C.A.M.P. Artists

Friday, March 26, 2010

CAMP VOICE TRAINING CLASSES.

Hi Guys,
From several Request from friends and family to have a voice 
training class,Camp has decided finally start its own voice training class and here are the details
below:
Application for the voice training school starts
MONDAY 29TH OF MARCH and it CLOSES on WEDNESDAY 7TH OF APRIL 2010. 

Application forms are on sale for N1000 @ the CAMP office: 26 Salaudeen Akano Street, Ogudu G.R.A, Lagos.  
Classes will commence on the 19th of April 2010. Duration is 3 months.  

Time: 11:00am - 1:00pm 0R 6:00pm - 8:00pm On SATURDAYS 12:00pm - 8:00pm.  

NOTE: There will be a screening process and only 20 students will be admitted. The BEST TWO (2) students will have the opportunity of recording a single with 
Cobhams.  
FOR INFORMATION: Call or contact: 
wonu@camp.com.ng, dami@camp.com.ng, 01-7397003, 07029116210 (BETWEEN THE HOURS OF 9:00AM - 5:00PM)

Sunday, February 28, 2010

Maga No Need Pay

Recently, myself and some of Nigeria's finest (Banky W, Wordsmith, Omawunmi, Bez, Modele, RooftopMc's and MI) did a song together called MAGA NO NEED PAY, through MISSPIN ambassador Ohimai Godwin Amaize. Being part of the project makes me feel fulfilled although there is still a lot to do to help Nigeria move forward. I am extremely grateful to have been apart of this project, as I have been getting lots of messages on all the social networking sites. Some of the messages have been wonderful while the others made me realise the extent to which cyber crime in Nigeria has gone deep. We all understand that a lot of things have gone bad in this country, A lot of people are suffering, one thing I know for sure is there is no excuse for crime however the case may be. We can all make things better by doing the right thing. 

One thing i realized is that most of the people committing this crime are intelligent people. People who can put their intelligence to better use and do well for themselves. For a person to be able to think for a second that he/she wants to go into "yahoo yahoo" it just shows that the person is educated to an extent. He/she were able to go to school at some point, you can read or write. Because if you think about it well there are some people who are in a worse case than you are.

Lets put our gifts, talents and intelligence to good use.


The song as well as its video was released this February. Below are the lyrics of the song:

Intro:
Echo: Eh!...Eh!...Eh!...Eh-Eh!...
Maga no need pay!
For me to buy correct motor,
For me to take make my dough,
Maga no need pay!
Eh! Eh!
Maga no need pay! 

Verse 1: Omawumi
Reminiscing as I walk to my car,
Thinking about how it used to be,
For Ekpoma, I dey ride okada and most times I dey soak garri,
I wanted to change the way I lived
But I didn’t have to do those things.
Now I’m rolling VIP
And all the girls wanna be like me, yeah...

Verse 2: Modele
You ask me how I deal with my reality,
Gotta tell you truly it ain’t easy, no!
I feel the pressure to find something wrong to do
Then I remember you reap what you sow!
Now I’m sitting staring at the screen of my computer,
I’m thinking really hard about what truly matters,
What with all these data, just to catch a maga,
It could have been my father, or someone else’s brother

Chorus: Banky W, Cobhams Asuquo & Omawumi
Maga no need pay!
For me to buy correct motor,
For me to take make my dough
Maga no need pay!
No need for me to go cafe
I hustle hard to make my pay
Maga no need pay
No need to do Yahoo-Yahoo (to do Yahoo-Yahoo)
Maga no need pay!
Eh! Eh!
Maga no need pay!
Eh! Eh!...Eh! Eh!

Verse 3: Banky W
Seven in the morning, it’s a brand new day
Eyes still swelling, still at the cafe
Hustling real hard from Sunday to Sunday
Hoping someday that maga will pay
But maga no need pay
For me to live correct
They call me Mr. Capable, I gat my self-respect
No need to do Yahoo-Yahoo for me to cash a cheque
I don’t need no maga, just work harder now

Verse 4: Bez
Tell me what a boy like me should do
Thought I heard the guys that rule do Yahoo-Yahoo
And if I do not do it I’m uncool
I’ll be a fool to the girls in school
But maga no need pay to get a good degree,
Or have a great opportunity
Don’t have to hack and attack,
Make use of CD cracks
We’re keepin’ it original, now you know my swag

Repeat Chorus

Verse 5: Rooftop MCs (Soulsnatcha & Sokleva)
Soulsnatcha:
Twale officer!
What’s the problem sir?
Or there’s a law against cruising in a Range sir?
Sokleva:
I don’t know what you think we are,
Cos we roll in fancy car?
We’re making the sweet money,
I call it the candy bar.
Soulsnatcha:
All those wey maga pay,
Where dem dey today?
I’m straight no deceit,
My money get receipt!
Sokleva:
I don’t mess with cybercrimes,
But I make the cypher rhyme.
I get paid for my time,
Don’t need to scam a dime!

Verse 6: Wordsmith
I’m your role model’s role model,
There’s no second guessing whom...
Wordsmith was made to make you change like a dressing room.
I’m living proof that there’s dignity in labour,
My bars is life imprisonment and this is hard labour.

Verse 7: MI
My father said I was a star before I ever spit a bar,
He said when you travel far,
Don’t forget who you are.
Represent Nigeria,
Represent for Africa.
Even when the things were hard,
I place my future in my God, (Yes, yeah)
See my nation’s reputation suffers much condemnation,
This’ our situation.
Are we cybercrime criminals? No!
We are the mineral resources of our fatherland,
We must rise and take the stand.
Every day heroes are born,
All stereotypes are torn.
Things we did to cause us harm,
We off that and now we on,
Hard work, positivity,
Truth, reliability
Expose your ability,
Change our reality,
That’s word! (Yeah, yeah, yeah)

Repeat Chorus 2ice

Outro with chorus in the background: MI
Cheer!
Nigeria!
Yeah, yeah...listen everybody,
Put your BLING up right now!
BLING in this case means we’re Brilliant, we’re Legitimate, we’re Inspired, we’re Nigerian and we’re Great!
It means that we do not have to do anything that we ought not to do to make money y’all!
We just gatto apply ourselves and work hard and be creative and innovative.
Be truly Nigerian.
We will get there, y’all!

Chorus till fade

Monday, November 30, 2009

COBHAMS + CAMP ON THE GREEN




On Dec. 10, Award winning producer Cobhams Asuquo, most famous for producing Asa's album, Rooftop Mcs ‘Lagimo’, Banky W ‘Strong Thing’, Dare Art-Alade's ‘Not The Girl’ and so many other artists, introduces four young stars from the CAMP (Cobhams Asuquo Music Productions) studio to a privileged Quirk audience. Bez, Omolara, Tarri and Joan will join Cobhams on the green at Coral Reef, Ikoyi for a great night of soulful music. They will be followed by the Renaissance Man playing a mix of soul, funk and old school tunes for you to groove to.

Doors open at 7 and performances start by 8 so come by after work, get a drink and find a good spot. Admission is N2,000, payable at the door. And please pass the invite to everyone you think would enjoy the music. Looking forward to seeing you all for an amazing night.



December 10, 09
Coral Reef
10A Ikoya Avenue,
Off Macpherson Street,
Off Bourdillon Road,
Ikoyi, Lagos

Doors open: 7PM
Admission: N2,000

More details on our websites:
http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=190936462186&ref=nf

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Cobhams Asuquo Authors, Composers, Artists: Music “Inspired by Life”


(Photo courtesy CAMP) 

Cobhams Emmanuel Asuquo 

September 2009


WIPO had the pleasure of hosting on July 13 a performance by Nigerian musician, songwriter and producer Cobhams Emmanuel Asuquo. Born blind in Lagos in 1981, Mr. Asuquo overcame both the challenges of being visually impaired and being from a developing country, to gain international recognition as a songwriter and music producer.

Although he trained to become a lawyer, Mr. Asuquo chose a career in music, his first love, instead. In 2005, Sony ATV London signed the then 24-year-old musician as a songwriter. He founded his own production company CAMP – Cobhams Asuquo Music Productions – in 2006. He is probably best known for the hit single “Fire on the Mountain,” which he wrote, and co-produced, for singerAsa’s debut album. He has worked with Asa since 2004.

Following his performance, Mr. Asuquo agreed to be interviewed for the WIPO Magazine. He spoke about copyright, piracy, his inspiration, being visually impaired and much more.
Learning to play

“I play classical music by hearing. I’ve learnt to listen and reproduce. In some cases it may not be 100 percent accurate but it gets the job done, especially because I pay attention to detail in music. My fingering is a bit tricky because I didn’t learn how to play formally. I may not have some of the techniques to run some of the notes with the required speed. I’ve devised my own technique and it pretty much works for me. I listen, I listen over time, I love and then I play.”
Finding inspiration

“I’m greatly inspired by someone I don’t see. It sounds nearly foolish but it’s the truth for me. I’m greatly inspired by God. I think about the things that I have read in the Bible and it just inspires me.

“I’m greatly inspired by certain environments, by a certain ambiance. For instance, the bathroom is probably one of my favorite places in the world because that’s where I get to be an astronaut, a physicist, an army general, a preacher, a musician.

“I’m inspired to write when I’m not very happy about the situation around me. I see myself in a lot of senses as a social commentator and there’s a lot that comes out of society that grieves me. When this happens, I’m inspired to write.

“I like long bus or train rides; they inspire me to write too. I like taking trips to foreign places, places I’ve never been before. I realize that once I’m cut out of my usual regular habitat, I get quite creative and I write. I get inspired by conversations – deep and wide, sensible conversations that get to the core of things, conversations that bring out the reason behind certain things. I’m inspired by life, by people’s testimonies, by my experience, by love. I’m quite a romantic; the experience is very inspiring and I take advantage of it to create.

“I’m also inspired sitting at my piano: I love to play. I love to play. I love to play. I find music just by tinkering on the keys. Music comes to me naturally sometimes.” 

“I’ve been influenced musically by tons of people: I grew up listening to all kinds of music. I listened to hip hop in detail, to jazz in detail, to the classics of the Sufi mystics, Hilda Garn, to a lot of traditional Nigerian music from highlife to juju, to fuji, to akbala – my musical influences are very, very, very, very wide.

“I’ve been greatly inspired and influenced by Stevie Wonder. Stevie Wonder is an icon. Stevie Wonder is phenomenal. However, I choose to see me as me. I have a clean sheet in front of me. I have a new course to chart, and that’s precisely what I’m doing with my life. There’s a lot to learn from the likes of Ray Charles and Stevie Wonder. But I’m not sure I want to be another Stevie Wonder or Ray Charles. I think I just want to be me, because I’ve got something to say. I’ve got something to offer. I want to share my thoughts about life, about social issues, about values. My opinions may not necessarily be the same as Stevie’s or Ray’s. I’m one out of 6 billion people in life with something to say, with a different course to chart and with a different print to leave on the sands of time.”
"There’s a healthy, vast amount of talent coming out of Nigeria... We can become a supplier as an industry of international material to the rest of the world."
Nigerian music on the international scene

“The main source of income from my production company comes from the work we do for advertising agencies and artists. We work with a lot of advertising agencies in Nigeria, and we work with artists in Nigeria and outside our shores. It’s lucrative, it’s sensible, it keeps us going.

“Quite a number of Nigerian musicians have been able to break into the international scene, and that’s very encouraging for me. We can tell that the industry is beginning to blossom. Ours is a music industry that is coming out of years and years of successive military rule, and things are beginning to happen. Having an international platform is definitely a good thing – it means that there is more to come. There’s a healthy, vast amount of talent coming out of Nigeria. The industry needs to build a structure that would help it turn out more, so that it interrelates sensibly with the international scene, so that its success is not seen as a fluke.

“I think that we can create a platform to just create international material. We can become a supplier as an industry of international material to the rest of the world. Part of what we do at CAMP is to create that atmosphere. My garage is a rehearsal studio and I like to hang out with people and make music. You’d be amazed at the things that come out of a little jam session in a garage playing music. These are potentials – materials that are capable of going out there and making a mark on the international scene. So if in our little garage we’re doing that, imagine what would happen if the industry builds a structure that supports that on a larger scale.”
Copyright: strengthen awareness

“We have to deal with a number of issues as regards copyright where I come from. One of them is awareness, then there’s piracy and structure in general. I think that awareness is very, very important. Not many musicians, artists or people creating works of art are aware of the importance of copyright. We have the [Nigerian] Copyright Commission, but not too many people are aware of the benefits of the Commission, what they’re there to do, what they’re available to do. People are not sensitized enough to take advantage of copyright. That in itself is a situation.

“Artists do not get to enjoy their rights to the full, because a lot of the materials that they create are pirated and the benefits don’t necessarily come to them. Royalty checks don’t come to them. The culture in some places is for artists to actually hand their works over to pirates because they’re the ones who have reasonable distribution outlets. I think the danger of doing that is something that should be brought to the fore so that they realize they should oppose these people. Working with pirates creates an unhealthy system.

“We don’t have a structure yet that fully supports protection of works in terms of copyright. The government needs to see the creative sector in industry as lucrative, as any other viable source of income for the country. They may then enact more effective copyright laws. I think that we also need to make decrees that protect copyrighted works and decrees that come down hard on pirates. Piracy needs to be taken more seriously.

“We should go back to the foundation, build a more sensible system that is based on a new distribution outlet altogether – a new, sensible, integrated network where people are aware of their responsibilities as artists to deal with the right kind of people.”
Challenges of the visually impaired

“Being blind is one of the best things that happened to me, because I’ve been challenged – I’ve been challenged to get up and go. I realize the importance of making things happen and the results of a lack of action. One challenge I’ve had to face being a blind person working in the music industry is, for want of a better way to describe it, the loneliness. I have to deal with a lot of the challenges all by myself.

“I have become a voice on behalf of other aspiring blind persons who want to come into the industry. Can you trust a 17 year-old doctor? Can you trust a blind driver? It can be that way with trusting a blind musician or producer who is not able to keep up with the changing times because he doesn’t have as much access as far as running interfaces and running sequences are concerned. That’s something I’ve managed to deal with to a point where I’m trusted for the work I do. But I’m hoping that this doesn’t just start and end with me. I’m hoping that same amount of trust is given quite as freely to any other visually-impaired person who gets into the industry to do what I do.

“The main challenge facing visually-impaired people in the field of music would be access. To take advantage of technological advancement, they need to know how to manipulate, how to run, whatever interface it is. Then, how to get materials that would help them improve their art, better their skills. These materials are available but not put out in Braille or in talking versions.

“I do more reading by hearing than I do in Braille because there is not enough Braille material out there. Braille equipment is generally expensive in Africa. You can get a Braille Note, equipment you can use to read, for what? About £4,000, which would be about 1 million Naira? It’s just too expensive. I’m fortunate to afford it, but the same does not go for every other blind person who lives and works in Nigeria.

“The Internet has sort of made things easy, but there’s a lot of stuff on the Internet that’s not properly licensed. That makes it all the more difficult…or easy for anyone who doesn’t have scruples. The Internet doesn’t favor people from the developing world in terms of using a credit card to buy software, books, an interface or a sequencer, so it is a problem. It’s a problem, and I think that in Africa and in other developing countries it’s even worse.

“For other visually-impaired people who want to take up music as a career, my advice would be to get up and go. Whatever it is you have been thinking of doing, there are 300,000 people thinking of doing the same thing and 10,000 people already making moves to do it. It’s more than just wanting to do it, it’s about taking the bold step of going out there and doing it.”
By Sylvie Castonguay, WIPO Magazine Editorial Team, Communications Division
Acknowledgements Jean-François Arrou-Vignod, WIPO Film and Multimedia Section, Geidy Lung, WIPO Copyright Law Division, and Samar Shamoon, WIPO Media Relations Section

culled from:http://www.wipo.int/wipo_magazine/en/2009/05/article_0003.html

Cobhams Asuquo


Cobhams Asuquo

Published: September 07,2009

The likes of Stevie Wonder and Ray Charles never let their eyesight or lack thereof become a handicap in achieving their dreams and Cobhmans joins this list, fast becoming a Nigerian musical legend—a one man music powerhouse.








The Man

He struts around the corridors of his house with keen precision, calculating each turn, corner and winding staircase without apprehension; after all, this is where the magic is made. His house is one part home, two parts business.

He is in the process of converting all the rooms into his mini recording studios. So far he has four recording studios. “They are studios with four different sections and each has its own work station so producers can work at the same time,” he explains. “It’s a happy, happy room where musicians can rehearse and collaborate.”

Cobhams is quite the charmer; he makes jokes, gentle quips and is never stingy with his smile. “I just really love to spend time with people. I like to build real and intimate relationships between myself and others.” As a spiritual creature and man of understanding, he says that his blessings come directly from God who has sustained and kept him this far and that if he weren’t such an indispensable figure in the music industry he would be a pastor.

Affecting Societal Change

Cobhams is an avid lover of music. Everything from Gregorian chants to hip hop; he consumes music like most people consume food. Today I sit in his den with the classic accompaniment of strings and piano chords as background music, the relaxing soundtrack of the evening. You name the musical genre, and he can tell one million things about it. “I write songs for artists, corporations, theme music, I attempt to write movies scores, and the like.”

He has produced work for several artists like Asa, Yinka Davis, the Rooftop MCs, Charlie Boy, Mode 9, Sasha, Omawunmi, Timi Dakolo, Banky W, Sound Sultan, 2face, Timaya, and that’s only about a quarter of the list. He has written and produced work for a number of organisations as well: MTN, Zain, Globacom, Etisalat’s 0809ja campaign music, Stanbic IBTC, Coca Cola, Close-up, Reltel and this list continues to grow as he plans to watch his career solidify and inspire minds to become the best that they can be despite obstacles and challenges.

“I want to build the brand for what it represents. I am interested in becoming a key player contributing to the growth of the entertainment sector in terms of capacity building and helping to build a structure for the business, not only to make profits but to give back to a society that has given so much to me.”

He declares that he was not born with a silver spoon. His father was a military man and he just wanted to see his children grow up to be positive influences in society. As the youngest of six children, Cobhams spent much of his formative years honing his love for music, and admits to not being the strongest student academically.

With just a few terms into his University career, he, very much like Kanye West, decided that he was finished with school and took the alternative route, crafting his entrance into the music scene by becoming a songwriter and producer. As a self taught musician, his skills are quite impressive. “I try to sing and I play the piano, guitar, percussions and I mess around with other instruments from time to time.”

Inspiration and Style

He says that the magic happens in the bathroom and he sometimes takes a bath to get inspired. “I love me some bathroom time! I am that extreme. In my bathroom I am any and everything, from an astronaut to a physicist, to a soldier. I’m scared if I change my bathroom around too much it might affect the inspiration for now, but I know sometime in life I’ll add in a recorder and piano.”

Cobhams likes to go around looking fresh. He’s no fashion slave, but admits he enjoys looking good yet comfortable. Today he sports a crisp button up and jeans, the look he generally moves about in.

“It’s just God because sometimes I get into the studio and I’m just confused with the direction I should be going. I just want to live my dream and support the industry and motivate young Nigerians towing the line in their industries into becoming beacons of light.”

Good Movies and the Importance of Solid Foundations

Yes, ladies and gentleman, he watches movies. Watches in the sense that he listens very well and fills in the visual blanks however needed. He explains that a good movie will transcend the visual barriers and can appeal to the sense of sound if made properly, and that really is all that is required. On an average weekend he finds time to inject some love for cinema into his schedule, relaxing and catching a good flick with his sweetheart.

Yes, he is very much taken, and hopes to be a husband and father sometime down the line. As far as the Nigerian music industry is concerned, he likens it to a skyscraper being built on a foundation fit for bungalows. “It is taking shape but we need to deal with the foundational issues, given the rate at which the industry is growing. We need to get our processes and structures right. It is a sustainability issue that depends on our education and looking at the industry from an economic standpoint: regarding it as a science and a lucrative, sensible and viable part of our nation’s economy.”

Words of Wisdom

“Get up and go, whatever you are thinking of doing do it. If it is within reason and doesn’t harm anyone. To be a pioneer you need to first take the baby steps. Live the dream.”

culled from: http://www.connectnigeria.com/news/index.php?news_id=158



Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Elan Personality: Cobhams Asuquo

Hi guys,

 I know a lot of people have so many questions to ask me about me. If you are one of those people, I'd like you to read an article about me published on sunday by the new wave making newspaper in Nigeria...NEXT. You are free to write your comments:http://234next.com/csp/cms/sites/Next/ArtsandCulture/Elan/5451554-147/story.csp

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Prodigal Family Member

...And so family, it happens as with most things in life that time reveals the true threshold of our tenacity. When it started, I wrote to you nearly everyday or posted something at least; but for however long now, you have not heard from me. yes, I could easily blame it on our eratic internet situation in the country; but truth be told; if I had made the effort, I would have myself to thank for having kept in touch through the technological odd. So, i'm back, repentant, reminded of the fact that in our day-to-day grind and grime, we forget to  service those relationships that mean so much to us. Face it guys, we do it all the time and our relationships suffer: from marriages, to platonic commitments. although, sometimes, we think of the people or things involved in these relationships and we hate to feel like we have become comfortable, it only takes a while for us to stop doing simple things. the things we never thought we'd ever stop doing. We stop sending flowers, we use our kind words and endearments sparingly, we're more budget conscious and quick to return to our regular vertical lives. our relationships at various levels need to be oiled constantly; sometimes, even when we don't feel like it or like we can afford it. writing to you right now is not the most convenient thing for me to do ; but i'm reminded that I love you deeply and that you can never know unless I tell you; better yet, show you. This is why God has  given us His word: a constant reminder of His love. He will never leave us nor foresake us, His thoughts towards us are of good and not evil, with a future, hope and an expected end, he desires that we prosper. God is constantly oiling his relationship with us and so I want to be like my heavenly father. I want to oil my relationship with you. I refuse to yield to the distractions of my nine-to-five. I can make time, and so I will.  

 I'm reminded of how I would fly to Abuja in the morning and return to Lagos in the evening, just to be with the woman I deeply loved and still do. Now, we both live in  Lagos; yet, I have to strugle to find time out of my "BUSY SCHEDULE" to be with her. That's the most stupid thing ever.  The best of us are quick to forget. May we not value the things we have only after losing them. I have not lost her, nor have I lost you. Let us go out and oil our relationships. Take time to be with the one you love. Take out time to be with God. Share a kind word, Call your mother or father (if you still have them). You don't need a reason to call. Send an SMS to some of the numbers on your phone. You haven't even called those numbers since you took them down. I know I have loads of those.If yours is one of them, i beg to be forgiven. Just remember that I love you deeply.
So, I must go now. In the words of Jerry Springer, take care of yourselves and each other.
PLEASE HOLLER BACK. I HAVE THINGS TO SHARE. GOD BLESS  Y'ALL. 

Friday, June 26, 2009

The Man in the Mirror


And so my friends, Michael Jackson is dead. Many will mourn him, a few extremists will wish they could accompany him to the great beyond, while some  may even have the audacity to criticize even in his death. But we are quick to forget to look at the man in the mirror; I’m not talking about Michael---I’m talking about you and me. Quite like Michael, we will exit the building; hopefully later than soon. We may not be as popular or as wealthy, but we will certainly be faced with the same parallel destinations: no euphemism about it guys, heaven or hell! One is good, one is not and our dear friend Michael is certainly in one of them. Our best of wishes cannot send him to heaven; our deepest of grudges will not send him to hell. We can only rely on the grace and mercies of God for fans who would like so much as a glimpse of Michael.

So, like the poem I read in my primary 3 or 4 Mc’millan English comprehension book, old (or young) Michael is dead and gone to his grave.  MMMMh! We will all die and go to our graves. But what would be said of us here on earth? Where will we ultimately go? I’m not sure I want to be around to give some old woman a knock for picking an apple off of my grave like Old Roger. I’d rather be in heavenly places, singing halleluiah with an angel on the piano. So, I’m talking to the man in the mirror and I’m asking him to change his ways and live right. I suggest you do same. Whether Michael Jackson did the same is another story all together, whose part 2 will be seen in eternity. Michael has had a subliminal foretaste of the two sides of eternity: from his palatial houses and parks, to his burning skin. I imagine he would know better where to go. I imagine he would have heard of Jesus and being saved. We like him, have heard of Jesus. We unlike him are yet living witnesses and this write up is a testament of sorts.  So my friends, the man in the mirror cannot change his ways unless you change yours. He is a reflection of you. We will miss Michael. I will certainly miss him because he influenced my music greatly. I hope he saved one last breath to pray for salvation. I hope he got a chance to use it. You are breathing now--- use it!

I pray we all make heaven by the grace of God and in Jesus’ name. Amen.

Ps: q. How does anyone call his child Blanket

a. the  same way a man would call his child Cobhams.   I understand my name means a sheltering tree of some sort---quite like a blanket.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

AN INTENSE WORSHIP EXPERIENCE WITH COBHAMS ASUQUO- A TRUE PSALMIST OF OUR GENERATION By Felix Abrahams Obi



I woke up on Sunday, the 21st of June 2009- Fathers’ Day- with great expectation and knowing that in expecting too much from others or a situation, one is setting himself up for deep disappointments when they are not realized. I knew the risks but still left my home expectant. There was this deep longing to make it to this worship meeting from the first day my eyes caught a glimpse of the poster announcing the ‘’Intense Worship with Cobhams Asuquo’’ @ Transcorp Hilton Abuja to be hosted by the Throne Room Parish of RCCG.
Hundreds of us were crammed into Lagos Hall this Sunday morning and extra chairs were brought in to take up more spaces, and the foyer outside the hall took care of the overflow of human heads and hearts. Just before the service kicked off, I had reason to receive an important call outside the hall. Behold there was Cobhams exchanging banters with his band and team members. His acoustik guitarist friend and fellow musician, Gbolahan was kind enough to introduce me to Cobhams and we pumped each other’s hands in a warm handshake. ‘Thank you brother Felix’, he offered as I made my way back to the hall.
No sooner, he was ushered into the hall with his worship team and after humbly acknowledging the kind compliments and introduction by ‘Auntie Dayo’ of DOXA Digital (Abuja’s and one of Nigeria’s foremost Sound Engineering and Events Company) he set out for the business of worship. His band comprised of two female backup singers/vocalists, two acoustic guitarists, a bass guitarist, his violinist and drummer; and he sat behind the piano with the microphone adjusted to face his mouth. And two laptops for cueing in the songs in sequence completed his team!
He began with a charge; that he wouldn’t have us do anything mechanically in God’s presence like it’s often the case in some Christian gathering. He wanted us to be deliberate because he ‘’wanted heaven here’’ and at the end of the intense worship experience we had corporately, any sincere person would attest that we truly experienced the beautiful atmosphere of heaven in that crammed hall.
His 1st song and call to worship was ‘Holy Holy Holy, Lord God Almighty’, followed by ‘Make Our Hearts Your Dwelling Home’. The 3rd song titled ‘My Soul Thirsts for You” was written by him in 2005. He said it was a period when he thirsted desperately for God and a time when his spirit literally was patched like when one who has been marooned in a desert, hedged all around by sand dunes with no oasis in sight. Where there’s no water, the throat becomes famished and parched, and that was the feeling he had that period; He was in need of a touch from God!
At that time, a lot of things had gone awry in his life, and his car had this funny stench that made him upset. But as he prodded further, he realized that the sense of discontentment he was experiencing was because his soul was thirsty and longed for God desperately. So he wrote this song which should be the heart cry of every true worshipper. How else would you gauge the heart of the writer of a song whose lyrics are loaded with some heart-stirring words like?
“Like the grasses need the rain
Like the desert needs the rain
Like the suckling child needs the milk
Like a barren woman needs a child
Hear my prayer…
You’re my shelter, my helper
You hold my anchor
Let me hide in you forever 
My soul thirsts for you...”

Hands were lifted. Souls were stirred. Hearts of many cried as his soulful voice resonated in worship to God with reckless abandon. As we transited to the 4th song, he told us how he loved the feeling of sound so much and that he used to put his head in between the two speakers of his deck while in secondary school to enjoy and feel the stereo/surround effect of the sounds from the speakers. 
He had wanted to play his acoustic guitar as the 5th song was cued in, which was popularized by Anthony Evans and Women of Faith whose chorus celebrates Jesus as the Wonderful Rescuer of the souls of men. It was written at a time when he just couldn’t get by in life and had to learn to lay down his burdens at the foot of the cross. It’s about trading our ashes for God’s beauty. He likened God to the One who has a bucket of water at the sidelines of the football pitch of life whom we should run to when tired to have a cup of water to soothe our thirst. 

But once we gulp the cup however, we just run off and forget that He still has a bucket-full of water waiting for us to come back now and again to refresh our souls. He urged us to recognize that we can’t achieve anything or labor to build a house without the help of God. And did he not tell us to not wrestle with God to save us from the dislocated hip experience and resultant limping gait that Jacob suffered for wrestling with God?
The 6th song was written by a friend of his titled ‘Jesus the Son of God, I believe in You” and he yet again regaled us with another true-life story. It was a period in his life when according him, he was ‘Poor, Broke and Homeless’’ and needed a breakthrough for he had no dime then and used to sleep on the bare floor of hundreds of studios across Lagos. Then he would day-dream about having a different kind of studio from the ones he worked and slept in which were very uncomfortable and mediocre. But he was poor and broke! He needed not just to sing or preach about faith but truly believe in God and live the life of faith.

He related how as a kid in the army barracks where he grew up, he was playing with a Muslim friend, Saidi , who had shouted “Jesus” when the latter fell off a tree. That incident made him reckon that we often grow up not realizing the power we have access to in the name of Jesus. It was the name of Jesus that the blind Bartimeaus called on that led to his receiving his sight and made him whole. As for him (Cobhams) he hinted that he was already whole and this was not saying it in a euphemical sense! He had achieved a lot by exercising faith in the name of Jesus. 

While doing some recordings sometime ago in Paris (I guess Asa’s), he got a call from a friend in Lagos that the space for the dream studio he had always wanted to acquire was now available. Problem was that he had no dime to pay the landlord but somehow he believed God will sort him out. Upon his return to Nigeria, he learnt about a job to produce a commercial for a very big brand in Nigeria. Because the figure being offered was too big and beyond his financial experience, he felt he had already lost it even before executing it. 
After receiving this fat cheque, he paid the landlord for his studio but “waited for him to say the cheque had bounced’’ which never happened. That was one experienced that took his faith to a notch higher and since then, he had exercised faith to do much more than he had ever done before. According to him, faith is like a habit that we develop. Like when a man slaps a woman once, it becomes easier to do it a second time till it becomes a bad habit. 
Faith he said is developed same way as we exercise fear till it becomes as constant as a lunar cycle. E talked about his mom who had believed that her son, Cobhams though blind, was going to get the best of education even when she didn’t know how nor had the means. And in exercising her faith, she has become one of the happiest moms on earth today for her seemingly ‘blind son’ has become a blessing to millions all over the world!
This song was delivered with so much passion as Cobhams sang, “Jesus the son of God, I believe in you. In my darkest hour, you became my light. With your healing arms, you redeemed my sight. And Jesus the son of God, I believe in you…” He became ecstatic and swayed side to side when he came to his most favorite refrain when his voice bellowed; “I believe, yes Lord, I believe, you’re the son of God”. He called Jesus his Hebrew name, ‘Yeshua”; our Redeemer, Savior and Counselor!
The 7th song was about righteousness which he defines simply as doing right like obeying traffic laws, not being a litter box and being good and law abiding citizens. He affirmed that Nigerians are a blessed people. We’re all left in stitches when he joked that no English word can correctly translate the word blessing like the Yoruba word for blessing; ‘Ibukun’. To him you have to ‘ibu’ it till its ‘kun’… and the hall resonated with laughter as he tried to translate blessing from English to Yoruba. 
He made us realise how seemingly ordinary things like a plate of beans and dodo or a cup of cold water can evoke extra-ordinary feelings of pleasure that he sometimes feels like crying. The song titled ‘The World of Ordinary People, living the way God wants it” eulogized the simple things of life that produce extraordinary things. Such ordinary things like a baby drooling on your lovely shirt. It’s about ordinary people like David, Job etc who did extraordinary things. Like an ordinary dream or decision (yes or no) we make today creating extraordinary things tomorrow. Just like every oak tree grows from a small mustard seed. He spoke about family life and that no ordinary father will come back home after 3am, after hanging out with guys.

The 8th song was accompanied by his violinist Ernest and he had written it when he lost a dear friend and had tried to console a mutual friend who seemed so inconsolable then. He had exhorted his friend to know that whatever happens, God is still good. But his friend retorted and cried, ‘But it is difficult…” to believe that God is good when things go bad. But this is a lesson Cobhams had come to learn over the years from his personal experience as one who’s been blind. He had tried to achieve a lot of things by sheer hard work and all, but he had come to a point where he said ‘I will worship God, regardless…” even when things don’t come through as expected.
He then took us through a medley of two popular songs of worship: ‘You’re all I Want’, and ‘This is the Air I breathe’ followed by ‘Glorious Deliverer” which had an acoustic feel and as he delivered this song, streaks of tears glistened his eyes and trekked out of the corners of his eyes. It was as though the tear sacs had become too engorged that they just had to burst and let go off the tears of worship from a heart that truly loves God passionately. His voice reverberated as he sang this song:
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Almighty God, Ancient of Days… 
Strong and Mighty God
Bright morning star, beautiful beyond compare
Perfect in all your ways
You’re worthy of my praise
I worship you Lord in the beauty of your holiness
In the splendor of your majesty
In the frailty of your son, your salvation for us was done
You’re God; you’re bigger than what they say you are,
You’re God, far more beautiful than they say you are,

At this point we had reached a crescendo in this intense worship experience and Cobhams began to speak passionately about God like a TV evangelist. Having grown up as a Catholic, he had learned to recite prayers like ‘Our Father’, ‘Hail Mary’ etc and it was easy thinking about other things while reciting these prayers. So when he stepped into a charged atmosphere where spirit-filled believers worshipped he felt detached and cut-off. As a skeptic He even felt embarrassed when people spoke in tongues or ‘fell’ under the anointing.
He talked about having a deep experience with God which Jesus offers anyone that invites Him into their hearts. To him, one might not be able to know all there is about God, but that doesn’t make the experience of God something that is far-fetched. His voice quaked as he announced it to our hearing that ‘God is real” and that ‘Life outside of Jesus Christ is not worth living at all”. 
He became apologetic when he turned his attention to those who may doubt the veracity of his claims about God. They might see him as stupid, mentally-deranged or plain serious. He was of the view that it’s ok to be ‘cool’ and be ‘hip’ and not care about God. But he re-echoed Jesus’ warning that anyone who denies the Son of God before men, will receive same treatment by Jesus on the last day at the Judgment seat of God.
Gradually a number of people started making their way to answer the altar call, while Cobhams sang about ‘ a fountain that washes away our sins’, and another song that evokes the picture of Jesus standing by and knocking at the door of our heart, seeking to be let in, and that we should not let Him walk away. One of the host pastors joined Cobhams to urge people who want to give their lives to Christ to come to the altar, and many more did…

At this point, I felt I’ve had a truly intense worship experience and I stood up to leave for an important assignment. As I pondered over the experience, I realized that much as I love to worship God in church, Cobhams has made me realize once more that worship is more of a lifestyle. The songs he wrote were offspring of the experiences he’d had with God and I wish we have more psalmists like him in the Nigerian church that are not entertainment driven who would take us through corporate worship into God’s very presence.
The picture of Cobhams worshipping, singing and playing behind the piano reminds me of my dear friend and psalmist, Segun Gilbert (London-based) whom I’ve long told to organize worship meetings like this…and I trust he’ll someday release a worship album for the good of worship-starved believers like us. And I believe RCCG Throne Room Parish recorded this live-worship and would in due course make the CDs and DVDs available to the wider community of believers.
If anyone is in doubt that Cobhams is a God-chaser and Jesus-freak, let me share an excerpt from an interview he earlier granted Hip-Hop World Magazine where he said; “There’s hardly a thing I do. I wake up and I say, God you know what? This is the deal: I don’t know how this is going to happen but it’s your name out there more than mine. Some people say mine but the big picture is your name. So let’s save the situation again. He always does. So quite frankly, I’m not sure I have anything spectacular. I just allow myself to be used and I’m happy…” He says he’s done nothing spectacular yet he boasts of owning world-class studio -www.camp.com.ng- and remains one of Nigeria’s greatest producer, song writer and singer whose fame is global.
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Felix Abrahams Obi is a Physiotherapist and Poet who lives and works in Abuja and can be reached via halal3k@yahoo.com or www.nuggetz4life.blogspot.com

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