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Singer  turned Punch Columnist Etcetera writes on why Fuji music is dangerous. Read  below...
What would I become if I wasn’t aware of myself anymore? Unlike many adults, I have no stomach for music that makes me want to vandalize my home and for some crazy reasons; I have discovered that some fuji songs that are popular right now make you want to assess your mental state. The simple truth is one can’t remember any of such songs getting posted daily on blogs. I can only recognise a handful of artistes mentioned by some die-hard and unrepentant fanatics in my hood.
There was a period in time when it was  actually important to know who was who, and who was better than the  other lyrically or vocally. Then, having fuji songs on your  playlist was like having a cool smile on your face. The stranger your fuji  references, the more you would have boys believe in your supernatural  powers.  And you even believe that the gods must be happy with you.
What is really going on? Fuji music is  now  all about autotune, carrot jeans and mohawk? Doesn’t this combo  spell any  danger? Maybe not yet. Now I see a bunch of fuji artistes who  are of the  opinion that carrot jeans, mohawk and autotune are the  essentials of modern  fuji music.
Just like hiphop, fuji was a religion.  Fuji  was original. It was a culture. Fuji made it possible that for a  time in our  history, parents and their kids were actually enjoying the  same music at the  same time. Now the temple of fuji has been desecrated  with today’s fuji  artistes lifting choruses from popular hiphop songs.
I miss the good old days when touts  would  converge around the motor parks and people would blame it on fuji  music.  Whatever happened to the utter disgust that your neighbors would  have for the  fuji songs blasting through your bedroom door? That was In  the days when fuji  music was a movement and a rallying point for boys in the hood. Isn’t that the  way it is supposed to be?
Why would I wander into a club of  today’s  music when I know I might bump into that same tasteless whining  banshee called  autotune? And I might actually be forced to listen and  dance azonto. I might as  well listen to a whining South African Kwaito  music and see the blood rolling  down my chin. Good God, now that is a  genre that I am glad to put behind  me.
Just because I don’t have the ear for  today’s  fuji music doesn’t mean that I don’t love Pasuma. I have every  album he has  ever made, every new release and every new single.
With fuji music, sometimes the general  intro  sounds really good and make you feel alive. And at that point when you start  nodding your head to just what music should feel like, and  thinking you have  discovered a sound from another planet or maybe from  an alien music colony, the  vocalist decides to introduce himself with a  terrifying and dangerous shriek  that leaves you looking for pain  killers.
I am glad to finally get away from  today’s  fuji. The music scares the hell out of me, but in a very  intriguing way.  Naturally as music, some folks consider fuji as noise in the actual sense. What  is even more dangerous is the fact that the  singers are never on key. But yet  again, don’t people also say that  highlife is scary and dangerous too?
Please Lord; don’t let me listen to  another  song from a Naija blog ever again. It is fast emerging as the  perfect way to  listen to music and forget it immediately. Wait a minute, he sounds a lot like  er..er..er, that’s what you always get. So why  don’t I just punch up the  original?
I am in dying need of some highlife in  my  veins right now. The good thing is that most times I travel to Ibadan on visits,  I often stay at Premier Hotel where some of our old  musicians go to for  relaxation. And I love it. On a given weekend, I’ll  run into an old favorite  like Kwam 1 at the bar or bump into Adewale  Ayuba during breakfast. They say  the last stage of grief is acceptance.  And I have accepted my grief. I have  been a man in love with music, and  the music that I love is mostly gone, long  since tamed by today’s sound.
But all the same, let me put on my  shoes,  pour myself a glass of soft drink and relax with Osondi Owendi by Chief Osita  Osadebe or the (puke in your face) remix by late Mc Loph,  and be happy knowing  that music is music, just as sex is sex, and these  two things will always find  a way to go together like a nice cold soft  drink and an evening at Elegushi  Beach.
So please keep your carrot jeans,  unusual  eyeglasses and that Mohawk while I am loving it here chilling  with my Oriental  Brothers.
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