Nigeria
’80 Africa Cup of Nations winner Emmanuel Okala has revealed West Brom
striker Osaze Odemwingie will be invited for Nigeria’s June 5 World
Cup qualifying game against Kenya in Nairobi.
Osaze has not played for the Eagles since he featured in the Africa Cup of Nations qualifier against Rwanda last year.
He missed out on a place in the 2013
Africa Cup of Nations squad after his Twitter rants against coach
Stephen Keshi. Nigeria eventually won the championship, with Osaze
denied the opportunity to win gold with the national team. He won bronze at the continental showpiece in 2004, 2006 and 2010.
Former Eagles goalkeeper Okala said
during the week the forward, who has been frozen out by the Baggies
manager Steve Clarke after the former Lille star launched a series of
attacks on the Premier League club on his Twitter page, would end his
stay in the international football wilderness in June.
“I understand he (Keshi) will also
invite Osaze Odemwingie in the next game, to show that the perceived
quarrel between them has been resolved,’’ the News Agency of Nigeria quoted Okala as saying.
The ex-Enugu Rangers keeper frowned upon
calls for Keshi to invite certain players to the national team, saying
the Tunisia ’94 Africa Cup of Nations winner should be allowed to do his
job.
He also urged fans not put Keshi under
pressure in selecting players for the national team, adding that the few
changes he effected in the qualifier against Kenya affected their
performance.
Okala said, “People were clamouring for
Obafemi Martins and some others and he invited them for the country to
know their fitness level.
“We all saw why he has not been inviting them all along.”
The ex-Eagles goalkeeping coach
condemned the reported rift between Keshi and his captain Joseph Yobo,
urging the duo to resolve their differences.
“Yobo as the team’s captain should be
notified about the affairs of the team because he is the next, after the
coaches,” he said.
“I believe it was the cordial relationship in the team that made them win the Africa Cup of Nations in South Africa.”
His
real name is Olumide Adegbulu but he is popularly referred to as Olu
Maintain. An accomplished artiste, the Yahooze crooner, is one of the
most extravagant artistes in Nigeria. In this interview, he opens up on
his lavish lifestyle and the entertainment industry
Is it right to describe 2012 as your comeback year?
I think that will be a fair assessment
because prior to 2012, l had some level of hiatus locally for about two
and a half years. Last year, I redefined my brand and it was very
refreshing to test the waters and reaffirm that the brand is still so
much in demand. It was a year that defined the second phase of my career
and I see myself as starting over again.
What do you mean by ‘the second phase’ of your career?
The first phase lasted for about 14
years. Then, Olu Maintain evolved from Maintain, the group, to Olu
Maintain, the solo artiste that has seen it all and done it all. When
you are in that state of mind where psychologically, you see yourself
not being challenged any longer, it becomes difficult to have the hunger
to do more. That was why in 2012, I decided to try another genre of
music; another image and path in my career. I was overwhelmed that it
worked. That has inspired me to look at myself as one who has given
enough to the industry and who has more to offer. Therefore, it is a new
beginning, another phase of the journey for me.
Why did you choose to be active only internationally in the last two and a half years?
That was not by choice. If I give you a
rundown of my activities since the Yahooze album dropped in 2007, it is
remarkable to see how quickly time flies. After the album was released
in May 2007, I was on tour in Nigeria from that time until 2008 when I
came up with the Kamakazi video. In 2009, I toured America for the first
time and I visited 35 states. In 2010, I toured almost all the
countries in Europe and in 2011, I started recording again. In September
2011, the Nawti audio was released and in January 2012, the video came
out and the rest is history. Therefore, there was no time I sat down
doing nothing.
You mean the emergence of new artistes in the industry did not force you to beat a retreat and restrategise?
I see the Nigerian music industry as one
that is saturated but very uncompetitive. How do I explain an Olu
Maintain that has been quiet for some years and only for him to come out
with a music video in 2012? This is unarguably the best video in the
country ever. That means that I saw what a lot that people were not
doing and I capitalised on it. The industry is growing but it is not
developing.
Why did you have to do a collabo with foreign artistes, is it that you cannot hold it down on your own?
To start with, the collabo between Olivia
and I was purely circumstantial, it was not by choice. I met her at an
industry party in Los Angeles by the producer of the Nawti video, Naomi
Smith and we took it from there— courtesy her producer, Jerry Wonder. He
is one of the best hands in the industry in America. That was how the
track ‘Hypnotise me’ was born and Jerry wonder also facilitated my
collaboration with Fatman Scoop, an American hip-hop star. So, my
collaborations were circumstantial and as a result of me being at the
right place at the right time. It was not something I set out to do or
part of my agenda.
Having watched the Nawti video, it is very hard to believe there was no sexual chemistry between you and the video vixen
No comment but the beauty about my
personality is that I can be overwhelming because I have a persuasive
and likable personality. When I work with anybody, I like to establish a
relationship outside work.
You raised the bar for yourself with Yahooze; do you think you can match that?
I am not going to match it, I will
surpass it. Living up to it is not an achievement but surpassing it is
the beginning of achievement. A DJ once told me that the only
competition I have is me.
With your years of absence, don’t
you think you have lost your place in the industry especially with the
emergence of young artistes?
The truth about it is that the industry
is my wife, I am married to it. I know what to tell my wife anytime I
feel like making love to her. Other people are dating the industry and
because I am married to it, I understand her language so I can make her
dance to my tune when I so desire. You just wait and see what my new
album. It is a ten tracker and each letter stands for a song.
Is there a possibility of Maintain regrouping?
Nature has a funny way of taking its
natural course; I would not deem anything impossible. If it is nature’s
calling and if God says we would come back, who am I to say no? But for
the next four quarters, I already have my plans defined and if Maintain
is going to do something, it will have to be in the future and not this
year.
When will marriage come?
Olu Maintain has come of age; I am closer
to 40 now, single and with no child. Before now, my career has been my
wife and companion and that makes it necessary for me to start
prioritising. It will be a safe assumption now to say I am seeking for
something that is missing in my life. There is no woman in my life now
but I am working towards it. I just want my woman to love me and love
what I do. I am not attaching any physical attributes to it because that
eventually will go away. It’s better to fall in love with someone
because that lasts forever. My parents have been married for 43 years.
Apart from music, do you do other things?
Yes. How do you think I have sustained my
lavish lifestyle? That is why people attribute my lifestyle to all
sorts of negative things. What they don’t know is that I surround myself
with friends that are not in my industry and that shows I have been
able to sustain my fortune. I respect my colleagues but I don’t have any
close friend in the industry. My best friend is a chartered accountant
and a bank manager.
Don’t you think your lifestyle is too loud?
It is a part of me. I still like to blow,
shine, stand out in a crowd and that is with some level of affluence.
Besides, it is required for my profession. For instance, when I dress, I
do loud colours and really that is just my person, and being an
entertainer makes it mandatory for me to be flashy. I like to glow,
bling and dress flamboyantly because I am not a conservative in any
way.
I read somewhere you still live in a rented apartment…
It is false because I have tenants. How
can I be collecting rent and still live in a rented apartment? By the
special grace of God, I own the place where we are having this interview
and many more.
So how much is Olu worth?
Olu will be rich for the rest of his life
and that is by default. I cannot go broke for the next generation to
come. I have planted enough for my next generation to benefit from. That
is as a result of being prudent and making wise decisions in my choice
of investments and circle of friends.
The Nawti video for instance cost a lot
of money. It is the only Nigerian video that has 16 looks. Most Nigerian
videos have four or five, which costs an average of $20,000 or $25,000 .
So for a 16-look video, do the arithmetic.
How do you relax when you are not making music?
I love to stay in my home. I do not
drink, smoke, or go clubbing. I only club when I am being hosted. I
watch TV and I like to travel also. My persona is a completely
misunderstood one. Contrary to what people think, I am a very warm
person. I am Cancerian. so naturally I have a large heart and that is
misinterpreted because I am an artiste.
Christmas
Eve, was a special night for Nollywood diva, Monalisa Chinda. It was a
night that brought together big names in the industry for the
performance of a novel Christmas dance production tagged, ‘Project
Help; A dance for Life.’
Hosted by Segun Arinze and Bimbo
Akintola, the event featured amazing dance performances and recital by
the likes of Kate Henshaw, Desmond Elliot, and Chinda in the company of
the Bailamos dance ensemble.
The event featured a large turnout of
movie personalities including Stephanie Okereke, Kingsley Ogoro, Tonye
Cole, Chioma Akpotha, Zik Zulu Okafor, Halima Abubakar, among many
others.
In her closing remarks after the show, an
emotional Chinda expressed her appreciation to the guests who turned up
for the show, saying that it was the best way to celebrate Christmas
since it was organised to give back to the society and the less
privileged.
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