I'm not into commercial music but still make good money - Timi Dakolo
Nigerian vocal
powerhouse and king of soul music, Timi Dakolo, who came into the
limelight in 2007 after he emerged winner of the inaugural season of
Idols West Africa is an amazing talent. In this interview with MERCY
MICHAEL, he speaks about his journey to stardom, family and career.
Exactly eight
years ago, at the West African Idol show, his whole story changed after
he won. Speaking about how life has been, he said, “Life has been very
fair to me if I must sum things up in all honesty. It has had its ups
and downs but there’d been more ups than downs. If for nothing, the
fact that I got married, I have children and I have been doing music
the way I want to do it is enough. And these things have been paying off
in a lot of ways. I would not say that I’m where I want to be yet, but
I’m not also where I used to be.”
Quite a lot of
stars have their grass to grace story and Timi is no exception in this
regard. However, he put the record straight on the notion that he sold
recharge cards to survive as an undergraduate at the University of Port
Harcourt, Rivers State. According to him, “I didn’t really sell
recharge cards as a vendor, but you know when you’re broke in school and
someone sends you recharge cards from wherever they are, if the person
sends you like N1,500 recharge card, why would you load it? You’d sell
it for like N1300 or N1,400 and use the money to survive. There were
times like that, but to God be the glory.”
A peek into the
reality show that brought him and fellow act Omawumi Magbele into
public consciousness – did he feel threatened by Omawumi’s presence in
the debut edition of the West African Idol in 2007 because she was
equally the audience’s toast? “Well, it was a competition and
sincerely everybody was a threat at a point because there was something
unique in everyone. But when we got to a particular level, I knew for
sure that Omawumi Magbele was going to give me problems. So, I was
watching her performance than anybody else,” Timi said.
Curious to know their current relationship, he said, “We still talk, we’re cool and I even visit her at home sometimes.”
Timi signed to
Sony BMG recording deal when he won the competition. Did he continue
any other deal with them? “I don’t have any relationship with them
other than the first one,” he said.
Sometimes, he has
been said to sound like Michael Bolton and at other times, like John
Legend, but the singer said, “I listen to a lot of music and I think as a
person, that’s one of the best ways of gathering information. Whether I
sound like them or not, I don’t even know. It has always depended on
the kind of song I want to sing. I don’t fashion my singing style after
anybody but I also think that it’s a great honour to be compared to
these acts.
“I do get these remarks from other people. Yes, I get that a lot and it humbles me,” he said.
In 2014, Timi
stormed the stage with a full band and a cast to perform one of his
tracks, Iyawo Mi, at The Headies. Wondered if he knew he was going to
win, he said, “It was a performance and you had to bring your best team
forward; that was what I simply did. Everybody that mattered in the
industry was there and I couldn’t deliver less. What is worth doing is
worth doing well.”
It is easy to
think his wife is blessed to have such a fine singer for a husband who
will constantly wake her up with a sweet sound but it is not so. But to
the chagrin of his fans, his wife confessed on a TV interview that he
hardly sings for her as the world believes. “(Chuckles) don’t mind her
o, I still sing but it’s just that it doesn’t work again after these
kids. I still sing for her, it’s just that somehow, it doesn’t work the
magic like before.”
To say that Timi
Dakolo bonded with former President Goodluck Jonathan is to state the
obvious. Does he have anything he misses about him? “Of course, I miss
him. I keep telling people that the man is a good man with good
intentions but a lot of people misunderstood him. A lot of things might
not have gone the way he planned but God knows best. This country is
ours and there’s nowhere else we can run to. All we want is a better
country for our children and our children’s children no matter what
happens.”
In a country
where commercial singers are making millions of naira and getting brand
endorsements from big firms, only those who appreciate the art
celebrate the likes of Timi and sing their praises. “If only people’d
know that I’m doing very well and making my cool money! I go for events
that are not even announced – most of the birthday and wedding gigs I
perform at, people don’t even know about them. It’s not that I sit back
at home and just do songs without getting invitation to events at the
mainstream. The kind of music I do is the kind I want to do. I love
where I am and everybody cannot be giving Nigeria the kind of songs you
hear all over today,” he stated.
Haven done a
couple of works with Cobhams Asuquo with quite a synergy between both of
them, how did their paths cross and how would he describe him? “We met
after the West African Idol show and started talking as friends, but
right now, we’re more than friends, we’re brothers,” he enthused.
Timi’s ‘Iyawo Mi’
was produced by the iconic Cobhams Asuquo. It is a love letter
delivered with the trademark vocals that set Dakolo apart – a
traditional melody surrounded by horns. It is another classic from an
artiste that takes his craft very seriously. “I have been excited to
share this beauty of a song with my fans across the world. This also
comes straight from the heart, and it’s a delight to share,” Dakolo
added.
Some singers say
that their songs are mainly inspired by the beats, it is not that much
the same for Timi Dakolo. According to him, “I write my songs first, all
of them. The beat doesn’t come first; it’s the melody that comes
first.”
He was at the
Nigerian Idol show to tutor the contestants. Speaking on how he felt, he
said, “It felt great and it reminded me of how far I’ve come. I’ve been
on both sides of the table. It’s like a mighty leap – first, I came
here wanting to win this show and now I’m here to mentor contestants. We
might not know where the road leads, but it does lead somewhere and
that was what crept into my mind when I was with the contestants.
Sometimes,
musicians have favourite tracks from their many singles that they
themselves like to wish to sing to. But in Timi’s case, it is not so
because, “The songs that get me excited are the ones I’m writing at any
point in time; it’s never the one I’ve written. Once I’ve written a
song and listened to it, I move on. It’s only the next one that I’m
working on that fascinates me because I can sing it all day.”





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