Celebrities are no strangers to controversy and are constantly caressing
the spotlight as much on screen as they do off it, that it is often
expected that they have at least one major scandal or two over the
course of their careers.
For the controversy-laden Davido, even his debut single, “Back When”,
was not without much ado. With a billionaire father and the good things
of life coupled with an Asika for a manager and a Naeto C guest verse to
boot, it was quite contradictory and unbelievable that he’d be singing
of times when he had been broke.
The comparisons with Wizkid were ominous, for even Olamide had been
subjected to similar scrutiny as the EME act became the datum for
auto-tuned hooks and repetitive lyrics. It is little wonder then that
many have trumped up a silent rivalry between the two, claiming it is
the reason why both performers are yet to record a joint together.
When he released his Omo Baba Olowo album, critics were quick to dismiss
it as a half-baked collection of average club singles. At the album
launch, the presence of Aliko Dangote brought again to the fore his
family’s affluence and additional criticism. Like Naeto C again before
him, the singer meandered his way through and has come to be a success
not only because of his father’s cash, but besides it.
This is due to the boy’s industrious nature. On the song “Life”, Paedae,
one half of Ghanaian hip life duo, R2Bees rapped: “I think life is like
Davido and Wizkid/one from the ghetto, the other a rich kid/But they
both running their games artistic.”
“The way Davido has been putting in work this year,” observed someone on
Twitter the other day, “you’d think he came across the family will and
didn’t find his name in it.”
A statement is credited to him as having said in December last year that
he’d recorded a myriad of hits, waiting to go ballistic. January 2014
had barely walked through the door than they started dropping.
Statistically, there have been at least 10 joints up on music blogs that
he has lent his vocals to, in this first quarter of the year alone,
excluding his smash hit, Aye.
On the issue of who’s the better artiste between Davido and Wizkid, the
jury’s still out but the former’s records are intimidating. Wizkid may
have been in the industry long before his contemporary, but until 2013,
he had only toured Africa and the UK. Davido on the other hand, has been
a constant performer in several parts of Europe since he burst onto the
scene and was even reportedly arrested once in Prague. As hits go, not
one of Wizkid songs – which almost alwa
ys turn out to be a hit – has
been as big as “Dami Duro” or “Skelewu”; the Youtube stats, the number
of parody videos, the Hulkshare downloads and the fans in other
countries do not lie. Simply put, while Wizkid makes hits, Davido drops
monster hits. Unlike Star Boy, the younger Adeleke is also a producer.
He also repeats lyrics far less often, unlike Star Boy.
He split with his former manager, Asa Asika when the latter began to
bend the basic rule of music management: never outshine your act. He’s
also picked an efficient PR team that continues to weather the storm
with him and his HKN label mates.
More importantly, he’s graduated from being the One Week, One Trouble
kid who couldn’t walk through the pottery class without breaking
something to a modern-day Perseus gifted by the gods; his career taking
flight like Pegasus. That, ladies and gentlemen, is the story of young
David Adeleke.
By : Eromo Egbejule
READ : The Parable of Davido
by Gen 2shy add us pin:26BD08C7 @2shymusic , at 2:38 AM , have 0
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READ : The Parable of Davido - written by Gen 2shy add us pin:26BD08C7 @2shymusic , published at 2:38 AM, categorized as Gists
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