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(according to some accounts) in the

s, Fela played around

with it and further transformed it, in uenced in part by

spending several months in

in Los Angeles with his band.

(Anyone in the US unfamiliar with Kuti would recognize the

sounds he directly in uenced—from entire albums such as

the Talking Heads’ masterpiece

Remain in Light

[which will be

given a distinctively modern Afro-in uenced performance by

Femi Kuti’s present touring partner, Angélique Kidjo], or as

sampled in songs by Missy Elliott and Alicia Keys.)

Beyond his music, Fela is just as revered in parts of Africa

for his politics. As his pro le as a musician grew, he also be-

came a crusader for human rights and a vocal opponent of the

corrupt Nigerian military that governed the country. It seems

he grew into this role quite naturally, thanks to the example set

by his well-known mother: Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti was an

educator, women’s su rage campaigner, and outspoken crusad-

er in the anticolonial movement.

Fela developed an Afrobeat that entwined both strands of

his psychic DNA: e popular beats carried lyrics that dove

head rst into sociopolitical matters. Driving rhythms and call-

and-response vocals were a perfect musical vehicle to spread

messages about inequality and independence.

Fela Kuti and his band developed a commune called

Kalakuta Republic; it contained everything from housing to a

health clinic to a recording studio, and it was a hub for political

activity as much as music making. But it was raided and burnt

to the ground in

. During the attack, Fela was severely

beaten and Funmilayo was thrown from a window. It was

murder: his mother fell into a coma and eventually died from

her injuries.

Fela’s saga continued until his death in

. He took more

than two dozen wives in a polygamous ceremony; he tried

to run for president, but his candidacy was blocked; and he

was jailed by Nigerian authorities and deemed a prisoner

of conscience by Amnesty International. It’s no wonder his

life inspired several lm documentaries, as well as the

Broadway musical simply titled

Fela!

[conceived, directed, and

featuring Tony-winning choreography by Bill T. Jones, the

creator of Ravinia’s Lincoln-bicentennial stage commission

Fondly Do We Hope … Fervently Do We Pray

].

is is the complicated, heavy history Femi Kuti

carries with him. Yes, he inherited the gi of his

musicianship and a famous surname. Still, it’s

inexorably entwined with more strife than any

American musical family—any Jackson or

Wilson or Osmond—could truly imagine.

For his part, Femi says he avoids labeling

his music. “I really would not like to put

anything on it. I say just ‘music from my

perspective,’ ” observes Kuti, who’s earned

four Grammy nominations over the course of

two decades for Best World Music Album. “Of

course, I am very in uenced by my background

and things that happened here in Africa. If I lived

somewhere very quiet, my music might sound

more classical. But because I live somewhere with so

father’s songs.

There was always

a big competition

in the house of

who would learn

all the lyrics to my

RAVINIA MAGAZINE | AUGUST 6 – AUGUST 19, 2018

18