Lagbaja
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Bisade Ologunde (born 1960), professionally known as Lagbaja (stylised Lágbájá), is a Nigerian Afrobeat musician, saxophonist, singer-songwriter and percussionist. He is known for performing behind a distinctive textile mask, which he has said symbolizes the "ordinary Nigerian" rather than an individual performer. His music blends Afrobeat with jazz, Yoruba traditional music and socially conscious themes.
Career
Lagbaja adopted his stage name in the early 1990s. In Yoruba, Lágbájá is a generic expression referring to an anonymous person or "everyman". He adopted the mask to emphasize that his music represents the collective experiences and struggles of ordinary Nigerians rather than personal fame.
His debut recordings established him as one of the leading voices of modern Afrobeat. Albums including C'est Un African Thing, We, Me, Africano... The Mother of Groove and Paradise combined socially conscious lyrics with Yoruba percussion, jazz improvisation and dance rhythms.
Lagbaja has collaborated with several Nigerian musicians, including singer Ego Ihenacho, whose vocals featured prominently during the group's most successful years.
Throughout his career, his songs have addressed corruption, poor governance, social justice, national unity and everyday life in Nigeria.
Musical style and legacy
Lagbaja's music blends Afrobeat with Yoruba traditional music, jazz, funk and highlife. His masked identity has become one of the most recognizable symbols in African popular music and has been widely interpreted as representing the anonymous Nigerian citizen.