebodys there doing something diferent there in Nigeria, but they never really brought it to light. But there was prob- ably a reason for that. Maybe the characters involved, like those record companies that were dealing with Fela in the 1960s, thought it was a dif- fcult situation. First of, they knew what this guy was like before, when he didnt smoke. But after he started to take things, he became kind of weird. And maybe they felt that to go into business with this type of character might not be really positive for them. Either way it would be a gamble. Because this is also a guy who has problems with his govern- ment, and nobodys going to come do business with somebody that has problems with his own government. Im sure that none of them wanted to get involved in all these things, and thats why they stayed away. So then the kind of people that came around him later had the atti- tude that they didnt care about whatever kind of person this guy is, they just wanted to sell this music. And I think that if these kinds of people had been around back in the 1970s, it would have happened then. But at the end of the day, those people that were in business with him at the end and who are now handling his music after his death, its also like they have foreseen the end of this guy and prepared for it. They knew that at 174Chapter 9 a certain time he was going to be gone and then they would have room to use his music as they wanted, because he wouldnt let them use it the way they wanted when he was alive. Thats the way this thing appears to me at the end of the day, and I dont want to be part of this way of think- ing. Thats why when these journalists ask me about that period after Fela died, when everybody was talking about Afrobeat, I just tell them that I wasnt jubilating, because it should have happened the longest time ago. The reason I say that was because it was only after Fela passed away that people in the business started to do things like expose me to the US, which they never really did before. I always thought that when I arrived here in France in the 80s, they would have handled me like I am being handled now. They should have done business with me coolly. But they didnt do it then, because it would have been competing with Fela, and nobody wanted to put anybody else across Felas way. Then he had a son that sprang up at the end of his life, which was Femi, and that too cooled my own side down a bit. Its like Bob Marleys story. You can see that no- body can jump in the way of Bob Marleys children because they cannot sell that person, whereas they can always sell the children quickly as the son of this legend. Its the same with Fela. Thats the music business, you know? So I just stayed clear. I was here, and Id been doing my thing my way for a long time already. Ive been playing since the 60s, and I just kept treading on. I knew that eventually I would get somewhere, because there is no end to business, and I still had a lot of music in me! NO END TO BUSINESS It was really moving to France that made me start to work with many diferent musicians. To play with them live, that never happened too much because Ive always had my own band going. My goal was always to have my own band. I never said I wouldnt work with anybody, but my priority was my own band. But Ive recorded with many people. For ex- ample, Ernest Ranglin is a great guitarist, and a great composer too. I really liked working with him. When we got to the studio and he was handing the music out, he told me, Just be yourself, and I created my own way of working according to his music. We spent about fve days getting the music together, and the people at Palm Pictures really liked the album when it was fnished. There was another artist in France, named Sebastian Telier. Hes a guitarist, and his music is so weirdhes a weird composer. But I was able to put rhythm behind it on the recording and it worked. I recorded two times with Air, the rock band. Every- thing they put in front of me, I played and they were happy with it. Recently, Ive also been touring with Joseph Amp Fiddler, who is coming from George Clinton and Parliament- Funkadelic. Amp is a great keyboardist and really a genius, man. Hes one of my favorite people to play with in the world! Actually, it was my dream to make some fusions with the rock bands, the funk bands, or any band in Europe or in the States. It was my aim to cowrite with them, to fuse things together. I 10 176Chapter 10 didnt know how it was going to happen, but I was trying. And it was a string of events. The frst guy that almost gave me a chance was Dave Stewart of the Eurythmics. But I dont know what happened at the end of the day. I played live with him one time, in 2000. That was me and Mudbone, live in London. Later I went to his house in the countryside and recorded with him, but nothing never happened. He was going to open a club called the Marquee in London, and his intention was to have me play there once a month. But the Marquee was only open for three months before it closed. Well, Dave told me one time that he didnt look at me like somebody to be going about playing drums everywhere. His intention was just to give me a job as producer for his label of African music, kind of like doing A&R. But it never happened, so I continued just doing my own thing. I did a session with Jimmy Clif, in the studio. That was recorded and released on Jimmy Clifs album called Black Magic. When all those projects were fnished, it was around 2001 and my own project was coming up, called Home Cooking. When I had fnished all the tracks, I wanted some guestship- hop, blues, whatever. That means Ive written those tracks for everybody. Keziah Jones was supposed to sing the frst track on the album. Hes a singer from Nigeria who is popular here in Europe. But at the last minute, he couldnt do it. So there was a group called Unsung Heroes, who had been on the Brotherhood album, and they sugested that I should meet Damon Albarn. Damon was coming from a British group called Blur. He was a complete discovery for me. The guys from Unsung Heroes sugested Damon because they used go to his parties when he was deejaying, and one of the records he always played was Tony Allen Makes Me Dancethat was the title of one of his own songs, even before we met! They played me some of his music, and I de- cided that I wanted him to come and sing on my album. So then they went to talk to him, and he was open to it. We met at a bar there in London, and Damon was shelling us with drinksyou know, they say shelling in England, like in war. Even after the deal was made, we went to the studio to sing, and Damon came with two cases of champagne, about twelve bottles. We were all enjoying our- selves so much that we couldnt work that day, because everybody was drunk! So he told me that he would take the music to his studio and de- liver it later. Damon is a good writer, man. Hes a good lyrics writer, and hes a good musician. You need to see him at work in the studio and youll know hes a genius. When he came back with the trackfucking hell, No End to Business177 man, it was my best track on my album! Its called Every Season, its the frst track on Home Cooking. That album came out in 2002. After Damon got a taste from Home Cooking and Every Season, he wanted to try for a bit of Afrobeat style in his own music. And I told him that I was looking forward to the day when we can work up some- thing together from the beginning, and maybe even do it in Nigeria. And he actually followed it up a year later, because we went twice to record in Nigeria. Nigerias not an easy place to work, but Damon is a ruged guy and he loves Lagos! He knows what is good there and what is bad. He and his guys go out in Lagos on their own, without anybody guiding them, and they manage. He gets on fne with the musicians there, and they get on fne with him too. He gave them a lot, things that they would never dream of in their life. We did two cds of material with Damon, but afterwards he couldnt release all of it because he decided that it wasnt going to be easy for him to go in concert with this sound. It was going to divert him from his own identity of being a British pop singer. Also, he felt that if we put the album out this way, we would need a big band to tour, and most of the musicians were in Nigeria. That means a lot of problems with visas and all that. But he told me that I should come to London so that we could keep writing new material together. Thats why we eventually did another record that they released as The Good, the Bad and the Queen. That one is a better mixture. Damon had to think about it properly because anything he touches turns to gold, man! Look at the Gorillaz projectthey sold millions with that, and all of them are al- ready millionaires now. Even their sound engineer had a hit single which went to number one. And Gorillaz is even bringing in more money in the States now. Meanwhile, I used the bread I made from The Good, the Bad and the Queen to fnance Secret Agent, which came out in 2009 on World Circuit. I fnanced the whole thing, recorded it, and then I leased it to them. Everyone said it was a great album, so I felt good about that. Now were getting ready to do another project with Damon, myself, and Flea, the bass player from the Red Hot Chili Peppers. Flea himself loves Afro- beat and Im sure its gonna be great, man! The way Damon came into my life, it was kind of like it had been written. He turned out to be the most important one for me among all these projects. Meeting him was like meeting another Fela for me; it was really that important because not only did this guy make a big diference in my career, but we are also very good friends. 178Chapter 10 Since then, Ive been traveling all around the world with my band. Traveling is an experience, and it made me discover diferent places that I would have never even dreamt of just taking a fight to. If I didnt have anything doing in all those places, I might not even think of them, you know. Im not going to these places like a tourist. Anytime I go to play somewhere, I might stay one week, maximum. Usually, I dont have fun trying to go and discover things, or see historical things. I never get time to really see the place. Its always that I have to go directly from Paris to the sound check in that other city. Directly to the sound check, and then stay at the sound check because theres no time to go back to the hotel. So you stay and perform the concert and then go back to the hotel and jump in your bed! Its very tiring and you dont get to see many things. But a few places I remember because we got to see a few things, and they really made an impression on me. Brazil was one of them. When we played there it was in Bahia during their carnival, and I gave a master class there. And I saw many drummers and drum makers, and heard a lot of drumming too. And I took part in it. We did a real big jam session with them before the concert. That was fantastic, man! Bahia, you know, thats really where the Yorubas are. They worship all those old godsOlodumare, Babaluaye, Ogun, Yemaya, and all the others. I even went to where they worshipped and I flmed them. That was an experience, man! It was diferent from the Yorubas in Nige- ria. The Brazilian one is kind of polishedthey polished the traditional thing. They used a lot of fowers, and you dont see blood fowing every- where like in Nigeria. They have a cooler way of doing things. The foods are too similar! They have something like what we call fufu (pounded yam), and I think they call it fufu, too. They use gari (grated cassava) and palm oil, and sometimes they mix it with dried meat in balls, or dried fsh. What they call akara is really like our own akara in Nigeria. Its made from bean paste, like what we call moi- moi. They slice it into sandwiches and put some shrimp in the middle of it. That was the main thing to eat when we were hungry. When you eat two of those and drink water, youre okay, man. You dont need to eat it with anything. We also went to La Reunion, just on the East of Madagascar near South Africa. I gave a master class there for the drummers, and to me it was like a little France down there. They speak broken French there, like, Creole. Apart from that, its like you never really left France! But its so beautiful, its like a paradise in the middle of the sea. In a way its strange, because you see big jungles, but there are no animals in there. If you go No End to Business179 into the jungle expecting to see animals like monkeys or tigers, they dont have that. The only thing that they have are birds. Dangerous beaches, though, because they have sharks, and some other fshes that they call stonefsh. When you are swimming, you get attacked by them and they give you marks everywhere. So they always tell you to watch it while you are swimming. They eat a lot of fsh and its good, man. Seafood business, mixed with French stuf that you can get in their Creole restaurants. Its tastyalmost like the way we cook stew and mix it together in African cooking. Its kind of the same style but with the French infuence. One trip Ill never forget is when we went to Israel to play in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv for three or four concerts. I remember that the last concert was in the afternoon and we had some time to kill. So we all said, Lets go and discover Jerusalem! Our tour manager took us in a minibus and we all went to Jerusalem. We looked around at the mosque there, and then we wanted to cross to the Jewish side near the wall where people go to write their wishes. And the police told us that we could go to the wall but we couldnt put any writing there because of the Sabbath. They said no pictures, no flming, and that we should just make our wishes in our minds. So we went to the wall and touched it, and then went into a church nearby. We wanted to go to the Christian side, but the police told us that it wasnt the same gate. It was like we were in the airport, with all the security! Police everywhere, and all of our bags and everything had to pass under the scanner. So we went to another gate and that checkpoint, to get to the Christian side. We went into all the churches there, the tour guy gave us the story of the church. In the Bible, thats the church where Jesus Christ sent of those sellers, you know. Then we went to where he was laid to rest frst, before they put him into the tomb. I took a picture there. After that I wanted to see the tomb too, but the queue was too long and we had to travel back to Tel Aviv to play. So we had to leave. But if I was a tourist, I would have queued to enter the place. And even the taxi driver was tell- ing us that we should have gone to Bethlehem. Like I said, if I had been a tourist, I would have jumped on that opportunity, man. But unfortu- nately, we didnt have the time. So we had to leave the Christian side. But what is the Christian side? What is the Jewish side, or the Muslim side? I didnt see any diference; you just cross through a gate, and youre still in the same land. There is a big market there, and you see Israelis and Palestinians mixing. And I could not tell the diference between them. Thats why, watching the news and seeing all this business of Palestinians 180Chapter 10 and the IsraelisI cant understand what is happening! Because to me they are like the same people! Same thing with the Christians there theyre all the same to me, they all have the same look. Ive gone to Japan twice already and every time Ive been to Japan it was always successful, man, because the Japanese are very inquisi- tive people. They want to know all about what this Afrobeat thing is especially the musicians. There was even an all- women Afrobeat band that gave me their cd, with them singing and playing Afrobeat. A fve- piece banddrummer, bassist, guitarist, keyboards, and horn. We played a few gigs in Tokyo and a few other places and they were completely packedabout one- quarter of the people couldnt enter the club. It was so full with people that I myself and the band were stuck! We couldnt move. When we were fnally able to enter the stage, we were stuck there, so when we fnished, it was impossible to come of that stage. We had to wait until everyone left! And their foodI love it so much, man. I can- not stop eating sushi. When its in front of me, only God knows when I will stop eating! There is no time Ive ever played, anywhere in the world, when the audience has moved from the place we were playing. I dont care where it is, but I know that no audience will ever move when Im playing. They will never leave! When Im onstage, Im not there to joke with nobody. I dont come there to disappoint them. I want them to go back home and say, We have heard something that we wouldnt even have imagined if we were not there! Thats what I put in the mind of my audience every time. Every time we go play somewhere, we always take them by surprise. Because they see that our own is diferent from what the others are play- ing as Afrobeat. They always come back to say that this one is something else. Were playing with a quintet or maximum a sextet, which you can- not compare with an eighteen- piece band. But still, we wrung them out so much because my music is easy to dance to. For my own side, I wont say that its necessarily political. Fela was able to use Afrobeat for his own messages because he was politically in- clined, but he was not in the government where he could say things, or in the university where he could lecture and publish things. So he had his own platform to deliver what he felt about the government and what he wanted them to do. Afrobeat was Felas power. But you can use music for any message you want to deliver, politically or whatever. You can deliver love songs and people can trip with that, too. Look at the Koola Lobitos time, when we were playing love songs like Olufemi, Yese, and all No End to Business181 those things. It didnt have anything to do with politics or any roughness at that time. It was simply music for enjoyment. So my music touches on many diferent things, and thats why I could play with many difer- ent artists. All these projects with other artists and with the electronics were completely diferent from what I had been doing in the past. But at least they put me on the road and made people think about Tony Allen. If I hadnt had that back catalog, it would have been difcult to work. These records and touring exposed me physically to people, and at that point I was being written up everywhere. Some people just came and watched for curiosity, to see the Tony Allen that they had heard so much about. But then sometimes other musicians would invite me for something like sessions or collaborations, so it was also a discovery. I presented myself in diferent forms for them to know that I can cope with whatever they bring my way. I said the longest time ago, Put Chinese music in front of me, I will deal with it. Put Japanese music in front of me, anything. Just dont tell me to play as it used to be. I will play it and Im sure you will never say its bad, because it will relate to the music. And I think it worked. I have been here in Europe for ffteen years already, and I have been getting the big festivals, and touring all over. Im rarely at home for more than one week at a time these days, man. Even though I was fnally having a lot of success in Europe, I wanted to fnd a way to bring my music back home to Nigeria, to open up some chances for the people there. Thats why I did my album called Lagos No Shaking, which really means No problems in Lagos. And thats why I wanted to go to Lagos to produce the album. Except for me living in France, everybody on that album was from Lagos. I even invited the juju singer Fatayi Rolling Dollar for my album. I had never worked with him before, but hes a guy that I used to know from a very early stage because he used to play at the Plaza Hotel near Mosholasi. At that time, Ebenezer Obey was playing percussion for him, before he started to play guitar and sing himself. The only limitation on Lagos No Shaking was the produc- tion, because I could get a certain kind of perfection from a studio here in France, but in Lagos you must deal with the machines they have there. I got the best I could get from them there, despite those limits. But all the critics loved it because that time, I went down to the real root! Work- ing with Damon was what led me to do that album, because that album came out on Honest Jons label, which he is involved in. For them to have helped me release that one was great for me, because at that time every- 182Chapter 10 body was complaining that with all the electronics, I was running away from the original Afrobeat that I used to do before. Even with all of the traveling that I have done in my life, I will say that Lagos is number one for meI still love it so much. Lagos is my home. But Nigeria is fuck- ing corrupt, man. I understand what those young ones are going through there. You can imagine some of them doing all these criminal things they went to school and everything, and came out with some kind of certifcate, at least for work. But they cant work. Its very hard to get employment there. Most places, they will tell you that you have to pay a certain bribe amount to get a particular job. But even then its hard to get work if you dont have a godfather. A godfather is someone that will look out for you and bring you in and get you a job instead of you having to pay a bribe. Even if theres no job there, they could create one for you! If you dont have a godfather, you dont get nothing. You must have a god- father. These kids have no one to look out for them and help them. And thats why I myself decided not to blame all these robbers. I would blame them if everything was okay in the country, there was no corruption and unemployment was zero. Then I would think it was crazy for them to do these things and I would prosecute it. But I cannot fully say that its not proper, because things are not right in that country, man. Its not easy for any ordinary person to live coolly in that environment. You will go crazy there just trying to survive. The rich are always becoming richer, and it seems like they want to make sure that they clean out everything and completely bury the rest of us. It cant always be like that! When people see their colleague on the street with mansions, they ask themselves, Why cant it be me too? Does that guy have two heads? No! So when they react, the reaction is extreme and the thing is spreading. Its all be- cause of inequality. And this shit is coming from the top, from all of this North/South business, the problems between the North and the South in Nigeria. I am not a politician, so I am not an expert on the causes, but I am just watching. It was the oil that made everything go haywire in the country. The oil money was supposed to be for the good of the people, and the gov- ernment itself was supposed to be for the good of the people. But then, our own government didnt turn out to be any better than the British. So much stealing and corruption, man! Believe me, if Lagos could have been left to develop naturally from where it was back in the 60s, it would No End to Business183 have been something else by now. It doesnt mean that there wouldnt be any ghettos aroundghettos are everywhere in the world. But at least you would see that this type of ghetto is from the country that has oil. I mean, a higher standard of ghetto! But the way things are today, the whole country is fucked up. I blame the leadership in Africa for that. And I also blame Europe and America. Just go back and check for your- self; check whats happening in all those countries they call the Third World. Check who was there before colonizing, and who is there now. Check who were the handlers before, and who the handlers are now. Its the same people, plus the Americans are a part of it now. Its like you have to dance to their tune, maneven after independence! Lets say you are a black guy in Africa and you know your own abilities properly. You see your counterparta white guy from Europe or Americaand you both have the same qualifcations and you are doing the same job. Usually the Western guy just knows it from the book, whereas the African guy, he knows it from the book and from the practical side as well. So who is the best? But the Western guy has a certifcate, and even though hes work- ing in your own country, you can never see the two guys being treated equally. The white guy is making double or triple what the African guy is making. You understand what I mean? So whos conducting the show? The African leaders always pretend that their countries are standing on their own feet, but behind, on their phones, theyre calling their former colonial masters. Thats where all the bullshit is, man. The independence they gave to usnot even Nigeria alone, but to every African country that got independenceits a tactic of giving the goat while hanging onto the string around the neck of the goat. We have a proverb in Yoruba they say, Olokun lo leron, meaning, The one that has the string is the owner of the goat. If it was really independence, the Europeans would have to let go of the goat along with the string, which never happened. So who is the ringleader of the whole show? And how can that stop? Some- times it appears that it can never stop. For example, what are they doing in Iraq? Saddam Hussein, hes only one guy. With all the technology the Americans have, Saddam could be taken single- handedly, without killing anybody there. And then the next morning when the Iraqis wake up, its in the newspaperSaddam is gone! But the Westerners dont want that. They dont care nothing about Saddam. The type of democracy they want to implement there now is just colonialism, so they can snatch the oil of those people there. Since how many years has Iraq got its independence? Many years back, man! But what are they facing now? And its now the 184Chapter 10 same shit in Libya, with Gaddaf. It doesnt have anything to do with democracy, man. Its all because of oil! In Nigeria, we were lucky that when the British gave us independence in 1960, they didnt really know about all the oil we had. If they had known, I bet we wouldnt have got it. But the British had just left, and it was after that when the oil started to show its face. All the big heads in Nigeriathe smart ones that are supposed to stay and develop the countryare leaving. They cannot stay, because their talents are wasted there because of no opportunities. So they go and make use of what they know somewhere where its appreciated. Its the same thing like my own case. I had to leave to make a life for myself in another country. Maybe in another century, someone will come and try to make a little bit of improvement. Like, one- quarter of improvement. Twenty- fve percent better. I think thats all we can hope for. You will never get all, man. But even it if it were only that much, I would go back. Nigeria is a good country. So Im praying that theyll be able to turn it around. Im praying so that my own kids and their own kids will not think that Europe or America are the only places that one can exist. Even if a country is not perfect, it doesnt have to be that kind of chaos like what we have back home. I always say that maybe it will take one of my own children to decide that he wants to play the drums. I have three kids here in France, and I have six in Africa. It might take one of them to be able to have my tricks. Because these tricks, I cant teach anybody. I cannot even teach my own children. I will just show them the basics. But when it comes to techniques, they have to develop it themselves. They have to have it in their blood, so theyll be able to de- velop it. They will know that their father had a kind of style to his thing, and this thing will grow up inside them. But really, it could be anyone. Thats why Im trying to do this dvd of lessons, so that theres a legacy to leave behind for people. Whoever wants to play like Tony Allen, get the stuf and study it, lesson by lesson. Its a discipline, you knowwhen you fnish one lesson, you go to the next one. And after you can start to put them all together, and you have your own head to start working for you, to develop your own style from those techniques. In the meantime, like I say, theres no end to this business. I have been playing music for ffty years, and wherever I play, the people always come and bow to me. I think people are happy to see a guy thats associated No End to Business185 with a legend doing his own thing and doing it strongly. I still challenge myself every time with my playing. I still want to play something impos- sible, something that I never played before. Thats what Im after and it will be established. I have to do it like that. I couldnt do it any less be- cause its a big competition out thereI have to keep Afrobeat going and I must not relent at all! If anyone would try to count how many regae bands exist, or how many jazz bands, or rock bands, they couldntit would be impossible. With Afrobeat, we can still count it, but its coming up and Im happy to see it growing. Everywhere I go around the world, I see Afrobeat bands forming. I know that it will take some years to reach the level of the others, but its growing and I feel great about that because I know I participated in the creation of this thing. I was looking to be something in life, and I achieved it. I took some risks, but if I hadnt taken any risks, there would be no way to achieve. Way back in the beginning when I decided to go for it, I left my par- ents house and I told myself that I wasnt going to come backI was just going to face it, whatever it was. And along the way I got so good that everybody around me could bear with me through all my ups and downs and the fact that I decided to put myself in shit more than secu- rity. I just kept on doing my thing because I believed that it was going to happen. If people were not ready to listen at a certain time, I was sure that there was gonna be a time when they would listen. And look at me todayI have reached a climax and I will never want to go and do any other job. The money might come big sometimes, and sometimes it might be just enough for living. I just need enough to feed my family, to make everybody around me happy, and to make sure nobodys lacking any- thing. Thats all Im after, and that is what I have. So Im content, man. I think its beautiful for me like this. selected references BOOKS AND ARTICLES Allman, Jean. Fashioning Africa: Power and the Politics of Dress. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2004. Apter, Andrew. The Pan- African Nation: Oil and the Spectacle of Culture in Nigeria. Chi- cago: University of Chicago Press, 2005. Arogundade, Fola. Why Im No Longer Guy Warren (interview with Kof Ghanaba). Punch, May 12, 1979. Babcock, Jay. Bootsy Collins on Fela Kuti. Mean, October 1999. Reprinted at Arthur Magazine Archive, http://www.arthurmag.com/2009/11/02/bootsy- collins/. Baker, Ginger. Hellraiser: The Story of the Worlds Greatest Drummer. London: John Blake, 2010. Barber, Karin, ed., with Mary- Jo Arnoldi, Frederick Cooper, Donald Cosentino, and Bennetta Jules- Rosette. Popular Arts in Africa. African Studies Review 30, no. 3 (September 1987): 178. Bender, Wolfgang. Sweet Mother: Modern African Music. Chicago: University of Chi- cago Press, 1991. . Der nigerianische Highlife. Wuppertal: Peter Hammer Verlag, 2007. ben- Jochanan, Yosef. Black Man of the Nile and His Family. Baltimore: Black Classic Press, 1996. Biobaku, Saburi Oladeni. The Egba and Their Neighbors, 18421872. Oxford: Claren- don, 1965. Chadbourne, Eugene. Frank Butler. http://www.allmusic.com/artist/p6215/biography. Accessed May 21, 2012. Charry, Eric. Mande Music. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000. Chernof, John Miller. African Rhythm and African Sensibility. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1979. Collins, John. Music Makers of West Africa. Washington, DC: Three Continents, 1985. . Jazz Feedback to Africa. American Music, Summer 1987. . West African Pop Roots. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1992. 188Selected References . Highlife Time. Accra: Anansesem, 1996. . Kalakuta Notes. Amsterdam: kIt, 2009. Darnton, John. Nigerias Dissident Superstar. New York Times, July 24, 1977. Davis, Angela. Angela Davis: An Autobiography. New York: Random House, 1974. Diawara, Manthia. We Wont Budge. New York: Basic Civitas, 2004. Dibango, Manu. Three Kilos of Cofee. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1994. Euba, Akin. Islamic Musical Culture among the Yoruba: A Preliminary Survey. In Essays on Music in Africa, ed. Klaus Wachsmann. Evanston: University of Illinois Press, 1967. . Yoruba Drumming: The Dundun Tradition. Bayreuth: E. Breitinger, 1990. Ewens, Graeme. Congo Colossus: The Life and Legacy of Franco and OK Jazz. Norfolk, UK: Buku Press, 1994. Feld, Steven. Jazz Cosmopolitanism in Accra: Five Musical Years in Ghana. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2012. Graham, Ronnie. The Da Capo Guide to African Music. New York: Da Capo, 1988. Idowu, Mabinuori Kayode. Fela le combatant. Paris: Le Castor Astral, 2002. Jacobs, Dan. The Brutality of Nations. New York: Knopf, 1987. Johnson, Rotimi. The Language and Content of Nigerian Popular Music. In Perspec- tives on African Music, ed. Wolfgang Bender. Bayreuth: African Studies Series, 1985. Kelley, Robin D. G. Africa Speaks, America Answers: Modern Jazz in Revolutionary Times. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2012. Kilby, Jak. Master of Afrobeat. West Africa, January 28, 1985. Korall, Burt. Drummin Men: The Heartbeat of Jazz: The Bebop Years. London: Oxford University Press, 2002. Locke, David. Drum Gahu: An Introduction to African Rhythm. Tempe: White Clifs, 1998. Makeba, Miriam, with James Hall. Makeba: My Story. New York: New American Library, 1987. Masekela, Hugh, and D. Michael Cheers. Still Grazing: The Musical Journey of Hugh Masekela. New York: Crown, 2004. Mattingly, Rick. The Drummers Time: Conversations with the Great Drummers of Jazz. New York: Modern Drummer, 1999. Monson, Ingrid. Saying Something: Jazz Improvisation and Interaction. Chicago: Univer- sity of Chicago Press, 1996. . Freedom Sounds: Civil Rights Call Out to Jazz and Africa. Oxford: Oxford Uni- versity Press, 2007. Moore, Carlos. Fela, Fela: This Bitch of a Life. Chicago: Lawrence Hill, 1982. Olaniyan, Tejumola. Arrest the Music: Fela and His Rebel Art and Politics. Blooming- ton: University of Indiana Press, 2004. Olorunyomi, Sola. Fela and the Imagined Continent. Trenton: Africa World Press, 2003. Oroh, Abdul. Im Still Scratching the Surface. African Guardian, October 17, 1988. Oti, Sonny. Highlife Music in West Africa. Oxford: Malthouse, 2009. Payne, Jim. Give the Drummers Some! The Great Drummers of R&B, Funk and Soul. New York: Manhattan Music, 1996. Schoonmaker, Trevor. The Black President: The Art and Legacy of Fela Anikulapo- Kuti. New York: New Museum of Contemporary Art, 2003. Selected References189 . Fela: From West Africa to West Broadway. New York: Palgrave, 2003. Seck, Nago. Les musiciens du beat Africaine. Paris: Bordas, 1993. Seck, Nago, and Sylvie Clerfeuille. Musiciens Africains des annes 80. Paris: LHarmat- tan, 1986. Shapiro, Peter. Tony Allen: Talking Drums. Wire, July 1999. Slutsky, Allan, and Chuck Silverman. The Funkmasters: The Great James Brown Rhythm Sections, 19601973. New York: Manhattan Music, 1997. Smith, C. C. Tony AllenThe Soul of Afrobeat. The Beat, December 1984. Stapleton, Chris, and Chris May. African Rock: The Pop Music of a Continent. New York: Obelisk, 1990. Thomas, T. Ajayi. The History of Juju Music. New York: Thomas, 1992. Thress, Dan. African Drummers in Paris. Drum!, June 2001. Veal, Michael. Fela: The Life and Times of an African Musical Icon. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2000. von Essen, Penny M. Satchmo Blows Up the World: Jazz Ambassadors Play the Cold War. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2006. Warren, Guy. I Have a Story to Tell. Accra: Guinea Press, 1962. Waterman, Christopher. Juju: A Social History and Ethnography of an African Popular Music. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1990. Wilson, Olly. The Signifcance of the Relationship between Afro- American Music and West African Music. Black Perspective in Music 2 (Spring 1974): 322. Winders, James. Paris Africain: Rhythms of the African Diaspora. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006. SELECTED DISCOGRAPHY I. toNy ALLeN: SoLo recordINgS Note: Recordings in this section are listed chronologically. Jealousy (with Africa 70). Soundworkshop. 1975. Progress (with Africa 70). Phonogram. 1977. No Accommodation for Lagos (with Africa 70). Phonogram. 1979. No Discrimination. Shanu- Olu. 1979. Never Expect Power Always (N.E.P.A.). Moving Target. 1985. Too Many Prisoners. Barclay. 1987. Afrobeat Express. Justin. 1989. Ariya. Comet. 1998. Black Voices. Comet. 1999. Black Voices Remixed. Comet. 2000. Allenko Brotherhood Ensemble. Comet. 2000. Home Cooking. Wrasse. 2002. Eager Hands and Restless Feet. Wrasse. 2002. Live. Comet. 2004. Lagos No Shaking. Astralwerks. 2006. Secret Agent. World Circuit. 2009. Inspiration Information (w/Jimi Tenor). Strut. 2009. 190Selected References II. toNy ALLeN: recordINgS wIth feLA ANIkuLApo- kutI (Ne rANSoMe- kutI) Ransome- Kuti, Fela, and His Koola Lobitos. Highlife- Jazz and Afro- Soul: 19631969. P- Vine. 1960s. Note: The following recordings are listed chronologically. As of 2008, all of them have been reissued on the Knitting Factory label, unless otherwise noted. Anikulapo- Kuti (ne Ransome- Kuti), Fela. Felas London Scene. 1970. . Fela Ransome and the Africa 70 Live with Ginger Baker. 1971. . Open and Close. 1971. . Music of Fela: Roforofo Fight. 1972. . Afrodisiac. 1973. . Gentleman. 1973. . Confusion. 1974. . He Miss Road. 1974. . Alagbon Close. 1975. . Everything Scatter. 1975. . Excuse-O. 1975. . Expensive Shit. 1975. . Before I Jump Like Monkey Give Me Banana. 1975. . Noise for Vendor Mouth. 1975. . Ikoyi Blindness. 1976. . Kalakuta Show. 1976. . Na Poi. 1976. . Unnecessary Begging. 1976. . Upside Down. 1976. . Yellow Fever. 1976. . Fear Not for Man. 1977. . J.J.D. (Johnny Just Drop). 1977. . No Agreement. 1977. . Opposite People. 1977. . Sorrow, Tears and Blood. 1977. . Stalemate. 1977. . Zombie. 1977. . Shufering and Shmiling. 1978. . V.I.P. (Vagabonds in Power). 1979. . Music of Many Colors. 1980. . I Go Shout Plenty. 1986. . Anthology, Volume 2. Indie Europe/Zoom. 2010. III. toNy ALLeN: recordINgS wIth other ArtIStS Ade, King Sunny. Aura. Island ILpS 9746. 1984. Air. Pocket Symphony. cdv302. 2007. Annabi, Amina. Wa di y. Philips 512 6971. 1992. Common. Like Water for Chocolate. McA 088 111 9702. 2000. Selected References191 Dibango, Manu. Wakafrica. fNAc 592137. 1994. Gainsbourg, Charlotte. 5:55. Because pr016134. 2006. The Good, the Bad and the Queen. The Good, the Bad and the Queen. Parlophone 00946- 3- 73067- 2-7. 2007. Jones, Grace. Hurricane. Wall of Sound woS050cd. 2008. Lema, Ray. Medicine. Celluloid. 1985. Psycho on Da Bus. Psycho on Da Bus. Comet. 2001. Raman, Susheela. Love Trap. Narada 724359006703. 2003. Ranglin, Ernest. Modern Answers to Old Problems. Telarc. 2000. Raphael. Je Sais Que La Terre Est Plate. Delabel 5099952010507. 2008. Soul Ascendants. Variations. Nuphonic Nux134cd. 1999. Tellier, Sebastian. Politics. Virgin 137243594283214. 2004. Ty. Upwards. Big Dada Bdcd057. 2003. Various Artists. Red Hot & Riot: A Tribute to Fela. McA McAr- 25898-1. 2002. Zap Mama. Supermoon. Heads Up International hucd3132. 2007. Iv. other SeLected recordINgS Note: Multiple recordings by the same artist are listed chronologically. Ade, King Sunny. Syncro SystemMovement. African Songs. 1976. . Juju Music. Mango. 1981. . Ajoo. Sunny Alade. 1982. . Synchro System. Island. 1983. . Aura. Island. 1984. Akinsanya, Adeolu, and His Rio Lindo Orchestra. Those Days in Nigeria: Juju Roots. Evergreen. 2011. Baker, Ginger. Stratavarious. Atco Sd 7013. 1972. Blakey, Art. Moanin. Blue Note BSt 84003. 1959. . A Night in Tunisia. Blue Note BLp 4049. 1960. . The African Beat. Blue Note BLp 4097. 1962. Blur. Music Is My Radar. Food cdfoodS135. 2000. Brown, James. Star Time. Polydor 331. 1991. Butler, Frank. The Stepper. Xanadu 152. 1977. . Wheelin and Dealin. Xanadu 169. 1978. Checker, Chubby. The Best of Chubby Checker 19591963. Abkco 9225. 2005. Coltrane, John. Kulu S Mama. Impulse A 9106. 1965. . The Classic Quartet: The Complete Impulse! Recordings. Impulse IMpd 8280. 1998. Davis, Miles. Seven Steps to Heaven. Columbia 65341. 1963. . The Complete Studio Recordings of the Miles Davis Quintet 19651968. Colum- bia/Legacy c6k 67398. 1998. Edwards, Jackie. Best of Jackie Edwards. Island 936. 1966. Ghetto Blaster. People. Moving Target Mt 012. 1985. Goodman, Benny. Live at Carnegie Hall. Columbia g2k 40244. 1938. Ishola, Haruna. Apala Messenger. Indigedisc 495002. 2001. Julius (Ekemode), Orlando. Dance Afro- Beat. Shanachie 43029. 1985. . Super Afro Soul. Afro Strut StrutAcd 002. 2000. 192Selected References . Orlandos Afro Ideas. Eko Sound/Soundway 001. 2003. . Orlando Julius and His Afro Sounders. Voodoo Funk vfcd01. 2011. Lawson, Cardinal Rex Jim. The Classics, Volume 1. Premier Music kMcd 006. 2004(?). . The Classics, Volume 2. Premier Music kMcd 009. 2004(?). Masekela, Hugh. Introducing Hedzoleh Soundz. Blue Thumb BtS62. 1973. Mensah, E. T. All for You. RetroAfric Retr01xcd. 1998. . Day by Day. RetroAfric Retr03cd. 2003. Olaiya, Victor. Three Decades of Highlife: The Best of Dr. Victor Olaiya. Premier. 2003. Parker, Charlie. The Genius of Charlie Parker #3: Nows the Time. Verve Mgv 8005. 1953. Pino, Geraldo, and the Heartbeats. Heavy Heavy Heavy. Retro Afric 20. 2005. Ramblers Dance Band. The Hit Sound of the Ramblers Dance Band. Flame Tree fLtrcd 526. 1975. Rollins, Sonny. Saxophone Colossus. Prestige prLp 7079. 1956. Silver, Horace. Song for My Father. Blue Note BLp 4185. 1964. Small, Millicent. My Boy Lollipop. Smash 1893. 1964. Various Artists. Juju Roots: 1930s1950s. Rounder 5017. 1985. . Giants of Dance Band Highlife 1950s1970s. Original Music oMcd 011. 1990s. . Azagas and Archibogs: The Sixties Sounds of Lagos Highlife. Original Music oMcd 014. 1990s. . Yoruba Street Percussion. Original Music oMcd 016. 1990s. . Money No Be Sand. Original Music oMcd 016. 1990s. . Afro- Baby: The Evolution of the Afro- Sound in Nigeria. Soundway SNdwcd002. 2004. . Lagos All Routes. hjrcd17. 2005. . Lagos Chop- Up. hjrcd15. 2005. . Out of Cuba: Latin American Music Takes Africa by Storm. Topic tScd927. 2005. . won Ojs Olorun: Popular Music in Yorubaland, 19311952. Savannahphone Afcd 010. 2006. . Ghana Special: Modern Highlife, Afro- Sounds and Ghanaian Blues 196881. Soundway SNdwcd016. 2009. . Nigeria 70: The Defnitive Story of 1970s Funky Lagos. Strut 044cd. 2009. . Nigeria Afrobeat Special: The New Explosive Sound in 1970s Nigeria. Soundway SNdw Lp021. 2010. . Nigeria Special, Volume 2: Modern Highlife, Afro Sounds, and Nigerian Blues 19701976. SNdw Lp020. 2010. Warren, Guy (Kof Ghanaba). Themes for African Drums. rcA- Victor LSp- 1864. 1959. . Ghanaba: The Divine Drummer. RetroAfric Retro 16cd. 2002. Williams, Tunde. Mr. Big Mouth. Honest Jons cd 101/2. 1977. index Addis, Victor, 151, 162 Ade, King Sunny, 7, 18n18, 130, 136, 139 41, 143, 145, 146, 152, 154 Adekunle, Benjamin, 5859, 66 Adex, Kehinde, 4445 Adio, Isiaka, 56, 65, 137 Africa, Center of the World, 125 Africa 70, 3, 5, 912, 63, 85107, 11213, 11622, 152, 158, 170; Allens departure from, 12227; Allens solo albums with, 105, 131; international tours, 87, 89, 9495, 1023, 109, 11722, 149, 153 African drumming, 4, 89, 10, 18n23, 129, 16364 Afrika Shrine, 31, 95, 113, 13637, 144, 147, 150, 152, 160 Afrobeat: Allens innovations with, 1, 5, 7, 1617, 101, 131, 143, 151, 15354, 16970, 182; global popularity of, 6, 17374, 177, 180, 185; musical elements of, 1112, 8990, 94, 125, 154; as played by Africa 70, 9, 147, 180; as played by Koola Lo- bitos, 6162. See also Africa 70; Koola Lobitos Afrobeat Express, 162, 169 Afro- Spot, 31, 58, 62, 64, 66, 85, 87, 93, 95 Agbeni, Ibilola, 43, 44, 81, 104, 114, 159 agidigbo, 2829, 45 Ahidjo, Ahmadou, 103 Air, 175 Ajayi, Adebiyi, 5 Akanbi, Moses, 140 Akarogun, Olu, 96 Akinsanya, Adeolu, 4445, 53, 54, 126 Ako, 56, 61, 70 Alagbon Close, 9, 11, 92 Albarn, Damon, 16, 17677, 181 Ali, Muhammad, 7172, 96 Ali, Rashied, 4 Allen, James Alabi, 2, 2130, 35, 37, 43, 106; advice from, 41, 53; death of, 156, 15960; sale of property to Fela, 22, 116, 121 Allen, Tony: arrest, 11011, 161; car acci- dents, 2527, 5758, 13940; childhood, 2130, 3637; children of, 43, 157, 167, 184; drumming technique, 12, 29, 4546, 5051, 6061, 7475, 8993, 94, 131, 143, 154, 164; ethnic heritage, 2, 2124, 106; health problems, 6364, 6970, 83, 93; immigration to France, 67, 15, 153, 15761; introduction to drumming, 89, 3235; legacy of, 18485; musical career after Fela, 67, 12, 1617, 105, 12835, 13845, 14956, 16264, 16870, 175 82; musical career before Fela, 3, 3746; musical career with Fela, 46, 912, 49127, 14649, 172; nonmusical work, 3031, 3435, 64, 6869, 8081, 82, 88, 104, 134; relationship with Veal, 2, 1213, 194Index Allen, Tony (continued) 15; siblings of, 22, 24, 28. See also Africa 70; Koola Lobitos; Mighty Irokos, the Allenko Brotherhood, 170, 176 Alphonso, Ogbona, 5 Alu Jon Jonki Jon, 91 Ama, Sami, 15455 Amaechi, Steven, 31, 41 Amina, 168 Anam, Masefswe, 5 Anex, 32 Anikulapo- Kuti, Fela: as bandleader, 4, 1012, 31, 4966, 69, 7377, 8083, 8588, 9196, 131, 136, 138, 14243, 14650, 160, 170; his clashes with Allen, 98102, 1045, 107, 117, 11921, 12225; his clashes with Nigerian government, 8687, 10918, 15051; his death, 171 74; his friendship with Allen, 24, 46, 51; as leader of Kalakuta Republic, 17, 96127, 135, 160; as musical icon, 12, 3, 46, 7; his political convictions, 71, 77, 8687, 93, 10810, 113, 121, 126, 180; his property in Ikeja, 22, 11516, 159; his spiritual beliefs, 106, 137, 17172. See also Africa 70; Fela Ransome- Kuti Quar- tet; Kalakuta Republic; Koola Lobitos Anikulapo- Kuti, Femi, 6, 152, 171, 174 Anikulapo- Kuti, Remi, 51, 52, 96 Anikulapo- Kuti, Seun, 6 Animashaun, Lekan, 54, 99, 104, 117, 124, 152 apala, 10, 2829, 86, 89 Araba, Julius O., 28, 29 Arinze, E. C., 31, 41 Ariya, 16869 Armstrong, Louis, 3839 Asekun, Femi, 55 Associated Press, 64, 6869, 82, 83, 88, 89, 104, 134 Aswad, 151 Aura, 152 Avom, Nicholas Ringo, 5 Ayers, Roy, 125 Aziz, Raymond, 6162 Ba, Awa, 15657 Babangida, Ibrahim, 161 Bahula, Julian, 151 Baker, Ginger, 93, 94, 95, 97, 99101, 120, 121, 131 Baldwin, James, 14 Balogun, Mr. (nightclub proprietor), 95, 97 Bankole, Femi, 32, 48, 49 Barcelona, Danny, 39 Barclay, 152, 15354, 157 Barrett, Carlton, 1, 10 Beautiful Dancer, 11, 85 Benson, Bobby, 32, 55 Benson, Leke, 135, 139 Benson, Tony, 55 Berlin Jazz Festival, 11822, 125, 126 Bestman, Willy, 132 Biafra, 4849, 6667, 73, 85. See also Nigerian Civil War Bill of Fare, the, 7071, 7980 Black Magic, 176 Black Man of the Nile, 94, 113 Black Mans Cry, 85, 86 Black Power, 5 Black President, 113 Black Santiagos, the, 62 Black Voices, 12, 16, 16970 Blackwell, Chris, 139 Blackwell, Ed, 5 Blakey, Art, 1, 10, 4546, 50, 61 Boma, Eddie, 57 Bossard, Jean- Francois (Fixi), 170 Brailey, Jerome, 9 Braimah, J. K., 77, 95, 104, 118, 160 Braithwaite, Tunji, 134 Braque, Georges, 14 Brazil, 178 Brown, James, 5, 9, 12, 65, 66, 71, 85 Brown, Jim, 71 Bucknor, Wole, 77, 96, 144 Buhari, Mohammed, 145, 150 Bull, John, 32, 48, 6364 Butler, Frank, 7475, 84, 89, 90, 165 Buy Africa, 86 calypso, 6 Cameroon, 49, 89, 1023, 109 Celestial Church, 12829 Chambers, Dennis, 9 Checker, Chubby, 57 Index195 Chicago, Roy, 59, 132 Chico, Igo, 88 Chop and Quench, 11 Citadel dHaiti, 72 Clarke, Kenny, 71 Clement, Kalanky Jallo, 135 Clif, Jimmy, 176 Clinton, George, 12, 175 Cobham, Billy, 9 Coleman, Ornette, 5 Collins, Bootsy, 86, 169 Colonial Mentality, 91, 1067 Coltrane, John, 4, 12, 74 Confusion, 9, 91, 92 Conrath, Phil, 163 Constantine, Philippe, 153 Cool Cats, the, 3334, 3740, 41, 43 Cooper, Gary Mudbone, 12, 86, 16970, 176 Crossroads Hotel, 116 Dada, Charlotte, 60 Damisa, Segun, 171 Davis, Angela, 14 Davis, Carlton Santa, 1 Davis, Miles, 45, 74 de Burtel, Emmanuel, 16263 Decca, 95, 118, 124 DeJohnette, Jack, 5 Dembele, Asitan, 155 Dibango, Manu, 92, 114 Dos Santos, Olade, 81 dub, 3, 12, 16, 17, 151, 169 Dunbar, Lowell Sly, 1, 10 Dusty (friend), 94, 142 Earthworks, 151 Edwards, Jackie, 57, 66 Egbe Mi O, 94 Egypt 80, 105 Eke, 61 Ekpo, Morris, 88 electronic music, 7, 12, 16, 17, 139, 151, 152, 15354, 16263, 16870, 18182 Ellington, Duke, 10 Ellis, Alfred Pee Wee, 12 Empire Hotel, 31, 41, 9596. See also Afrika Shrine Etuk, Kingsley, 4748, 4950 Euba, Akin, 88 Every Season, 177 Ewes, 2, 22, 28 Fademolu, Tunde, 66, 69, 70, 72, 8283 Fagbemi, Rilwan (Showboy), 144 Farrell, Liam (Doctor L.), 16870 Fatayi Rolling Dollar, 181 Fear Not for Man, 12 Fefe Naa Efe, 11 Fela. See Anikulapo- Kuti, Fela Fela Ransome- Kuti Quartet, 4748 Felas London Scene, 85 feStAc, 11213 Fiddler, Joseph Amp, 12, 175 Flea, 177 Friday, Bill, 31, 32 fuji, 86 funk, 1, 3, 5, 9, 10, 1112, 16, 89, 175 Funky Juju, 169 Galland, Kof, 38 Garibaldi, David, 10 Gentleman, 11 Ghana: Allens heritage, 2, 2223, 24; music of, 3, 5, 10, 3132, 52, 54, 5961, 62, 64, 65, 89, 129; recording in, 11314, 117; touring in, 38, 5961, 76, 87, 89, 93, 11718, 132 Ghana Armed Forces Band, 61 Ghanaba, Kof, 4, 10, 18n24, 12930 Ghetto Blaster, 138, 152 Gillespie, Dizzy, 71 goje, 2829 Good, the Bad and the Queen, The, 177 Gorillaz, 177 Gowon, Yakubu, 85, 108, 110 Hamilton, Bernie, 72, 75, 80 Hansen, Jerry, 60 Hausas, 48, 144 Heartbeats, the, 6566 heroin, 75, 16567 Higins, Billy, 5 highlife, 3, 16, 17, 3132, 4344, 55, 60, 61, 86, 93, 132; drumming, 9, 10, 11, 32, 33, 34, 45, 51, 90, 164; highlife jazz, 52, 196Index highlife (continued) 61, 66, 74; infuence on Afrobeat, 1011, 12, 89; as played by Koola Lobitos, 5, 9, 39, 41, 5254, 56, 6566, 136, 143 Himes, Chester, 14 Home Cooking, 16, 43, 17677 Hustler, 105 Hykkers, the, 62, 67 Idiagbon, Tunde, 145 Idonije, Benson, 48, 50, 5253, 58, 104 Ifayehun, Eddie, 54 Igbos, 26, 4849, 67, 73, 89 I Go Shout Plenty, 107 Ijagun, Benjamin (Ola), 5, 135, 139, 144, 150 Imbert, Pascal, 14647 Inspiration/Information, 16 Iseli, Tee- Mac, 130, 139 Ishola, Haruna, 29, 125 isicathamiya, 6 Island Records, 139, 152 Japan, 180 jazz, 3, 13, 16, 185; Allens interest in, 5, 7, 10, 4546, 5051, 8384; drum- ming, 12, 4, 9, 12, 49, 5051, 52, 7475, 93, 129; Felas interest in, 5, 47, 51, 77; highlife jazz, 52, 61, 66, 74; infuence on Afrobeat, 912, 89; infuence on other artists, 60, 61; in Paris, 14, 15 Jealousy, 105, 124, 156 Jerusalem, 17980 Jeun Koku, 85, 86, 96 Johnson, Dele, 66, 70, 8788, 97 Jones, Elvin, 1, 4, 4546, 74 Jones, Felix, 65, 73, 83, 88 Jones, Keziah, 176 Jones, Philly Joe, 1, 4, 10, 4546 juju, 2728, 51, 86, 130, 141, 152 Julius, Orlando, 140 Kabaka, Remi, 4, 61, 6364, 95, 12930, 164 Kakadu Club, 31, 61, 62, 95. See also Afro- Spot Kalakuta Republic, 5, 17, 104, 11112, 156; attack on, 12, 11316, 119, 126 Kalakuta Show, 11 Kerketian, Francis, 14649 King, Peter, 34 Knock on Wood, 66 Kof, Henry, 65, 75, 76, 91, 120, 121 Koola Lobitos, 3, 11, 31, 5384, 129, 133, 137, 139, 141, 180; American tour, 66, 6884, 87, 89, 110; relationship to Africa 70, 9, 85, 92 Koziarek, Pascal, 162 Krupa, Gene, 4546 Kuboye, Wole, 100 Kuti, Fela. See Anikulapo- Kuti, Fela La Chapel de Lumba, 155 La Citea, 168 Lady, 89, 91, 1023 Lagos, 33, 9596, 113, 131, 132; Allens life in, 2, 6, 8, 2123, 34, 43, 44, 50, 58, 82, 88; Allens visits as an expat, 14647, 152, 15960, 171, 177; Felas life in, 4748, 52 (see also Kalakuta Re- public); Ginger Bakers studio in, 94, 95; music scene in, 28, 3132, 38, 41, 58, 5960, 6162, 6566, 8586, 116, 129, 130, 13637, 181; violence in, 48, 49, 67, 13637, 145. See also Nigeria Lagos No Shaking, 16, 181 Laise, 61 La Reunion, 17879 Lawal, Fred, 54, 76, 79, 80, 88 Lawal, Mr. (music patron), 13233 Lawson, Cardinal Rex, 31, 32, 52, 59, 61, 93 Lawson, Sivor, 33, 3740, 41, 43, 48, 83 Lema, Ray, 7 Lionheart, Sunny, 4344, 83 Live in Citea, 168 London, 16, 22, 12122, 14243, 14647, 149, 15152, 153, 157, 158; Felas educa- tion in, 47, 48, 53, 65, 77; recording in, 139, 143, 162, 163, 177; touring in, 55, 9495, 149, 176 London Scene, 94 Los Angeles, 7081 Los Angeles Sessions, The, 73 Lumumba, Duke, 73 Index197 Makeba, Miriam, 68 mambo, 3, 41; Cuban, 34; Nigerian, 10, 28 marijuana, 3637, 70, 7678, 95, 106, 107, 109, 110, 117, 16768 Marley, Bob, 174 Martins, Bayo, 55, 12930 Masekela, Hugh, 68, 113 mbaqanga, 6 McCartney, Paul, 95 Meissonnier, Martin, 13840, 143, 145, 146, 15254, 155, 168 Meneh, James, 32, 14243 Mensah, E. T., 32, 38, 52, 60, 129 Meppiel, Martin, and Stefan, 138 Mettle, I. K., 30, 3132 Mettle, Prudentia Anna, 2, 2224, 27, 35, 3637, 43, 49, 9798 Michael (manager), 69, 70 Mighty Irokos, the, 13233, 135, 13839, 15556 Mitchell, Mitch, 94, 131 Mitterrand, Danielle, 153 Modeliste, Zigy, 1, 10 Mohammed, Murtala, 86, 1089 Moustique, 5, 149 Music Is the Weapon, 139 Music of Fela, 66 My Ladys Frustration, 74 NBc, 4748, 49, 52, 60 Neke, Oje, 32 N.E.P.A. (Never Expect Power Always), 149 53, 157, 158, 162, 169 N.E.P.A., 151 Ngomalio, Emmanuel, 38, 48, 49 Nicollet, Sylvie, 7, 157, 158, 159, 162, 167, 168, 173 Nigeria: Allens visits as an expat, 14647, 152, 15960, 171, 177; bandleader sys- tem in, 55, 6263, 123, 126; civil war in (see Nigerian Civil War); clashes be- tween Fela and, 8687, 10918, 15051; corruption in, 6, 26, 1089, 111, 112, 133, 161, 18284; food of, 13, 24, 51, 156; geography of, 38, 39, 70; political situa- tion in, 3, 6, 21, 30, 36, 70, 76, 78, 8587, 145; music of, 3, 5, 6, 9, 10, 31, 32, 5152, 66, 86, 89, 138 Nigeria 70. See Africa 70 Nigerian Army Band, 65 Nigerian Civil War, 3, 4849, 5859, 6667, 73, 81, 85, 111, 136 Nigerian Messengers, the, 4243 Njo, Bele, 89 Nkrumah, Kwame, 5960, 61, 71 No Accommodation, 5, 124 No Accommodation for Lagos, 105, 12425 No Agreement, 12 No Discrimination, 131, 162 Norris, Agu, 31, 4143 Obajimi, Candido, 131, 132, 135, 141, 144, 151 Obasanjo, Olusegun, 87, 109 Obe, 56, 61 Obeng, Rim, 10, 6061, 62 Obey, Ebenezer, 8788, 181 Obokun, Olu, 65, 129 Ogun, Mr. (hotel proprietor), 116 Ojeah, Laspalmer, 143 Ojukwu, Odumegwu, 48, 67 Okanlawan, Babatunde, 157 Oke, Lekan, 135 Okeji, Ojo, 38, 4344, 4950, 54, 59, 6465, 90, 135 Okonta, Eddie, 31, 41, 43, 140 Oku, Mr. and Mrs. (hotel proprietors), 13233 Oladeniyi, Bob, 130 Olaiya, Victor, 31, 32, 3334, 37, 38, 42, 43, 52, 59 Olalowo, Raimi, 135, 144 Olasugba, Isaac, 54, 61, 76, 79, 87, 88 Olatunji, Babatunde, 113 Ololufe, 56, 61 Oloruka, 56 Oludayo and His Rhythms, 130 Olufemi, 180 Oluwa, Tex, 33 Onuha, Eric, 31 Open and Close, 11, 91 Oremi, 143 Original Suferhead, 5 198Index Oritshe, 61 Osho, 3334, 37 Osibisa, 60, 135 Osijo, Felix, 95 Osobu, Kanmi, 104 Oyesiku, J. O., 28 Oyesiku, Tunde, 47 Pan- Africanism, 8, 16, 71 Pando, Joe, 15556, 163, 168 Pansa Pansa, 152 Paradise Melody Angels, the, 4344 Paramount Eight, 61 Paris, 2, 67, 22, 142, 145, 15257, 159, 166; Allens career in, 15456, 16263, 166, 16870; culture of, 1315, 32, 153; Felas visits to, 149, 153, 156, 171, 173 Parliament- Funkadelic, 9, 12, 169, 175 Parker, Charlie, 10, 129 Payne, Michael Clip, 12, 16970 Pereira, Akanni, 33, 34 Picasso, Pablo, 14 Pino, Geraldo, 6566 Plange, Stan, 60 Progress, 105, 121, 124 Psycho on Da Bus, 170 Question Jam Answer, 9, 91 Ramblers, the, 32, 52, 60, 62 Ranglin, Ernest, 16, 175 Ransome- Kuti, Bekolari (Beko), 53, 6970, 8889, 96 Ransome- Kuti, Dolupo (Dolu), 58 Ransome- Kuti, Funmilayo, 48, 55, 97, 104, 114, 126, 137 Ransome- Kuti, Olikoye (Koye), 53, 63, 93 regae, 6, 10 Rhodes, Steve, 57, 67, 130 Roach, Max, 1, 10, 11, 17n2, 46 Roberts, Yinka, 43, 54, 59 Roforofo Fight, 66, 91 Rollins, Sonny, 11 Sah, Julia, 155 sakara, 28, 86, 89 Secret Agent, 16, 177 Sery, Paco, 4 Seyi, 13335, 141 Shagari, Shehu, 136 Shakara, 89, 91, 1023 Shanu- Olu, Mr. (record label proprietor), 13132 Shenshema, 86 Shorter, Wayne, 147 Shufering and Shmiling, 9, 11, 124 Sierra Leone, 21 Silver, Horace, 50 Sinatra, Frank, 73 ska, 57 Slap Me Make I Get Money, 91 Small, Millicent, 57, 66 Smith, Sandra, 71, 77, 79, 86, 94, 13839, 145 soca, 6 Solanke, Jimi, 13031 Sorrow Tears and Blood, 12 soul, 6566 Sowande, Fela, 47 Stargazers, the, 32, 60 Starks, John Jabo, 1, 5, 9 Stephan, Kobena, 14142, 14445 Stewart, Dave, 176 Stratavarious, 94 St. Thomas, 11 Stubblefeld, Clyde, 1, 5, 10 Surulere Night Club, 95 Synchro System, 152 Telier, Sebastian, 175 Tenor, Jimi, 16 Tontoh, Mack, 60 Tony Allen Makes Me Dance, 176 Too Many Prisoners, 154, 163 Trafc Jam, 139 Trosst, Eric, 16869 Trouble Sleep, 66 Twins Seven- Seven, 135 Uhuru Dance Band, 60, 62 Unnecessary Beging, 9, 91 Unsung Heroes, 176 Uwaifor, Christopher, 54, 76 Vagabonds in Power, 11 van Renen, Jumbo, 151 Index199 Wallace, Leroy Horsemouth, 1, 10 Warren, Guy. See Ghanaba, Kof Washington, Morris, 7071, 72, 78 Water No Get Enemy, 9 Weather Report, 14748 Wendell, Mr. (friend), 7374, 85 Wesley, Fred, 12 Western Toppers, the, 4445, 49, 50, 5254, 54, 126 Weston, Randy, 113 When One Road Close, Another One Opens, 151 Williams, Rex, 44 Williams, Tony, 1, 4, 50 Williams, Tunde, 54, 76, 88, 13233, 135 Williams, Y.D., 117, 13233 Willington, Yomi, 81 Wokoma, Charles, 4243 Wonder, Stevie, 113 Wright, Richard, 14 YarAdua, Shehu, 87 Yellow Fever, 9 Yese, 54, 180 Yoruba: Allens heritage, 2, 8, 2123, 24; confict with Hausas, 48; culture, 2, 6, 23, 26, 141, 178; language, 22, 45; music, 2729, 89, 13031; proverbs, 158, 183; traditional medicine, 137, 17172 Yusuf, M. D., 86 Zawinul, Joe, 147 Zombie, 87, 114