The name might continue to be contentious, but Afrobeats-the derivative form of Fela-inspired Afrobeat- got its biggest validation with two Grammy wins from two of its most prominent stars Burna Boy and Wizkid.
The 63rd Annual Grammy Awards on Sunday, March 14, 2021, saw two Nigerian stars Burna Boy and Wizkid, take home the coveted trophy.
Burna took home the Grammy Award for 'Best Global Music Album' with his 2020 project Twice as Tall, while Wizkid's win came courtesy of his feature on Beyonce's 'Brown Skin Girl', which won the award for Best Video.
Big night
It was a big night for Nigerian contemporary music, which has come to be known as Afrobeats.
Since its recorded start in 1998, the genre has made a quantum leap from national dominance to nods from the most significant music institution.
"Whoever thought Afrobeats would take it this far?" Nigerian pop culture connoisseur Ayomide Tayo titled an episode of his newsletter Naija Times.
Burna Boy couldn't contain his joy after he won his award. A Grammy edition ago, he got sick after losing the category to Beninese veteran singer Angélique Kidjo, but this time it was a delight.
"Africa is in the house, this is a big win for my generations of Africans all over the world and this should be a lesson to every every African right there, no matter who you are, no matter what you plan to do you can achieve it, no matter where you are from, because you are a king . Look at me now, Grammy award winning Burna Boy," he said in his acceptance speech.
ALSO READ: Meet Nigeria's first Grammy winner Sikiru Adepoju
His Sunday night win is also a massive endorsement of his talent; although evident from his emergence, he didn't get wild-spread approval he craved earlier in his career.
It led to how he approached the music industry and his artistry—gusty and sometimes plain arrogance.
But it started paying off at some point. Burna garnered more commercial appeal from his third album 'Outside' released in 2018 and grabbed a Grammy nomination with this fourth African Giant released in 2019.
Drawing lessons from Kidjo, who beat him to the Grammy in 2020, Burna curated his next album 'Twice as Tall' to Grammy's taste.
From the theme of the album to features and rollout, it was clear what Burna wanted. He got it.
It wasn't the same with Wizkid. The equable singer never had to prove himself that hard; he was popularly heralded from his first single, 'Holla at Your Boy," released in January 2010.
His status as one of Afrobeats elite personalities got him a feature on Beyonce's Lion King: The Gift album, which featured other Nigerian artists. The single he featured on, Brown Skin Girl, won for Best Video.
Global breakthrough
Burna Boy and Wizkid wins position them as the stars for Afrobeats' next quest, global dominance.
"By 2016, it became clear that winning a Grammy for Wizkid and Burna Boy was an inevitability, not an "if"- because their music had become global in its outlook," music culture expert and author Jide Taiwo told Pulse.
"Where the predecessors (think 2face, Dbanj, Modenine, eLDee) had taken Nigerian music to the world, Wizzy and Burna have brought the world to Nigerian music.
"The Grammy Awards cemented that this year. It puts our music in good stead in the eyes of the world. It's broken down doors that the forerunners wedged open before now, allowing their gift to shine a light on the plethora of (budding) stars here."
From nation-wide stars like the Plantashun Boiz, Tony Tetuila, Eedris Abdulkareem, etc., Afrobeats has churned out stars like P-Square, Yemi Alade, who conquered Africa.
D'banj's May 2011 release 'Oliver Twist' had massive success in the United Kingdom to further push the genre, while his alliance with Kanye West's Good Music was an attempt for American acceptance.
The resonance of black culture has since made it easier for Wizkid, Burna Boy, and Davido, but it's perhaps time for a total takeover.