Dapo
Oyebanji (popularly known as D’banj) has taken his music beyond the
shores of Africa where he has become a reckoning force within his 10
years in the industry. In this interview with TUNDE AYANDA, the entertainer shares his dream for music and how he wants to celebrate his 10 years as an artiste.
How do you feel headlining the 2013 Hennessey Artistry?
A
lot of things have happened in the last two years, and next year, 2014
will be the 10th year of my first official song, Tongolo. I did the song
in 2004. So, next, year it’s going to be D’banj’s 10th year on stage.
For me to have been a decade in the industry means a lot. I have been
watching what Hennessey has been doing with the entertainment industry
and I can say I was humbled when they called me. I won’t be the first
artiste they have used. They have been doing Hennessey Artistry for the
past four years now. They have been doing it every year where they pick
two or three artistes together to do a song, shoot a video and then they
showcase what they have in a way to reach out to their core fans and
customers. When they called me for this year, everybody knows that when
it comes to D’banj, I enjoy what I do and put all my heart inside and
dive into it. I told them this year would be different; that I would do
it more like a lifestyle. I will do it the way it should be done, and I
think that’s what we’ve been doing since we started. And when a lot of
my fans see me now, they say they now drink Hennessy just because of me.
They even said they didn’t know of the Hennessy Artistry before; so
this one is more pronounced and I tell them it’s by God’s grace. I feel
very honoured. A lot of people love it; maybe they will even use me for
next year again. Who knows?
You travelled to France where Hennessey is made. Has that in any way changed your perception of the brand?
Going
there, for me – and I say this with all humility on behalf of everybody
and myself – a lot of Nigerians and our friends that were here don’t
know the difference between cognac and brandy. Hennessey is not a brandy
but cognac. My going to France was an experience, as I found out that
the Hennessey we drink is made from grape. It feels real in me because
nobody would ever believe it’s made from a fruit like grape. I was
expecting a mixture of a substance but I was showed the preview of how
it’s made and how it has been maintained. I took pictures of some
barrels that have the Hennessey content of 1901. It’s a life cell. I
pray that God should let me build my brand to that stage like Hennessey.
The drink is the name of a man called Richard Hennessey. He was the one
who discovered the place and established himself there. Today, he is
widely known all over the world, because everywhere in the word they
drink Hennessey. I too would also like to do a drink that can be called
Bangali drink or something in the future. Hennessey has really opened my
eyes and, like the bible says, that ‘a man that’s diligent with what
God has blessed him with would sit before king and not men’. It’s not as
if they are doing anything extraordinary, but they keep the simple
tradition that has been set from the onset, and till date, nothing has
changed in the process and only five or six families were allowed to
produce Hennessey. I was also allowed to produce my own Hennessey,
starting from the grape, to the beam, to the mixing and I did my own
drink. I was asked when I would want to start and I said in 10 years
time from now. You know I’m 10 years in the industry now and in another
10 years, we can now sit and open it.
You’ve been 10 years in the industry. Did you ever think you would come this far?
Oh
yes, my career is just 10 years, but with the success I feel like three
to four decades now. We are all doing the best we can do, but I believe
with my 10 years as a musician, I have the biggest song in Africa right
now and the best song of all time and most viewed videos of all time. I
would just say that I’m humbled and we are getting ready for the world.
With Oliver Twist, have you achieved all you want as a musician?
I
can never stop doing Oliver Twist; that is why I’m ‘Oliver Twist’. I’m
just starting and I can’t be satisfied. It was the only song that ever
got to the top ten chart in UK, Europe and other top places. I believe
that Fela’s song only played in Europe but officially, we have
accomplished a lot with Oliver Twist. So I want to continue with that
momentum. I want two or three singles on the top chart and I want a
video that would top the chart. I want to release an album that would
compete with the albums on the international market and I will not rest
until they see all of us as one; so they will not see us as Nigerian
artistes or African musicians. I want them to hear a song around the
world and identify that the song is from Nigeria, and that the singer is
an international artiste. Nobody ever asks Jennifer Lopez where she
comes from; everybody knows she is from America. Nobody ever asks
Shakira where she comes from; nobody asks Wyclef if he was from Haiti.
Until that is done in my own industry, I don’t think I will be
satisfied. Like Kanye West always says that people have forgotten about
racism; they are now on classism of colours, and I thank God because God
is changing everything finally.
Starting from Tongolo to your latest song, Finally, how has it been?
I
am very grateful to God. I’m not perfect but I’m happy and I’m
satisfied to an extent that I always see myself as a person. Just before
I did Tongolo, I had to force myself and everybody around me to believe
in me. Don Jazzy never believed in me in the first place; I had to
force him to believe in me. It’s not that I’m perfect or different from
what I saw in Wande Cole in 2007 in UNILAG. I was about to go to a show,
he sang for me and I told Don Jazzy we must sign him. But Don Jazzy
asked me why. We signed him and everybody that was signed on Mo’Hits
Records was brought in by me. But no one ever brought me into any record
label; I started from the bottom. I started from nothing, then I was
the only one who would play the mouth organ because we already had a
singer here and there. Then we had singers and rappers, and when I had
the mouth organ, I played it with passion and today, I’m on top of the
world. So, if you ask me in a short time from Tongolo till now how life
has treated me, I would say life has treated me very well and I’m on top
of the world.
As big as your name is now, will you think of doing a movie story about yourself?
I
would start by saying that I have never called myself a musician. I am
an entertainer. Likewise some of my friends say if I carry a microphone,
I can be a good stand-up comedian. But if you look at my videos, you
will notice I spend a lot of money and time on the making of my music
video. If you check the song Top of the World, you will see what I mean.
It’s not ordinary. Every other video is like a movie, starting from
Ogbona-Felifeli and Fall in Love where I had to go far to bring
Genevieve in to make it a real movie. So, nobody should come and ask me
if D’banj is still going into acting because they should already know
that I’m an actor. By the time I’m getting into the movie industry, I
believe it is going to be a replica of the same way. Who knows if in my
first movie I’ll act like 50 Cent in his movie titled Get Rich or Die
Trying, or maybe I’m going to do I’m D’banj in 2014, which is my 10th
year on the stage – which I’m sure is not going to be a bad idea, or
even with Genevieve.
The Fall in Love video still gets tongues wagging. Who really is Genevieve to you?
She
is a friend of mine and she is also a very strong part of one of my
most successful songs titled Fall in Love, and there is no way you are
going to talk about Genevieve – even if you Google me, you will
definitely find Genevieve attached to your search result.
Would you like to have her as your woman, and not just a friend?
Yes,
I believe she is great and I don’t know what could happen to us in the
future. I met her as a friend and I believe that anybody that has her as
a wife, just like the Bible says that anybody that finds a woman has
found himself a great treasure in life.
Do you miss your friend, Don Jazzy?
If
I say anywhere that I don’t miss him, then I’m lying, because I’ll be
10 years old on stage by next year, and I spent eight and a half of
those 10 years with him. I’m just married to him in a way that I miss
everything. I miss the family, I miss his movement, I miss his jokes and
argument in the studio and I miss him a lot. We can always do music
with Don Jazzy. Now the song Top of the World was produced by a Grammy
award-winning producer, while the song Finally and Don’t Tell Me
Nonsense was produced by my producer, and Oliver Twist was produced by
Don Jazzy; so why won’t I want Don Jazzy on my 10th anniversary album?
Tell us about your song Finally
For
me, Finally is not just music; it’s like our story. I see us living in a
jungle, where we are coming from as in Africa; where we are being
ruled, and then now we are the ones that they want to look out for in
the entertainment sector – not only in the oil and gas or the other
sectors of the economy.






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