Music

Nigerian Music Icon Fatai Rolling Dollar Dead at 86

“Nigerian musician Fatai Rolling Dollar, whose West African highlife music, sexual boasts and infectious guitar playing made him a beloved figure in his country, died Wednesday at 86, a government official said.

The guitarist and singer, whose real name was Fatai Olagunju, had fallen into obscurity after highlife’s popularity faded decades ago, only to have his career revitalised recently by tradition-minded musicians.

He continued playing energetic concerts into his 80s, usually sporting sunglasses, and often boasted of his sexual prowess.

He once said he had 15 children, with the youngest born only a few years ago — the result of an “adventure” on the sidelines of a concert in Germany, according to him.

“I can confirm to you that he passed on this morning,” Ipaye Olajide, spokesman for the ministry of culture in Nigeria’s economic capital Lagos, where Fatai lived, told AFP.

He gave no further details and the cause of death was not immediately clear.

Bunmi Akinbo-Gold, an actress and a family friend who visited his home Wednesday afternoon on the northern outskirts of Lagos, also confirmed his death.

“A lot of artists are in his house now to express their condolences,” she said.

He fell ill shortly after he returned from the United States about three weeks ago, complaining of a leg problem, a member of his band said.

In highlife’s golden era, Fatai was a nationally celebrated performer. Highlife music, born in Ghana in the early 1900s, reached its peak in the west African region in the 1950s and early 1960s.

The West African dance music is similar in sound to Caribbean calypso and often satirises modern life.

Fatai sang in his native Yoruba language as well as in the pidgin English spoken throughout Nigeria.

His popular song “Won Kere Si Number Wa” (They Cannot Match Us) asserted his generation’s superiority over those younger than him. . .”-AFP

Fatai Rolling Doll Performs Won Kere si Number


Sunny Ade & Fatai Perform

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