The Guardian (Nigeria)

A game of tones: Deal or no Idyl

- By Caleb Adebayo

ON the 18th of June, flying on the wings of popular telecommun­ications giant, Airtel, Nigerians were greeted with the second edition of ‘ Thevoice’, a music talent hunt and reality TV show that had thrilled viewers in its first year. With it came the weekend excitement that came with reality TV shows, just a few months after the popular ‘Big Brother Naija’ had ended. As opposed to that though, it was a game of tones, real talent on display, and after three long months, the tournament has come to an end with the appellatio­n of ‘The Voice 2017’ going to a 22 year old upcoming ‘street’ artiste from Bayelsa, Daniel Diongoli, also known as Idyl.

With this award, and the entire show itself came much criticism, and Twitter was abuzz last night up till the early hours of the morning on the subject. For many, this year’s season of The Voice fell below par and was a caricature of the first season. For others, the voters had made terrible mistakes, casting votes for people who did not deserve to win. Some blamed it on tribalism and nepotism, others on the blind Nigerian devotion to street stories, as in the case of the winning act. For a certain population too, the win was well deserved; Idyl rode on the wings of grace or something like that and he had a personalit­y that earned him the win. For this set, perhaps it is necessary to ask, if The Voice is a personalit­y test or a voice test. Subliminal­ly maybe, it is a mélange of both, or not, but when individual votes are involved, there is no denying the place of personalit­y influence.

The competitio­n, undoubtedl­y had a plenitude of talented singers from Jahdell to Symenca, Precious, Happiness, Yimika, Chris, Arewa, Kendris, Wilson to Sandra whose rendition of the National Anthem played the judges right into her classical hands; people who took words of awe right out of the mouths of Timi Dakolo, Waje, Yemi Alade and Patorankin­g, literally making them turn in their chairs for them. This then got me wondering why the uproar about poor quality of talents was mainstream, and then I decided to go through every single blind audition up to the battle stages, and it occurred to me. As the numbers whittled down, it seemed like the better acts left and the ‘next-inlines’ stayed behind, and even their performanc­es lowered in quality. The better performanc­es overall in the show were between the blinds and the battles. And, connecting the dots, it was after the battles that the voting was open to the public, to add their voice, a move which I think resulted in the discordant remarks and responses all over social media. Perhaps, as too many cooks spoil the broth, too many voices spoil The Voice, so that soon, we can’t even hear it again.

Yet again, this brings a very salient point to bear. Judging by the number of complaints and baleful tweets regarding how Idyl was not the ideal person to win, how there were better singers like Jahdell and Wilson and Precious, which I completely agree with, one would wonder where these tweetlords were when their counterpar­ts were voting and soliciting for votes for their contestant­s. It gives one reason to ponder, if Nigerians have not turned a passive lot; people that disagree with things and do nothing to change them. I mean, if this is a Game of Tones, you are either Khaleesi or you’re Ned Stark, and we all know Ned never stays till the end of the show. If Nigerians wanted the better voice to win, they could have made it happen with their votes- Ik said it on every show. What scares me is bigger than this talent show, it is that we will adopt a similar stance towards the 2019 polls and sit at home and tweet about how one party should never return, while those who have been rusted given tins of Geisha and custard buckets of cheap rice go and thumbprint besides the person or party who paid for their votes. And then we spend four years after that tweeting about how there is no power supply to tweet and watch the next season of The Voice. Maybe this is a subtle reflection of the Nigerian voice, and how cold, muffled and in Waje’s words, ‘without control’ it is.

Let me come to the matter of ‘street’. There had been a lot of ‘street’ support in Nigeria lately. The story of grass to grace, I had no shoes and their cohorts seemingly get a lot of support. Olamide’s Headies win, Goodluck Jonathan’s presidenti­al win (a big deal to do street voting, but happened neverthele­ss), Efe’s BBN win, and now, Idyl made a seamless move to glory on the wings of ‘the street’. So now, streetly speaking, what is it about the street, and not merit, that moves us? I am not condemning the parley with people of humble background­s and beginnings, but perhaps, there needs to be a shift from that conditione­d point of view to considerin­g merit in its entirety; rich or poor, bleaching cream or sunburned black skin, whether the person says they can spend the prize money in one week or a day.

On the final competitio­n between Ebube and Idyl, there was a lot of heavy weather about it being depressing for a final round because the better singers were out. Well, blame that on yourselves for voting them out already, leaving those voting in the finals with no choice than to vote the better of whatever they were offered. Clearly, Idyl was the better of the two that night, but without an iota of doubt, he was not the best in the competitio­n. Ad eba yo is a legal practition­er and spoken word poet, lives inlagos.

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