William Onyeabor
William Onyeabor is a funk
musician from Nigeria, born in 1945 or 1946
William
Onyeabor is an iconic figure in the history of Nigerian pop music. He is
considered the father of Nigerian electro Afro-funk. His biography has been
shrouded in mystery due to his own refusal to discuss it or his music since
becoming a born-again Christian in the middle of the 1980s and retiring to
pursue a career as a businessman running his own flour mill.
What we
do know is that he was born in Lagos, Nigeria in the 1950s. His musical
education began early on the piano and organ. In the early '70s he reportedly attended
university in Russia, studying cinematography. He returned to Lagos in the
middle of the decade and started his own company, Wilfilms. Although he was
recording during the era when Fela Kuti's
Afro-beat ruled the music scene, and was no doubt influenced by it, Onyeabor's music followed its own idiosyncratic --
and infectious -- path.
He was
fascinated by synthesizers, drum machines, and D.I.Y. recording technology. He
began composing and recording a style of music that melded Nigerian folk forms,
a love of repetition, and nods to Afro-beat and American R&B, disco, and
funk, weaving them together in a spacy, futuristic brew that no one was making
at the time; that style has influenced and been sampled and emulated by many.
His eight albums were all self-released on his Wilfilms label.
His debut
album, Crashes in Love, appeared in 1977. It featured four long tracks whose
joyous rhythms and zigzagging electro funk backdrops were often underscored by
militant political lyrics. In 1978, he released Atomic Bomb, whose title track
proved to be a regional hit. As an album, Atomic Bomb proved to be a road map
for all of his recordings to follow. Tomorrow was issued in 1979, Body &
Soul (whose title track is regarded as a classic) in 1980, Great Lover in 1981,
the angry Hypertension in 1982, the widely celebrated Good Name in 1983 (which
consisted of just two long tracks), and finally, Anything You Sow in 1985.
After his
conversion and retirement from making music, Onyeabor was crowned a High Chief
in Enugu, the economic capital of Nigeria, where he has lived ever since,
behind the walls of a palace in a wooded area. He is well known as a booster of
the thriving Christian music scene there.
Onyeabor's
music has only appeared on compilations in the 21st century and in
limited-edition, unofficial LP runs. In 2013, David Byrne's Luaka Bop label
released World Psychedelic Classics,
Vol. 5: Who Is William Onyeabor? Years in
the making, it is the first authoritative -- and reluctantly authorized --
compilation of his work. Later that year, Luaka Bop collaborated with Moog
Music (which actually makes two William Onyeabor-brand synthesizers, the Little
Phatty and the Moog Minitaur) in a various-artists remix project that kicked
off on Record Store Day 2014 with the vinyl issue of What?! The set was issued
in digital form in September
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