Gwen Madiba
Welcome to uOttaKnow, [pause] a forward thinking, expert-driven podcast produced by the University of Ottawa.
Hello, I鈥檓 Gwen Madiba, host of uOttaKnow and a proud two-time graduate of the Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Ottawa. I am also the president of the Equal Chance Foundation.
uOttaKnow puts you in touch with 91精品黑料吃瓜 researchers and alumni at the cutting edge of their fields for thought-provoking discussions on today鈥檚 trending topics.
Season II of uOttaKnow continues with a focus on wellness and personal growth. As we mark February as Black History Month, today鈥檚 episode will explore the power of music for social change as well as healing with Afrobop musician Idris Lawal.
A bit about Idris. He鈥檚 a 91精品黑料吃瓜 alumnus with a BCom in marketing and entrepreneurship from the Telfer School of Management.
After graduating, he moved to Toronto, where he is now an account executive at the marketing agency Cosette as well as an Afrobop recording artist. He released his first EP, Young Black & Blue, to great acclaim in June of 2020. He was chosen as a finalist for RBCxMusic鈥檚 First Up concert series and his latest single, 鈥淲allflowers,鈥 was featured on CBC Fresh Air. With all of this on the go, he still makes time to support his alma mater as a member of 91精品黑料吃瓜鈥檚 Toronto Alumni Council.
Idris, thanks for joining us from Toronto today!
Idris Lawal
Thanks for having me. I鈥檓 happy to be here.
Gwen Madiba:
So, in your bio you refer to yourself as an Afrobop recording artist. To start, it would be great if you could talk about what Afrobop is.
Idris Lawal
Yeah, Afrobop is a self-coined term. It鈥檚 what I call my music. Obviously, bop is a term that the kids use these days. It could substitute for being cool. You know, 鈥淚 thought that bop,鈥 and I would say it鈥檚 a combination of Afro music or Afrobeat music. I grew up in Nigeria. And when I grew up during this time, for the most part, I listened to African music. I don鈥檛 think I actually listened to, like, non-African music until I was like maybe 10 years old. So people like Fela Kuti, King Sunny Ade, they influenced my early African influence.
As I actually started writing music, I moved out from Nigeria, and I ended up moving to Qatar, in the Middle East, which is a weird place to discover hip hop in the Middle East. But that is where I discovered hip hop. And that鈥檚 where I started writing. And I also think back then it was being a black kid in the Middle Eastern environment, I was trying to kind of find myself and my identity. And a lot of what I saw on TV then in regards to being black was, honestly, hip hop culture, which was from America, which was, you know, early 2000s, the time of the G-Unit and Joe Budden, and so I started writing as well. And really, that hip hop background really came from that time.
And then, you know, as I moved from Qatar and moving back to South Africa, kind of reconnected with my African roots and then moving to Canada, becoming an adult and, you know, purposefully reconnecting with my roots, I discovered more connections. For example, Fela Kuti Afrobeat was very much influenced by jazz and James Brown鈥檚 rock music. He made music a lot with James Brown, and they influenced each other. So, I started also looking into funk and jazz music. And I met Jelani Watson, who鈥檚 a saxophonist, and, you know, he鈥檚 a big jazz head. He became like my second voice, and really brought that jazz influence, which I just loved.
So, I guess, you know, Afrobop is that combination of, you know, Afro music, hip hop lyrics and that jazz and soul vibe to it and is a very much a product of me kind of moving around growing up and taking in all these cultures and meshing it into what is my own. So, honestly, as much as Afrobop is a genre it really is also like kind of, like, for me personally, like a lifestyle and my individual culture, I guess.
Gwen Madiba
So, music is consciousness, you said, and you released your debut album, Young Black & Blue, last June during a global pandemic and a month after George Floyd鈥檚 death, which saw tens of thousands of people protesting around the world.
Idris Lawal
Yeah, I mean, it鈥檚 crazy because the music and I鈥檒l say what I like, what I know about it and what everyone said about it, which is, like, it鈥檚 timely. But I mean, honestly, I started working on the project in, I would say, 2017, when I actually moved from Ottawa to Toronto, and really started, like, living life, got out of the school bubble, and really got to, like, as an adult, see what the world is, like, you know, really, as a black man. So work on the project was done in, like, December 2019. And, you know, in the early months of 2020, was really just, like, working on, like, things like the artwork, shooting the video. So, I mean, what happened with George Floyd is very, very sad, obviously, but also like, it鈥檚 been happening, and that鈥檚 what affected the project all the way from, you know, 2017 to 2020. So, I mean, it鈥檚 timely, but also, it鈥檚 bittersweet, because it shouldn鈥檛 be always timely, you know that. Yeah.
Gwen Madiba
Absolutely. And this album, it is very personal, about your own experience as a black man. Can you tell us what it was like to put your art out into the world at that moment in time?
Idris Lawal
It was overwhelming. I gotta be honest 鈥 it was very, very overwhelming. But everything that was going on, obviously, it鈥檚 like a lived experience. It鈥檚 something I鈥檝e lived through, something, Gwen, I鈥檓 sure you鈥檝e lived through your entire life.
So, and then it became very prevalent in social media, which was amazing to see, because I think that was the first time it had really been that prevalent on social media. It was the first time you actually had other races kind of admitting and checking their own privileges, and also forming the support groups to kind of speak on our behalf as well. So, it was overwhelming, in that sense, because like, I鈥檝e lived it, but also as I scrolled through my social media, you were seeing it every day.
And then once I got off social media to like, let me work on my music, I was working on the same thing. So it was a little bit overwhelming, but it was also kind of healing, which, you know, like it was the whole process of it, you know, after, like, soaking it in all through all day on social media, I might even work on diversity initiatives, going home and then being able to kind of release all that through music, and express that through music was definitely healing and it was kind of like, like, just that, like, yeah, just that breathing moment. Yeah.
Gwen Madiba
Yeah, healing through music is really powerful. Before we go any further, though, I want our listeners to hear this incredible music. We are going to sample the last track on your debut EP, titled 鈥淗ealing.鈥
(Sample of 鈥淗ealing鈥: I dream of sunshine, I dream of sunsets When I ain鈥檛 know how to feel. I look up and I heal. I dream of cool waves. I let my blues take, when I ain鈥檛 know how to feel I did deep and I heal. Ooooh鈥)
Gwen Madiba
Beautiful. Idris, tell us what this song means to you. I鈥檓 guessing it is not accidental that you leave your listeners with it at the end of your album.
Idris Lawal
Yeah, um, yeah. It鈥檚 the song itself. Was it the first time I kind of maybe touched on mental health a little bit on a song? And it was honestly the last song I actually made for the album. And that鈥檚 why it made sense to leave it there. But also it was after I鈥檇 done the album, which kind of felt like a narrative of the Black experience through my like, my personal experiences, and also what I鈥檝e seen other people kind of experience and kind of, like, what, what can you do after you鈥檝e narrated everything that has happened?
It鈥檚 almost like what鈥檚 the 鈥渟o what,鈥 and for me, the 鈥渟o what鈥 was like, we need to heal, like I need to heal, I need to. Like, I鈥檝e seen, I鈥檝e accepted that all of this has happened. I鈥檓 aware about it. But I also need to be able to heal. And that is what my music was. So I was able to work so I worked on that song. And that was what it was, for me. It was just a healing after everything to heal. And when I created it after creating all those songs, it was a healing process.
And even to this day, when I listen to that the album and I listen to everything and I鈥檓 like, it gets deep, it gets deep and at the end that healing that song is really just like I said, it鈥檚 just like a breather. It鈥檚 why also at the end we have, like, the saxophone solo, that just goes, because it鈥檚 really just we purposefully ended that with a saxophone solo, because it鈥檚 a very wordy album and a conscious album. So the saxophone solo really just lets you kind of just sit back and just let, like, everything that you鈥檝e kind of heard through the entire album. And even on that song, it鈥檒l just kind of like marinate in your head. And just, it鈥檚 that time you kind of bask in it. So yeah, that song for me is, it was just healing, it was just like, like, yeah, you did it, you know, you lived it, the way you鈥檝e experienced it, and you came out of it on top.
And yeah, you鈥檙e healing. And even, I鈥檇 say, outside of the black experience. At that point, obviously, we鈥檙e still going through it right now, this unfortunate pandemic. So there was also that it was not also like, the whole world also needed to heal. So I think what we鈥檙e going through also seeped into that song as well. You know, it was a mental, mental healing for me, but also actual physical healing for kind of the world that we need.
And also, I just want to, if I can, just give some shout outs to a few people who really helped me bring the project to life. First of all, I already mentioned Jelani, who, you know, was really like a second voice for me throughout the EP with the saxophone. And that was an amazing experience. Sydnee, who, I guess for me, when you鈥檙e creating music that is kind of, quote unquote, documenting or expressing the black experience, you can鈥檛 document the black experience without the voice of a strong black woman. So it was very, very important for me to have a black female presence on the song and Sydney was that and you know, she sang backup vocals on all the songs on the album. So a big shout out to her as well. Kyu, who helped me mix all the songs in the project, as well. That was amazing as well. And so thanks to Kyu. Thanks to Antoine, who produced some of the songs on there. Thanks, Dean, who played the bass. Thanks L茫, who played the guitar.
Gwen Madiba
Thanks for sharing that, Idris. Well, we have a spotlight question for you today from a fellow alumnus who graduated from the Faculty of Social Sciences, Liautaud H Philogene. Liautaud, who works under the artist name King H, is a Haitian Canadian who has been active on the cultural scene since 2012 as a musician and spokesperson for the Haitian community. His debut album, Mon Heure, will be released this year. And he鈥檚 currently working on his marketing strategies to promote the album within the Francophone community across Canada.
Liautaud H Philogene
Hi Idris, it was a pleasure to listen to your music. And after listening to your album, I have a question for you. As a Black artist, do you feel like there are enough resources to teach our communities about the Canadian music industry? Thank you very much for having me.
Idris Lawal
Thanks. Yeah, also, by the way, I gotta say, I really love your album title, Mon Heure. I don鈥檛 know if I鈥檓 pronouncing it right but I love the name. But anyway, back to your question. Yeah, I think, like, I think there are resources for artists in general for sure to learn how Canadian music works. Um, I think where it kind of differentiates is a lot of these, like, resources and a lot of these books do it for albums that you know already exist, like, you know, like your pop or like your country. I mean, even hip hop, there鈥檚 ways, but like, like you were saying, you know, like your album, your music is influenced by Haitian culture, and kind of just like me, my music was influenced by my African culture.
So I think when I was trying to really market that鈥檚 when I found that oh, there鈥檚 not enough resources for people who make those unique kinds of music even down to, like, what do you call the genre? What do you call it, you know? Afrobop is something I invented, which is what I call my music. But when I upload it to streaming and stuff like that, or when I鈥檓 marketing it, for the most part, I do have to say it鈥檚 a world-sounding album. So even down to those unique things, like being able to just uniquely identify your album would be nice, as well as the ability to uniquely identify our albums.
But some resources that I鈥檝e been using personally, you know, websites like Baxter, the [Canada Council for the Arts], the Ontario Arts Council, they do have a lot of resources, down to information or even funding opportunities and grants. A lot, I would say also, is maybe a by-product of what happened last year with the whole Black Lives Matter movement, but a lot more organizations are also aware now.
And they鈥檙e being a lot more attentive and purposeful in the opportunities they鈥檙e offering us, Black people and POCs. There鈥檚 a lot more opportunities, you know, programs like CBC, they now have Errol Nazareth, who鈥檚 a CBC radio host who just started launching his own program called Frequencies, which is dedicated to sounds from unique cultures that you might not hear. But that鈥檚 one great way. I definitely recommend sending your project to him, because he would definitely love to hear it, check it out and amplify that.
And yeah, I mean, the way I really, the way I marketed myself, honestly, was I reached out to outside of Canada. For a while I reached out to back home in Nigeria, I reached out to where Nigerian, Afro music is really popular, which is in the U.S. and in the U.K. And I marketed myself there, and I networked there and then eventually brought it back home.
But yeah, there鈥檚 that we live in a virtual world and COVID made it a lot more virtual. So it's definitely gotten a lot easier for us to kind of manoeuvre and find those resources. But yeah, the resources available. I think they鈥檝e got to get better at uniquely identifying our unique sounds and our unique talents versus grouping us into certain categories, like maybe world or urban because the resources that might work for us, or the strategies that might work for hip hop parties would not necessarily work for me or probably for you as well. And yeah, yeah, I love the album name and I can鈥檛 wait to check out the music.
Gwen Madiba
Idris, talking about looking to the future, what is motivating you right now in your music looking ahead?
Idris Lawal
So, like, I guess going back to this whole pandemic thing, we鈥檝e all been spending a lot of time at home 鈥 so have I 鈥 and I鈥檝e just really gotten into a groove of production and producing music and I kept producing brighter sounds as I look personally look towards brighter times for all of us in the world. So I鈥檓 really excited about that and just released some new music that you know, hopefully, just continues to help the world heal.
Last year, I think we saw a lot of like bridging of technology music from AR to VR experiences to video games. We saw like Travis Scott and Fortnite for example. I鈥檓 so like, I鈥檝e, personally, I鈥檝e always been like a techie. I鈥檓 a big nerd. I love comic books. I play video games a lot. So I鈥檓 personally also looking for how I can bridge my music more with, like, the things I love in regards to technology, digital experiences, music, musical experiences. I鈥檓 so looking forward to that as well. Hopefully, things open up with the vaccine and everything.
The funny thing is, when I released the album in the midst of the pandemic, I didn鈥檛 get to tour, I was hoping to like release it and then go out and perform the shows and things like that. But honestly, looking back, if I had gone ahead and just done that, my band, we hadn鈥檛 had enough time to, like, practise together and get really tight as a band. So maybe they wouldn鈥檛 have been the best shows.
But, I mean, throughout this whole pandemic I鈥檓 humbled and blessed to have had these opportunities to do these virtual shows and virtual performances to a point where we as a band, where now I would say we鈥檙e in, like, our groove is tight. When we perform it, we just go and we perform it. And it鈥檚 like it sounds very good. Like we鈥檝e been doing it for a year, which we have. So I鈥檓 excited to, hopefully, do some live performances with them, and give these and just really showcase from a live perspective, all the music that we鈥檝e been working on. So I鈥檓 excited for the world to heal. And for me to continue to create and for me to, like, create music that also continues to help the world heal. Yeah.
Gwen Madiba
I really hope once this is all passed, we can have you come back on campus for a show! I know I really would look forward to getting to see you play live.
Idris Lawal
Yeah, I would love that. It鈥檇 be great, great experience to come back, especially to 91精品黑料吃瓜 and perform, or even just speak, I would love that for sure. And I look forward to that as well.
Gwen Madiba
Idris, could you let our listeners know where they can find you online?
Idris Lawal
For sure. I鈥檓 everywhere online. I am at Idrisxlawal. So that鈥檚 IDRIS x LAWAL. My website is also idrisxlawal.com. So from there, you can access all my Instagram and Twitter and also Spotify and Apple links, where my music, obviously the album, resides as well. And yeah, I鈥檇 say my website is the easiest hub.
Gwen Madiba
Thanks, so much for joining us today and sharing your music and your story! To end today鈥檚 episode, I want to leave our listeners with a sample of one more track from your album. Idris, what have you chosen for us?
Idris Lawal
So I have my song 鈥淲allflowers.鈥 It鈥檚, first of all, it鈥檚 a dedication. It鈥檚 a celebration of the little black boys and little black girls who fell victim to police brutality. And honestly, when I started writing the song, it started off as an inner reflection. Growing up, I had, I had protective parents and obviously for good reason 鈥 I鈥檓 a black man living in the world that we live in. So I spent a lot of time at home.
Moms say, you know, 鈥淪tay at home, just watch TV or something.鈥 Luckily, I didn鈥檛 watch a lot of TV. I instead spent a lot of time consuming music books or maybe creating my own music and I鈥檇 say that set me up to be the man that I am today.
But as I started working on the song, with everything that happened last year, I couldn鈥檛 help but reflect on those who were not able to grow into the people that they could have been, that they were destined to be. The wallflowers never got to bloom for your Breonna Taylors, your Ahmaud Arberys, your George Floyds, who was obviously an older man, but also his life was cut short as well. So that song is really about that 鈥 it鈥檚 about, I鈥檓 giving them their flowers. First of all, I鈥檓 memorializing them. So like I literally say their names on the song. So when people sing the song, yes, though, your names will hopefully forever ring on.
And, you know, like in a lot of cultures, in my culture, death is not the end. It鈥檚 a new beginning. And we actually celebrate when, like, our funerals are a lot more celebratory. So in my way, it鈥檚 also like celebrating their new beginnings as well. So yeah, that is what the song 鈥淲allflowers鈥 is. It was produced by my friend Antion, and it features Jelani, obviously, on the saxophone. It features Rocsi with some backup vocals. And as always, it was mixed by Kyu. Thanks to you guys for listening and bringing me in for this conversation. And thanks to everyone who鈥檚 listening. And yeah.
Gwen Madiba
Thank you very much again, Idris, for joining us today. And now, here鈥檚 鈥淲allflowers鈥 by Idris Lawal.
uOttaKnow is produced by the University of Ottawa鈥檚 Alumni Relations team. This episode was recorded at Pop Up Podcasting in Ottawa, Ontario. We pay respect to the Algonquin people, who are the traditional guardians of this land. We acknowledge their longstanding relationship with this territory, which remains unceded. For a transcript of this episode in English and French or to find out more about uOttaKnow please refer to the episode description.