Photo of Shamarr Allen

Afropop Worldwide’s African Coronavirus Playlist: The Crown

We’re excited to share our creative partnership with the legendary platform, Afropop Worldwide, to cross-pollinate our musical circles with an even more vibrant collection of sounds, rhythms, and cultures. Our pandemic-fueled connection has resulted in this badass playlist and beautiful words by Morgan Greenstreet:

In mid-April 2020, my mind was still reeling from the new realities of a global pandemic: ambulances passed my apartment in Queens every five minutes, day and night; friends and family were sick and fighting for their lives; everything that earned my income cancelled and economic depression was certain. One night I opened YouTube and the first video I saw, from Igbo traditional ogene group Ejyk Nwa Mba, was a spirited appeal to God to explain this pandemic. I felt, in that moment, how this experience, different in every location, was nevertheless affecting us all. I was excited by this musical response and began digging through the regional abundance of YouTube for more responses to the pandemic from African and Afro-diasporic musicians. This playlist is playfully entitled “The Crown,” in reference to the corona of the virus and the undeniable genius of the artistic response.

[Open this video on YouTube and you’ll see the curated queue of tracks already waiting for you]

There are plenty of humorous takes, which—depending on your mood—might be comedic relief or overly lighthearted, given the horrendous global impact of this pandemic. In early March it was hard to imagine where we’re at now: upwards of 26 million cases and close to 900 thousand deaths at the time of this writing.

The first musical responses I saw were the DJ/VJ remixes of Cardi B’s Instagram response: the now classic trap version (I even heard this bumping on car stereos in March) and the Afrobeats response. I still love the energy of Dominican dembo artist Yofrangel’s video hit which depicts him rapping from an ambulance while nurses attempt to treat him for the virus. In the followup “La Cuarentena,” the artist is stuck at home, eating whatever he can get his hands on and trying to stay sane. In a similar vein: Kenya’s Padi Wubonn, “Corona Greetings” on socially distant greetings; the live-stream voyeur’s anthem “Vibrate” from Konshens & Afro B; Dee 1’s “Corona Clap,” Tyga x Curtis Roach’s “Bored In The House”, and these two silly takes from Kenya’s Dogo Charlie ft. Munaisa.

These two dark soca bangers put me in the mood to wine by myself: St. Vincent’s Dynamite advises the virus to skip the island, “we got bush fi dat,” and St. Lucia’s JayDa paints a spooky picture in “Lockdown”. There are many dance tunes from across the continent that use the pliant, three syllable word “Corona” as the hook. Standouts include the South African Ama-piano anthem from Mapara a Jazz; a dance banger from Mali’s Calibre 27 ; this hard kuduro jam from Angola’s Sharon; and South Sudan’s Check B.

As is to be expected, there are also many saccharine songs, often from prominent artists, but these tunes did not make the cut of this playlist. However, there are some songs that have truly uplifting energy, tunes that could be enduring classics beyond a throwaway jingle to remind people to wash their hands and get the artists some quick NGO money. An early favorite comes from New Orlean’s Shamaar Allen, “Quarantine and Chill,” which celebrates the beauty of the people and culture of New Orleans, who survive adversity through music and community and Jamaica’s Koffee shared a touching anthem, “Lockdown” that twists the meaning of the word, and what else it can describe.

Many of the songs are made by younger artists in newer international pop styles, including a number of trap tunes (here’s a favorite from Malawi’s Born Chriss), but traditional pop styles also make a strong showing: Danny P’s guitar-band gospel from Kenya; from DR Congo, Paradis Des Stars with a slamming générique about the virus; an upbeat jam from Nana S Bibata from Burkina; Ghanaian singer Grace Osei’s highlife lament; Dj Mfundhisi’s upbeat Tsonga tune; and this multi-artist anthem from Ethiopia.

Of course, there are many that didn’t make this playlist, because I haven’t heard them yet! Tweet at me with your recommendations! But also, many artists have moved on, trying to figure out how to stay relevant and make an income without live performances. These topical songs might just be a moment in time, but there are a couple gems that might last beyond this year and hopefully bring us some joy in our recollections.

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