This young talent
(whom we’ve not discovered fully yet), since winning the Born Stars
singing competition --and through a series of singles and collaborations
--is gradually gaining a place in our music dialogues --so much so,
that he’s got, perhaps, the most realistic chance of coming out tops in
the New Artist category of this year's VGMAs.
The way Nero X sings ɛh, it’s like he knows (very well too), the dynamics of the Ghanaian emotion, and so far, he’s done it better than any other rookie I have come across. But then again, he’s always been a disciple of one of this generation’s most effective emotional manipulators with voice -- Theophilus Tagoe, or Castro, as we commonly know him, so it’s not so surprising.
Exactly! See how your eyes flared once I mentioned
Castro? Now don’t get me wrong, I respect Castro immensely. In fact, I
find him both a brilliant and an efficient musician. There’s a longevity
to his career which will always be enviable. He always had a song out,
and if we did not like it, he just went and made a new one. But very
often, he’s appealed to our pity --singing about envy, jealousy, and
tribulation in a way that brings tears to one’s eyes. Before he went and
got missing On Ada waters, he was the go-to person for hooks on themes
thus.
Anyway, like I said, it is logical to assume that Nero X
is protegee of Castro The Destroyer, as their techniques are
parallel--there’s an emotion to their voice, almost like they’re crying.
Like
Castro, NKRUMAH
BOATENG (a.k.a Nero X), is not strictly, a gospel musician, because gospel is hardly a genre: all genre is fundamentally rhythm, and gospel is not a rhythm. Also, he sings about girls too. Nero leans toward the assertion that gospel is not a genre. These are his words as reported on seancity.com some time ago:
BOATENG (a.k.a Nero X), is not strictly, a gospel musician, because gospel is hardly a genre: all genre is fundamentally rhythm, and gospel is not a rhythm. Also, he sings about girls too. Nero leans toward the assertion that gospel is not a genre. These are his words as reported on seancity.com some time ago:
"I'm a
highlife musician, high-life is a rhythm. You can sing gospel and other
love songs with high-life . High-life is our mother rhythm, the Ghanaian
cultured rhythm”.
...but he might as well be --a gospel act,
that is -- because he invokes that spiritual response from us in the Ama
Boahemaa kind of way. He is now, what Castro has been to the industry
for decades; the blur between gospel and secular music. By the way, I
should mention that Castro is one musician who may have gotten the Ghana
Music Award scheme scratching it’s head occasionally over
categorization, because hiplife is rap, and Castro doesn’t exactly rap.
That’s another conversation, all in due time...
We fall in
love with a new artist easily, once their song is tolerable and comes in
high tempo. It is a different thing staying in love with an artist
though. Even “established” artists constantly have to fight for a
comfortable place in our hearts. (Ask Omar Sterling...Sarkodie even). We
know what we said when we first heard your sound: that it’s new and
refreshing and is the closest thing we’ve come to experiencing heaven.
But become even a bit lazy in giving us more of that good stuff we like,
and we will break your heart in a way worse than an orphan who has been
bullied out of his lunch money. I remember when Tinny was king, I
remember when K. K Fosu brought us Anadwo Yɛ Dɛ. There was a time when
we never spoke negatively about Ofori Amponsah. Once, in this town, we
actually looked forward to hearing the sound of JQ breaking bottles in a
song, and I never imagined that today….Anyway.
But that’s
where the Castro brand of emotionality comes in. Employed
Takoradi-cally, it will always do wonders for you. Relax, Castro has
superior talent and is a hard worker, I've admitted that already...but
so are JQ, and Tinny, and K.K, and Screw Face.
Let’s talk
about the song now --Nyimpa Nua-- after all, it’s what I propose our
conversation entails today. It’s just that it’s inevitable to talk about
Nero X without Castro coming up. Unfortunately, it's one of the few
place he can resurface, since, you know… I don’t mind, and I imagine
that you don't, because he’s a very important part in music
conversations in these parts.
Nyimpa Nua, which might
translate as “man’s brother” is sweet highlife, and is listened to with a
smile and hand gesticulations. In there, the narrator appeals to the
listener not to hold back in offering him help as nyimpa nua ni nyimpa
-- man’s brother is man.
It is rendered in in Fante, a
language which I find very beautiful, and the use of the first person
narrator makes it all the more personal.
It was produced, of
course, by Willis Beats (sometimes known as Skinny Willis), who also
has produced most of Nero’s songs thus far (including the explosive
Osey). It feels live, with a melodious chorus of trumpets which are both
warm and reassuring (specifically toward the end). The strings of the
guitar we hear tingle our sympathies, and every other instrument feels
thoughtful. The song is very emotional...emotional enough to be used as
soundtrack for any of the movies which come out of Kumawood, and more.
There’s
a lot to say on this topic, so the song comes in three verses. The
message though cliche, is still urgent, so there’s hardly an intro. We
are not alien to the theme of this song, but as with everything else, we
constantly require reminding.
Hence, in verse one, we are
reminded that helpers are usually rare, hence the need to help our
brothers in need. The future remains blur to us, and the earlier we
recognise that no condition is permanent, the better. The chorus
translates something thus:
when I’m down, help me, for man’s brother is man
when I’m in trouble, help me, for man’s brother is man
if someone is in trouble, help them, for man’s brother is man
“obiara
hia obi”, the second verse starts --everybody needs somebody.
Especially when we have been let down, we coil into solitude, but it’s
only a matter of time before we come back to the statement...and then
the cycle begins again.
obi wɔ wiase mma onya edziban na w’edi, kotoku mu nni bi
ebusua bɔni mpo ama obi dan obi, so you for help the needy
today wey be your own, morrow you no sabi
nobody knows tomorrow, so you better take precaution, oh my padi
These are inevitable truths which are self- explanatory, and it is in our own interest to live by them.
nsa tia nyinaa nyɛ pɛ da --
The
fingers are all not the same, the above line translates, and then it is
followed by advice to do good today, bearing in mind that life is not
rosy all the the time --for what we sow is what we shall reap. Oneness
is the key, so it is important to not give ear to dissenting views, Nero
admonishes in Fante.
The piano interlude which follows the
second verse is shrill, like a child pleading for mercy, or moments
before a humble animal’s death. Nero’s voice itself is passionately
pitched, and for most of the song, it’s extremely moving, but he can
also afford to be playful at some parts, like when he harmonizes during
the interlude. At some points in the bridge, and sometimes when he
calls for the nyimpa nua response, he screams out of an exasperation.
It’s all unsettling, and it's all calculated to bring the sadness right
up to your eyes.
Sometimes too, the message accomplishes the
job if it comes in an example. Jesus did it with parables, and it
achieved wonders. So, in verse three, Nero X recounts a sad experience
about a well-to-do person he knew, who did not help others in their
time of need and lived to regret it when sickness befell him, and so we
should take a cue from it. These are the final words of that verse:
“ahokyir nyɛ dɛ’o wati…”
The
state of want is not a pleasant place to be. Our lives are made
comfortable by the generosity of others, and logically, we should do
same. What if God gave all of us equal measures of everything? There
would be no one to help, there would be no lessons for life to teach us
--and in a life where there are no lessons, are we really living?
Sounding
“gospel”, is Nero’s forte. Nearly every song he has made with that feel
has gotten attention. Maybe it’s what he’s realised gets us. Maybe he’s
realised that singing about adversity and God’s role in getting us out
of it, sells. Maybe he’s been playing us all along.
But
emotional trick or not, Nyimpa Nua is such necessary music. It seems
like common sense to me --the art of lending a helping hand --it sounds
like something which just has to be done. But today, we are more likely
to pull out our smartphones for Facebook pictures when we come upon
someone else’s misfortune than go in and help them.
We’ve
heard stories about how beggars might not be humans after all, and not
in a good way. We’ve also heard (and witnessed) how begging has become a
chore to many unscrupulous con artists in our Trotros today. Have you
met the gentleman from University of Ghana who has lost his wallet? What
about the man who requires assistance to buy drugs for a relative who
has been admitted at Korle- Bu? If you haven’t and your runs involve you
boarding public transport at Nkrumah Circle, it will happen
eventually. Thankfully, you’ve been given a heads up.
Yet,
must these deter us from lending a hand? There's a way we feel when we
engage in acts of charity; a peculiar sense of fulfilment, which might
end up being injured once we find out that we’ve been hoodwinked, and
when you've been tricked while you’re in the middle of doing good, it’s
someway.
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