| Photo: seunkutimusic.com |
As NPR journalist Anastasia Tsioulcas reports, he "is the youngest son of Afrobeat pioneer Fela Kuti. He began playing with his father's band Egypt 80 at age 8 — and took it over upon his father's death just six years later."
Please read the text that accompanied her "First Listen" audio story -- it describes many of the tracks (including one entitled IMF) and has links to related music, including some from his father. For the IMF video, I recommend enabling the closed captions on YouTube, even though the song is in English. Note that the captions skip the part where Kuti renames the "Monetary Fund" part of IMF to a more commonly used meaning of MF.
Lagniappe
When I was attending a meeting in my hometown (Washington, DC) with students from Brazil circa 2010, the walk from a hotel we could afford to the university hosting the meeting had us passing a lot of landmarks. When we passed the White House my students craned their necks in hopes of glimpsing then-president Obama. They were disappointed when I told them an arriving motorcade of 6 vehicles was probably a cabinet secretary, and that we would be nowhere near the place if if were the president.
But I digress: the relevant landmark was the World Bank (which is the conjoined twin of IMF). My otherwise lovely and polite students seemed ready to spit on the building. I have to admit being a bit impressed, but it should not be surprising. Educated people in the Global South recognize the damage that WB/IMF have done in the name of "development."
My presentation Sovereign Debt and the Erosion of Sovereignty tells the deep back story. I first gave this presentation in 2001, and sadly I have only needed to update some of the details -- the basic story has not changed at all. It is particularly poignant that Kuti is from Egypt -- the story begins there, when his father was still young.
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