Delivery For General Obasanjo

What’s the most rebellious thing your favourite musician has ever done? got his lad out on stage? done huge amounts of drugs and made an ass of themselves? dressed funny? posed naked? crashed their car? something sexual? hit someone? spat? forget it pee-wee.

Fela Kuti.

In September 1977 Nigerian troops, up to 1000 of them reputedly, raided his Lagos compound, ground zero for all manner of political, sexual and musical ferment.  The soldiers beat all the men severely, raped the women and threw Fela’s 76 year-old mother* through an upstairs window, causing injuries she eventually died from after an 8 week coma.  The compound, along with master tapes, his band’s instruments and the free healthcare clinic it provided was burned to the ground.

Fela Kuti Africa 70 Coffin Head of State 01

The attack was caused mainly by Fela’s goading of the military junta and his calling out of intimidation of citizens and rampant corruption on his Zombie album.  The official enquiry heard from 183 witnesses and passed the verdict that the compound had been burned and attacked by ‘an unknown soldier’.

On the anniversary of his mother’s death Fela and 75 followers boarded two buses and drove to Dodan barracks and delivered his mother’s coffin to the residence of General Olusegun Obasanjo to protest and to further embarrass the regime.  They were beaten and imprisoned again.  

Fela Kuti Africa 70 Coffin Head of State 02

Coffin For Head Of State, released in 1981 in a stark newspaper and leaflet collage cover that Crass would have been proud of, is the story of this.


Coffin For Head Of State was credited to Fela Kuti and Africa ’70 on original release, but annoyingly on my 2019 rerelease just to ‘Fela’ – in the logo used by the stage show, that’s branding I guess.

Fela Kuti Africa 70 Coffin Head of State 06

Unusually for a Kuti release this is a short record, split into a 10-minute instrumental and a 13-minute vocal side, both were wisely combined into a single track for the digital release.  Whether this reflects the difficulties in recording the track, logistical and political as well as emotional, or whether this was a deliberate ploy to make the message punchier on this occasion** I leave you, gentle reader, to decide.

Fela Kuti Africa 70 Coffin Head of State 05

The 10-minute instrumental track is a suitably smouldering warm up to the main act.  Over a simpler rhythm than usual^ we wend our way through some funky rhythmic electric piano playing from Fela through to a sax crescendo near the end.  At all times everything sounds controlled and clenched tight.  The brass builds towards the end of the first ten minutes, getting more and more wayward setting the scene for the second act.

The vinyl of Coffin For Head Of State splits off the vocal side, but personally I prefer the way that Fela’s beautifully soft vocals slink into place if it isn’t divided.  The backing singers are deployed to superb effect on the track, almost continually repeating a trio of words for emphasis – whether it be ‘amen‘, or personal favourite ‘waka‘, the strident rhythm they provide is electrifying.

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For my money this is Fela’s best ever vocal, he gently pulls apart and mocks Christian and Muslim moral hypocrisy, corruption and laments the way Nigeria was run, the way the establishment was carving up the nation just as it had before the military coup.  He is tone perfect and late on the simple line ‘dem kill my mama’ is as devastating as it has every right to be, before he goes on to describe his coffin protest.

Them steal all the money
 Them kill many students
 Them burn many houses
 Them burn my house too
 Them kill my mama

 So I carry the coffin
 I waka waka waka
 Movement of the People
 Them waka waka waka
 Young African Pioneers
 Them waka waka waka

 We go Obalende
 We go Dodan barracks
 We reach them gate o
 We put the coffin down
 Obasanjo dey there
 With him big fat stomach
 Yar'Adua dey there
 With him neck like ostrich
 We put the coffin down

This is a slow, measured protest, a revenge served cold and matter-of-factly.  This is protest music operating with the keenest of edges, total control and a sense of real destiny.  Remarkable.


I originally picked this up to review following Tony Allen’s demise, it was only after listening to it twice and not hearing him at all I realised that he wasn’t on the LP! That’s the kind of awesome professional, knowledgeable and highly-researched edge I bring to 1537.  Shucks.

999 Down.

*a remarkable woman who undoubtedly deserves more recognition than her son, she was a visionary educator and women’s rights activist.  Read more.

**Kuti’s discography is blessed with many tracks in excess of 20 mintes and not a one overstays their welcome for me.

^a product of Tony Allen quitting the band prior to this recording because of all the militancy and monetary issues?

13 thoughts on “Delivery For General Obasanjo

  1. You always point the way for some good listening for CB. Hanging with Fela had it’s benefits but it could get a little rough at the same time. The cut sounds great!

    George Jones riding his lawnmower to town for a drink was some kind of statement against the law. Or maybe he was just pissed.

    1. Pissed I think CB, it’s a great story though.

      Really pleased you like the Fela track – all of his stuff is just amazing, look for the stuff with the longest running times is my advice.

      1. Pissed as a rat.

        Oh yeah, I like those long grooves and jams and whatever you call what he does. Making music I guess. Certainly no pretender in the way he carried himself. I think I’ll dedicate a weeks listening to both Tony and Fela.

  2. Wow, my rock heroes are pretty lame and tame compared to this!! Great story that goes with this one and one I’ve never heard. Still probably won’t listen, but interesting enough story that makes me pause and think maybe I should.

  3. Better watch it Joe as your opening paragraph Motley Crue might try and swipe it and take credit as it sounds like The Dirt book.

  4. Great review. Makes all the stupid rock’n’roll posturing of the Rolling Stones etc seem just what it is. Not to mention Crass and their constant ranting about ‘state oppression’. Imagine if their commune got raided by the army! Geez, we’d never hear the last of it. ‘Mother… mother… ‘ er, she’s just been thrown out of the higher branches of a tree in Epping Forest. Fascists!
    I like this tune and would like to have it as a soundtrack in my latest creation… I’ll recommend it to the producer. Thanks for your womadtastic ear worms.

      1. Gotta film set in a Africa, I think the rebel poachers army that feature would have some Kuti soundtrack!

        Fingers crossed

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