Wednesday 19 December 2012

The 5 worst albums of 2012 (and yes,Davido’s O.B.O is on the list!)

The past year (period ending 1, December 2011-1,December 2012) had
it's great music moments but like every other facet of life, it had
it's downsides. We scour through the major musical releases and bring
you the definitive listof the 5 worst albums of the year. You may want
to burn your copies.


Solar Plexus – Mavin All stars
The D'Banj-Don Jazzy breakup was one of the top music events of 2012.
The release of the Don Jazzy-led Mavin All star album, 'Solar plexus'
sadly wasn't. And there are no prizes for guessing why. The problems
are legion; weak delivery, over reliance on lavish beats,
underutilization of Wande Coal,puerile lyrics and a general lack of
cohesion. Proponents argue it was a project put together in a hurry
but we say it is still no excuse.


The Statement – Sammie Okposo
There is a reason Sammie Okposo's latest album of gospel tunes was
largely ignored by the record buying populace. It isn't a good album.
The heavy-handed production values attempts to gloss over the fact
that Mr Okposo didnot have a lot to offer this time around but the
cracks kept showing.


Selah – J. Martins
J Martins' latest contains 15 unremarkable and utterly repetitive
songs and isabout as exciting as a dental extraction proceedure. There
is a desperate lack of identity as all of the songs could have easily
been recorded by any of Mr Martins' contemporaries.
Selah may be Hebrew for pause and think but neither attributes were
employed in the crafting of this record.


Omo Baba Olowo: The Genesis – Davido
At the start of 2012, with his ubiquitous hit singles and flashy
videos, Davido was the man to beat, up until he released what is
perhaps the most disappointing record of the year. O.B.O may have been
meant to let us have a good time but it fails terribly at it's primary
assignment. It is unbearably tedious, sinks where it should swim and
drags us down with it's weight. This is one album we still wish never
happened.


Footprints – Duncan Mighty
'Footprints', consisting of 18 tracks is filled with flops like
'Rejection to attraction', 'Wine it' (with Shaggy) and just about
every other song on the disc. It is pale, repetitive, tedious,
uninspiring and Timaya has no reason to be looking over his back.