Burna Boy promises to drop new teasers off his forthcoming “Love Damini” album every day until its release

Burna Boy promises to drop new teasers off his forthcoming “Love Damini” album every day until its release

Every day up until the release of his upcoming “Love Damini” album on July 8th, “African Giant” Burna Boy will release a new teaser ever.

This was announced by the Grammy Award-winning artist in a tweet on Monday.

He wrote, “Apparently I was born just after midnight, so I’m gna be dropping teasers everyday till release at midnight #LOVEDAMINI.”

He followed through on his promise by teasing Track 5 “Cloak and Dagger” in a subsequent tweet.

“Love Damini” follows Burna Boy’s “Twice As Tall”.

 

In a recent interview, the musician labelled his sound as “Afrofusion,” stressing that other African music genres should not be lumped together under the umbrella term “Afrobeats.”

“For me, it’s like the same way you’re going to say Nas is an R&B singer because he’s from America or Whitney Houston was a rapper because rap is the most popping thing now,” he said.

He added, “I can’t accept that because I’m not a rapper. So now in Africa when you talk about music, the first thing they say is Afrobeats. Afrobeat is a legend called Fela Kuti.”

“Years went by and Nigerian musicians started dropping music that was becoming something. So they needed to call it something to be able to identify with it.”

Speaking with the hosts of the “Million Dollar Worth of Game podcast” on Sunday, he added that “Somehow they just said Afrobeats and added an s. I don’t know what sense that made but that’s what happened. Somewhere along the line, all the music that comes from Africa just writes Afrobeats.”

“We have Highlife, Juju music, Fuji music, South African Kwaeto music, Amapiano, Afropop, we have all types of genres in Africa. To be really sincere, for you to just call everything Afrobeats kind of does a disservice to the artistes.”

“For me, when I started the Afrofusion thing, it was like my music was not the same with anything that was out. It was like everybody else kind of sounded the same.”

He also noted that he needed something to identify himself as. “It was one kind of move and for me, there was nothing I could identify myself with. So I just decided that I’ll call it Afrofusion because it’s a fusion of everything. The Afro-Africaness is the thing that covers it, it’s the bottle that holds the whole drink. That is why I always make sure that everybody knows this is what I do, it’s Afrofusion.”

Still talking on the podcast, he disclosed that Toni Braxton, an American R&B singer who also appears on the “Love Damini” album, receives 60% of the earnings from his most recent hit, “Last Last.”

Toni Braxton’s 2000 R&B hit, “He Wasn’t Man Enough,” is sampled in the song “Last Last.”

He mentioned that he had always wanted to sample the song and enlisted the help of music producer Chopsticks to do the magic.

See the full album tracklist: