The mansion, the pool, the
Bentley, the life-size portrait and the gold medallions are the spoils
of a revolution in Nigeria and music superstar D’banj is enjoying them.
The
35-year-old used to have to bargain with street-market traders to sell
his CDs because there were no formal distribution outlets. Today, MTN
Group Ltd., Africa’s biggest mobile-phone operator, and Emirates
Telecommunications Corp. sell songs by D’banj and other stars like
Davido and 2Face as ringtones and downloads. Now Tidal music streaming
service owned by U.S. rapper Jay-Z is interested in the Nigerian market.
“Our
consumers can’t get enough of it; you only need to give them a way to
get the music,” 35-year-old D’banj, whose real name is Oladapo Daniel
Oyebanjo, said at his home in the up-market Lekki neighborhood of Lagos,
dressed in a shiny fuchsia shirt. “The telecommunications companies are
bridging the gap and they’re raking in billions and billions of naira
every year, just from content.”
Thanks
to Nigeria’s answer to Spotify and Apple Music, the music industry has
seen sales triple in the past five years as mobile downloads surged
despite rampant piracy. With at least 550 albums each year, revenue to
artists from sales is now worth more than $150 million annually,
according to Sam Onyemelukwe, chief executive officer of Lagos-based
Entertainment Management Co., partner of Paris-based Trace TV.
Enough for a Ferrari
Outside
of his revenue from Apple Inc.’s iTunes, D’banj said that in the past
18 months he’s earned more than $200,000 from sales in Nigeria. “It’s
close to buying me a Ferrari,” he said by the pool at his home, where he
has his own recording studio.
More
than two-thirds of MTN’s almost 63 million subscribers in Nigeria are
using its ringtones service, for as little as 50 naira (25 cents) a
song, with downloads on its Music Plus platform growing about 25 percent
a year, said Richard Iweanoge, MTN Nigeria’s general manager for
consumer marketing.
“We have become the largest distributor of
music in Nigeria,” Iweanoge said. “It turned out that Nigerians actually
wanted to buy music, they just didn’t have a legal way to acquire it.”
The
boom has drawn the attention of Jay-Z, the rapper whose real name is
Shawn Carter. “My cousin just moved to Nigeria to discover new
talent,” he said April 26 on his Twitter account. It was part of his
move to make his Tidal music-streaming business “a global company,” he
said.
Boosted by satellite television outlets such as Trace TV and
MTV Base Africa, a unit of Viacom Inc., many Nigerian musicians have
won international acclaim.
“Trace and MTV Base have played a very
good part in bringing the artists to the rest of the world,” Onyemelukwe
said. “We pay royalties and it brings the viewers to whom we can
advertise to gain revenue.”
Awards Sweep
At the 2015 MTV
Base Africa Awards held in South Africa in July, Nigerian musicians
swept the most prestigious awards, with Davido winning best male artist
and Yemi Alade best female artist. D’banj, ambassador for brands from
Apple’s Beats Music to Diageo’s Ciroc Vodka, clinched an award for
popularizing African music.
“We’re operating in a music industry
that doesn’t really have clearcut structure,” D’banj said. “It’s a
global thing. Everyone is trying to come up with new formulas.”
In
the 1960s and 1970s Nigeria had a robust music industry, with EMI Group
Ltd., Philips Records and Polydor Ltd. publishing the works of
musicians including the late Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, King Sunny Ade and
Osita Osadebe who went on to achieve global appeal. Most of the
companies pulled out in the 1980s as an economic crisis led to currency
devaluations and lower disposable income.
Mobile-Phone Revolution
“When
the big recording companies left Nigeria and the local ones took over,
things went south,” said Tola Ogunsola, co-founder of Nigerian
music-download website MyMusic. “There was no formal distribution in
Nigeria anymore.”
That left musicians resorting to selling their
rights to distributors for a one-time fee, or heading over to the
open-air Alaba market in Lagos to get traders to distribute their
recordings.
Then, in 2001, MTN led the introduction of mobile
phones in Nigeria, and today there are almost 149 million lines. That’s
given local artists an unparalleled avenue to distribute their songs.
“In
the last five years, the market was ready to buy, the market was ready
to consume, consuming more of our own content,” D’banj said. “I believe
it is just the beginning; it has not even reached the threshold yet.”
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