Connect with Creatives on the itembo.com network Discover, share and enjoy content from the brightest talents in Africa.





@urslar-ice Urslar Ice
Joined 14 years ago
@simplesam Simplesam
Joined 15 years ago
@seizer Seizer
Joined 3 years ago
@zeak Zeak
Joined 3 years ago

Top Playlist

New Music

That’s All I Ask

That’s...

by Richard Shekari

Last Night

Last Night

by Richard Shekari

Love I Can’t Explain

Love I...

by Richard Shekari

You Are Unchangeable

You Are...

by Richard Shekari

Draw Near Again

Draw Near...

by Richard Shekari

Higher and Higher

Higher...

by Richard Shekari

Worries Never Win

Worries...

by Richard Shekari

I AM Alone

I AM Alone

by Richard Shekari

Jiggy

Jiggy

by remizile

Some Nights Are Grey

Some...

by Richard Shekari

Only in Your Presence

Only in...

by Richard Shekari

Total Surrender

Total...

by Richard Shekari

I Choose the Light

I Choose...

by Richard Shekari

You Remain the Same

You...

by Richard Shekari

In Your Image Again

In Your...

by Richard Shekari

From Rage To Grace

From Rage...

by Richard Shekari

Still You Loved Me

Still You...

by Richard Shekari

Only You, Father.

Only You,...

by Richard Shekari

Alive and Loud

Alive and...

by Richard Shekari

Anchored Through the Storm

Anchored...

by Richard Shekari

   / 10  

Trending Music

Sister's Beware

Sister's...

by Eunice Benson

2fine

2fine

by Patrizzy

mio ti setan

mio ti setan

by centstino aka omelikolobia

wyn it

wyn it

by lmd

v8 riddim Prod By LokoBEATZ

v8 riddim...

by LokoBeatz

TREAT YOU

TREAT YOU

by SNELLY T

mofesola

mofesola

by fo lex

ABATAGO

ABATAGO

by KWIZZY11

No Be Beance

No Be Beance

by Quronickel

shokiri cho

shokiri cho

by femat dave

One day

One day

by Bj2,

kilondamiduro

kilondami...

by olaxm

too nice

too nice

by olu alaye

AFRICAN MAN

AFRICAN MAN

by GiantBeats

BENJAMYN

BENJAMYN

by GiantBeats

DOWN TOWN

DOWN TOWN

by GiantBeats

CYNDERELA

CYNDERELA

by GiantBeats

YoungFace   Amina (Prod... MusicMonStar)

YoungFace...

by GiantBeats

KBbaby You lied

KBbaby...

by kbbaby

Sharon

Sharon

by Q-smart Omo-Wealth

   / 9  
  • Sponsored

    Blog

    Latest

    404 template not found


    The template is set for this widget, but that template was not found in the skin.

    template: item_grid_mobile.tpl
    directory: WhiteW

    Blog

    Sponsored

    SARKODIE NOMINATED FOR MOBO AWARDS 2017 ‘BEST AFRICAN ACT’ By belladella, 2017-10-21
    This marks Sarkodie’s second nomination at the renowned MOBO Awards, following his nomination in the ‘Best African Act’ category in 2012, the same year he won the prestigious BET Award for ‘Best International Act’. Alongside the just announced MOBO Award nomination, Sarkodie has also been nominated for ‘Best Artist In West Africa’ in the 2017 All Africa Music Awards, after winning the ‘Best Rap Act’ award at the just concluded AFRIMMA 2017 in New York.

     

    News of Sarkodie’s MOBO Award nomination, where he will be vying for the ‘Best African Act’ crown alongside Davido, Wizkid, Tekno and Mr. Eazi, to mention a few, also comes on the back of a sold-out European tour in September, and the announcement that the next official single from his Highest album, will be none other than fan-favourite ‘Ur Waist’ featuring Flavour, the video for which, has already racked over 600,000 views on YouTube.

    Posted in: Sponsored | 0 comments
    Tiwa Savage’s offers romantic diabetes on “Sugarcane” EP By belladella, 2017-10-05

    6 songs, with a running time that just pushes just into the 20-minute mark, Tiwa packs this EP with expressions of love. It reads out like a local love letter shared between a hopelessly romantic Juliet to her Romeo. “Na because of you wey I get goosebumps…This one na Julie Julie and Romeo, Original ogbongolo bo bo oh (bo bo bo bo bo bo),” She explains on ‘All over’, a record which has become popular, powered by its passionate theme.

    A kind of urban pop-iness runs deep through the EP, and the ‘Pon Pon’ softness of ‘Ma lo’ even features superstar Wizkid. The mid-tempo vibe is cut through by unmitigated title banger ‘Sugarcane,’ but this EP is definitely the project for the mushy times. Get ready to embrace love.

    Rating: 3.5/5

    Ratings

    1-Dull
    2-Boring
    2.5-Average
    3-Worth Checking Out
    3.5-Hot
    4-Smoking Hot
    4.5-Amazing
    5-Perfection

    Posted in: Sponsored | 0 comments
    “We can’t talk about Biafra with our music because it is illegal,” Eastern Musicians By belladella, 2017-10-05

    To find out why this is so, I have called endless list of musicians who are from the East, both popular and rising ones to share with the public the reason why they have never publicly confronted the topic. None has declared their support or openly criticised the group. If your entire consumption of social media, is from musicians then you would tend to believe that this isn’t one of the most controversial and trending topics in the country.

    It’s almost like our musicians don’t exist in Nigeria, neither do they follow the news or social media outlets. Not one tweet, one Instagram clip, one share of anything related, or anything else has elicited a reaction from them, and this has created a gap, one that feeds neither part of the conversation about the desires of a people for self-actualization.

    Almost every musician who I called to comment on the Biafran situation refused to talk to me. The most recurrent official response was “No comment.” And then a couple of artists were, “Omo, you want make I enter trouble’.

    During the civil war in 1967, everybody was affected. All Eastern musicians who generally were dominating the music scene in the country with Highlife were affected. Although there are no records of them contributing to the war effort, they were affected.

    After the civil war in the 1960s, Igbo musicians were forced out of Lagos and returned to their homeland. The result was that highlife ceased to be a major part of mainstream Nigerian music, and was thought of as being something purely associated with the Igbos of the east.

    “I think none of us wants to be associated with something that might affect our possibility to achieve success,” a young rapper told me under the strict plea for anonymity. “Nobody would like to have their chance at personal success hindered by fighting for a cause that might not be successful.”

    “Let’s face it, nobody is sure that we will get the Biafra that our fathers fought for, and our youths are struggling to achieve.”

    Another artist, who also pled anonymity said although he is led in his heart to pursue the cause due to what it stands for, the fact that it is now illegal means he might lose a lot. “I don’t want to be picked up and locked up for the cause. My family will run mad,” he explained soberly on the phone.

    These were the only two people who could speak to me about it. Some others simply begged that I don’t even mention their name in this story because whether they comment or not, it would have an effect on their personal lives.

    The whereabouts of the Nnamdi Kanu, the leader of IPOB is uncertain at the moment. And so is the future of the group. There are conflicting opinions on his disappearance, with sources claiming that he either fled back to the UK or got arrested by the Nigerian army. No one truly knows.

    I ask another Highlife artist if he would sing a song about him, or praise his efforts at rally Igbo youths to a cause. His answer was speculative and conditional.

    “If he is alive and one day Biafra becomes real, I will be the first to record a song for him. But for now, there is no way I will do it. I don’t anybody to pick me up.”

    Posted in: Sponsored | 0 comments
    Join itembo.com