Vinida singing in Fuzhou
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MUSIC

East Meets West Africa: The Growing Popularity of Afrobeats

From the first Afrobeat album to the first Afrobeat festival, the genre has been quietly making inroads in China’s music market

Aging Asian rockers and Afrobeat might not seem like the most likely combination. But when Wu Bai, one of the biggest Chinese rock stars of the 1990s, heard the genre, its rhythms and melodies reminded him of the Hokkien songs he listened to as a child in Taiwan, and he promptly made an album inspired by its sounds.

Perhaps it is this relatability and versatility that has inspired the fast-growing popularity of Afrobeat music, and Afrobeats in general, across the globe. Back in 2022, the popularity of African artists exploded globally, with article after article describing Afrobeats’ incredible global reach. In the same year, Ugbaja Emeka Augustine, CEO of Nigerian label South Nice Records, suggested that the popularity of Afrobeats would soon spread to Asia. He pointed to the success of Yoofi Greene, a Ghanian dance teacher who had been introducing Chinese students to Afrobeats through his classes since the mid-2010s, as well as international radio stations that have been rushing to promote the sound.

Despite some promising inroads, Afrobeats is still taking more small steps than great leaps into China. According to author Christian Adofo, Afrobeats is the “younger cousin” of Afrobeat, the fusion genre first popularized by Nigerian artist Fela Kuti and his band Africa 70. Afrobeats samples the original beats while mixing in different genres and electronic elements.

When Wu Bai adopted Afrobeat in his third studio album, Ding Zi Hua (《钉子花》) , in 2016, it was the first time a mainstream artist in the Chinese market showed overt influence by the genre. Hailing from Taiwan and often singing in his native Hokkien, the rock legend and his band China Blue became the soundtrack to the ’90s across China, growing from a small-time touring band to one of the biggest stars of the scene. Although most would categorize Wu’s music in the folk or rock genre, Ding Zi Hua achieved critical success despite its unusual mix of genres—winning the Golden Melody Award for Best Taiwanese Album at the 28th Golden Melody Awards.

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author Asian Pop Weekly

Established in 2010, Asian Pop Weekly is one of the only English-language platforms that specialises in reportings on Mandarin popular music. Informed by a multitude of disciplines and perspectives both practical and theoretical, diverse and with an ear to the ground; APW exists between cultural, disciplinary, and national boundaries precisely to demonstrate the possibilities that exist when you look beyond cultural differences. APW is obsessed with the notion of bringing Mandarin and Asian music to the world as a means of bridging cultural divides; unearthing the best of what the scene has to offer and presenting it to English-speaking audiences in ways that intrigue yet foster understanding.

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