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Seun Kuti Concert Tickets

Seun Kuti is the youngest son of the famous Nigerian afro-beat musician Fela Kuti. Seun started learning to play saxophone when he was eight, which is also when he started taking piano lessons. Seun Kuti has been performing on stage since he was nine years old. Check our available Seun Kuti concert ticket inventory and get your tickets here at ConcertBank now. Sign up for an email alert to be notified the moment we have tickets!


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Avg. Customer Rating:
5.0 (based on 9 reviews)

Like many artistic iconoclasts, Fela Kuti was an innovator and an emblem in equal measure, his social contributions ultimately as significant as his musical ones. Functioning as an influential counter-culture icon, he butted heads with a repressive Nigerian regime in a way that makes most creative rebellion seem like self-indulgent posturing, climaxing with the murder of his mother by government soldiers, who then ransacked and burned his personal commune...
- www.slantmagazine.com
Track List: 1. IMF 2. African Airways 3. Higher Consciousness 4. Ohun Aiye 5. Kalakuta Boy 6. African Smoke 7. Black Woman Photo by Johann Sauty, courtesy of the artist Further the conversation with your thoughts and comments. Agree, disagree, present a different perspective -- engage. For information and guidelines click: Terms of Service | Privacy Policy
- www.kcrw.com
Buy it from Buy the CDDownload as MP3Seun Kuti & Egypt 80A Long Way To The BeginningBECAUSE2014 Fela Kuti's youngest son has handled his father's esteemed Afrobeat legacy with aplomb, fronting his old band and over two albums adding modernist touches to a fundamentally unchanged format...
- www.theguardian.com
Seun Kuti is one of the lucky ones ? when he sings about "The Good Leaf," he doesn't get the munchies and crash out, it merely makes him funk harder. Kuti the younger's second album is similar to his first, but forged by a long road of touring, which has honed these songs to perfection, and sonically fleshed out to a grand degree by producer Brian Eno...
- exclaim.ca
The Kuti family continues to keep the spirit of Nigerian afrobeat very much alive on an international scale, with Seun, the youngest son of the legendary Fela Kuti, now fronting his late father's backing band. Those familiar with Fela's music will have a fair idea what to expect from Seun, and it is certainly arguable that he makes fewer attempts to deviate from the successful and energising afrobeat template than his brother Femi Kuti...
- www.musicomh.com
Youngest son of Afrobeat firebrand Fela, Seun Kuti has succeeded where most celebrity offspring fail, succesfully updating his father's musical legacy. It helps he inherited a brilliant band, Egypt 80, but Seun has added his own generational voice. On his second album, Afrobeat's loping rhythms are tautened for the digital age, while staccato guitars and intricate horns are laced with electronica (courtesy Brian Eno among others)...
- www.guardian.co.uk
Seun Kuti is very much his own man ? no matter how much he is compared to his father Fela. Even though he has the same middle name, Anikulapo (he who carries death in his pouch), as a nod to his father, is fronting his father's old band 'Egypt 80' and writes music of power and anger over the state of his continent, he still has his own musical identity and voice. And it is a huge and forthright voice, filled with positive anger and pride...
- www.music-news.com
I've been listening to the long-awaited debut recording of Fela Kuti's youngest son for a few months now, and the experience keeps getting better. Sure, Seun (25) shares his father's lanky physique, gruff vocal authority, and jaundiced attitude towards politicians. More importantly, he actually fronts Fela's old band, Egypt 80...
- www.afropop.org
Poor Ziggy Marley, poor Femi Kuti. The two chosen sons of the world music industry spent their youth dutifully catering to the expectations bequeathed to them by their fathers, superstars from the 1970s named Bob and Fela, respectively. (Maybe you've heard of them.) But then along comes meddlesome younger siblings (Damien and Seun, respectively) with knacks for making the old postcolonial protest song feel new and important again. "Me, step into my fathers shoes? Why...
- www.offbeat.com
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