THISDAY

O’jez Evergreen Mate to Revive ‘Elders’ Forum’ with Liberian Miatta Fahnbulleh, Jimi Solanke

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he wedlock between O’jez Entertainm­ent and Evergreen Musical Company has given birth to a reinvigora­ted Elders’ Forum, the once very popular monthly highlife music show that was also used as a medium to recognise and honour individual­s who have distinguis­hed themselves in the arts and music industry.

So come this Sunday, February 26, all roads will lead to celebrity restaurant, O’jez, inside the National Stadium, Surulere-Lagos where the revived Elders’ Forum will open in a grand style with the presence of Liberian Internatio­nal singer, Miatta Fahnbulleh alongside Nigeria’s acclaimed folklorist, playwright and actor Jimi Solanke. Time is 5pm. The Elders’ Forum according to Chief Joseph Odobeatu, Chief Executive Officer of O’jez Entertainm­ent Group, was rested for about three years to enable it come back in a different shape and style. “We had to go back to the drawing board and work out a way to make the every last Sunday of the month event that rocked Lagos for almost 15 years look fresher and better. So, O’jez went into a partnershi­p with Evergreen Musical Company to make this happen. What you will witness on Sunday is a sharp departure from the past editions because we will strive to reinvent ourselves,” Odobeatu said.

Meanwhile, Miatta Fanhbulleh has been reharsing with Jimi Solanke as both of them will be on stage for the better part of Sunday event.

Fahnbulleh according to her biography posted on allmusic.com, remains one Africa’s finest voices. She always wanted to sing, but the bug really bit her at 16, a desire that caused problems with her father, the Liberian Ambassador to Sierra Leone. Liberia was not very progressiv­e, and women, especially ambassador­s’ daughters, didn’t sing in dance halls and clubs, so Fahnbulleh pursued her craft on the down-low. She once came in second in a talent contest that she couldn’t attend because her father found out and wouldn’t let her go; the judges graded her from a tape. At 19, after graduating from high school in Sierra Leone she moved to Nairobi, Kenya to attend Junior College. She dropped out and moved to Monrovia, Liberia to D.J., alienating her father who wrote her out of his will and distanced himself from her.

She started singing profession­ally, often making more money in one night than most Liberians made in a month. Shortly after that, her father was sentenced to 20 years in prison for treason and other charges. Seeing no future in Monrovia, Fahnbulleh boarded a plane in 1968 for New York. She immediatel­y displayed her singing skills by entering a contest at the Apollo Theater and coming in second. Fahnbulleh not only sang, but composed and produced her songs also. She never made an impact in the States because of bad advice, bad luck, and the paranoia that everybody wanted sexual favors in return for helping her career, which went against her Muslim upbringing. Her breakout should have been with Donald Byrd, whom she wrote and composed songs with for an LP. A meddling friend, however, convinced her she was getting ripped off and she backed out of the project before the recording date.

A contract with Ed Townsend, who later broke the bank with “Let’s Get It On” for Marvin Gaye, literally went up in smoke when Townsend’s recording studio mysterious­ly burned down. At the time, Townsend and Motown Records were embroiled in a lawsuit over the use of Townsend’s studios to record the Isley Brothers’ “It’s Your Thing” while they were under contract to Motown. She never came close to cementing a deal again and returned home in 1974.

 ??  ?? Miatta Fahnbulleh
Miatta Fahnbulleh

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