The Journal
Notes from the Afrobeats era and the systems behind the culture.
An archive of reflections, interviews, and field notes from the work of building culture at scale. Less hype, more infrastructure. Less headlines, more legacy.
In 2012, a tense first meeting with Olamide led to a defining moment for Afrobeats in the UK. What began in a hall in Barking became a stress test for culture, infrastructure, and visibility. This is the story of how friction, scrutiny, and deliberate scale helped move street-rooted Afrobeats from community halls to institutional stages.
In April 2026, I’ll be running the London Marathon to raise £100,000 for The Africa Centre. This isn’t about a fitness milestone. It’s about protecting an institution that has supported the African and Caribbean diaspora in the UK for more than six decades.
In 2013, I promoted Davido’s first major UK show at London’s INDIGO2 — my first solo concert without partners. Afrobeats was still emerging in the UK, and touring outside London was a risk. The show sold out. The tour travelled. Demand was not just discovered, it was created.
In 2024, backstage at The O2 Arena after Davido’s sold-out show, he reminded the room that SMADE did his first UK concert “when the year nobody wanted to.” That moment showed how far Afrobeats has come — and how belief compounds over time.
At MIPAD’s New Year’s Lunch at The Africa Centre, I was reminded that influence is not defined by visibility, but by responsibility. The conversations reinforced a lesson I’ve learnt building SMADE across the diaspora: effective leadership is about managing difference with clarity, patience, and purpose.
In 2012, Afrobeats in the UK lived in community spaces. Student halls, clubs, house parties, barbershops and butchers. Flyers taped to shop windows. BBM broadcasts and chain messages lighting up phones. Conversations carried from hand to hand.
The culture moved on belief before validation. It moved through people.
What many see today are stadiums and global milestones. What often goes unseen is the apprenticeship. The years where nothing was promised and everything was earned through patience, humility, and repetition.
That was 2012.
What the AJ accident reveals about Detty December: On loss and the systems we rely on
This reflection is shared in care, from the perspective of cultural operators with a responsibility to think beyond moments and toward systems.