The Borneo Post

Musicians in Frenchspea­king Africa eye global market through streaming

-

ABIDJAN: The wildfire popularity of streaming platforms has hoisted Nigerian and other artists from English-speaking Africa to unpreceden­ted popularity around the world.

Musicians from the continent’s francophon­e countries are now looking to cash in on the boom.

Africa’s streaming leader is Boomplay, whose library of 80 million tracks is almost in the same ballpark as those of Deezer and Spotify.

But Boomplay’s big difference with the global giants is a catalogue that focuses intensivel­y on African music rather than a broader range of genres.

The app was created in Nigeria in 2015 and is now present in six African countries, said Paola Audrey, manager of Boomplay’s Ivory Coast branch.

“We offer a very large library which helps you to discover many local artists,” she said.

Funded by advertisin­g and free for the user, Boomplay has blazed a trail internatio­nally for Nigerian Afro-pop and now hopes to do the same for francophon­e African stars.

“At the moment it’s much easier to highlight Nigerian artists in the French-speaking world, but we’re doing some experiment­s in the reverse direction, such as the Ivorian rapper Didi B,” said Audrey.

“There are small niche markets, and our role is to promote artists so that they can find an audience on a bigger scale.”

For industry experts who met last week in Abidjan at the African Music Industry Fair, the digital revolution promises glittering opportunit­ies for West African artists.

Revenue from African music streaming is expected to more than triple in five years, from US$92.9 million in 2021 to US$314.6 million in 2026, according to research firm Dataxis.

Digital dawn

“Everything began with digital platforms,” said Akotchaye Okio, in charge of internatio­nal developmen­t for Africa at Sacem, a rights group representi­ng artists.

“Look at the success of the South African song ‘Jerusalema’ or ‘Calm Down’ by Rema,” a Nigerian singer whose hit has notched up 50 million streams in France alone, he said.

Magali Palmira Wora, a francophon­e Africa specialist at US distributo­r The Orchard, pointed however to a learning curve.

“Artists in French-speaking Africa have to learn to put themselves forward on platforms,” she said.

“Spotify for example has got an Afro-pop playlist – you have to explain to artists why it’s important to be on it.”

Good exposure on the platforms smashes down the barriers to bigger markets, and opens the way to a career that is far more internatio­nal than would have been previously possible.

“Wherever you are, you can listen to my songs in one click. With digital technology, access to informatio­n is much more extensive. It allows local music industries to develop and as an artist it gives us exposure,” said Ivorian rapper Suspect 95.

“We no longer need to go through networks which made it hard to get my CD to this or that country.”

Copyright issue

Five countries – South Africa, Egypt, Nigeria, Algeria and Morocco – account for 86 per cent of African streaming revenues today, according to Dataxis.

But the 400 million potential listeners in French-speaking sub-Saharan Africa, two-thirds of whom are under the age of 25, are a promising untapped market.

Ensuring that up-and-coming independen­t artists can make money from the dominant platforms will be a key challenge.

“Obviously, if you’re signed up with a major (music company), it’s easier – you are using an establishe­d network” for getting copyright payments, said Suspect 95, who is signed to Universal.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia