08-04-2025
Afrobeat heir Seun Kuti brings fiery show back to San Francisco
The son of Afrobeat pioneer Fela Kuti, Seun Kuti brings his father's longtime band Egypt 80 to San Francisco to headline the Great American Music Hall Saturday.
As the pioneer of a musical style that would eventually be known as Afrobeat, Nigerian musician and political firebrand Fela Kuti emerged in the early '70s as one of the most important figures in African music. While he spent much of the '60s producing a jazzy style of highlife (an uptempo style that first surfaced in Ghana) with his group Koola Lobitos, a stay in Los Angeles near the end of the decade led Kuti to radically change his music and politics.
Activated by the revolutionary stance of the Black Panthers and the propulsive funk sound of James Brown, Kuti returned to Nigeria, renamed his band Africa '70 and began to focus on social and political messages. Recording fiery, hard-grooving salvos indicting the corrupt government and military leaders working with corporations to exploit Africa, Kuti rose to become not only a force on the growing world music scene but a political force in his native country. Despite intense government persecution that culminated with an attack on his compound that left Kuti's mother dead, the musician would maintain his rebellious stance throughout his career until his death from AIDS in 1997.
Kuti's music would inspire legions of imitators and a hit Broadway musical, but his legacy has largely been carried on by his two sons, Femi and Seun Kuti. Younger brother Seun was already performing onstage with Fela as a member of his latter era group Egypt '80 before he even entered his teens. He took over leadership of the band -- which featured a number of players with a history dating back to the Africa '70s days -- when he was 14 after Fela died.
While the group toured regularly, it would be another decade before Seun Kuti would record his first album in 2008, That debut effort, entitled
Many Things
, was produced by Martin Meissonnier, who had already worked with Fela on two albums. Where his brother Femi would introduce elements of hip hop and electronic music into his modernized style of Afrobeat, Seun would hew closer to his father's sound and politics.
His follow up albums --
From Africa With Fury: Rise
in 2011 and
A Long Way To the Beginning
three years later -- would both be hailed for their righteous political lyrics and kinetic energy. In 2018, he released his album
Black Times
, which features guest appearances from legendary San Francisco guitarist Carlos Santana (who contributes an incendiary guitar solo on the title track) and noted jazz keyboardist Robert Glasper. The acclaimed effort shows the that the current political climate has only intensified the artist's commitment to writing revolutionary protest songs. Live, the younger Kuti continues to uphold his father's tradition of putting on sweat-drenched marathon stage performances.
A year before the COVID-19 pandemic put Kuti's busy touring schedule on a lengthy hiatus, he recorded the live-in-studio effort
Night Dreamer
that features fiery takes on some of his more recent original tunes. More recently, Kuti appeared on "When We Move" -- a Common song that also featured the Roots rapper Black Thought -- and in 2022 released live recordings of a pair of new songs tracked at Clout Studios.
His collaborations with hip-hop artists have continued since then. He joined forces with Roots MC Black Thought in the EP
African Dreams
and teamed with Talib Kweli and MadLib on the song "Nat Turner" for their album
Liberation 2
. More recently, he collaborated on Janelle Monae's Album Of the Year Grammy nominee
The Age of Pleasure
with the singles "Float" and "Knows Better."
Late last year, Kuti released his latest collection of new material entitled
Heavier Yet (Lays The Crownless Head)
, which included the single "Dey" featuring Damian Marley as well as "Emi Aluta," a collaboration with Zambian singer/rapper Sampa the Great. The artist recently released a new remix of the song "Stand Well Well" with a guest verse from De La Soul rapper Pos. He brings Africa 80 back to San Francisco for a show
Saturday night at the Great American Music Hall
with Baltimore-based Nigerian-American vocalist Lily Ogé warming up the crowd.
Seun Kuti and Egypt 80
Saturday, April 12, 8 p.m. $35-$45
Great American Music Hall