Timi Dakolo And Brymo: Wish Me Well In A City That Has No Good Turn
Timi Dakolo’s ‘Wish Me Well’ and BrymO’s ‘In The City’ (soundtrack to the movie No Good Turn) are songs about the aura and ugliness of the city. The former is cheerful and optimistic; the latter is wary and pessimistic.
On the Cobhams-produced “Wish Me Well”, the narrator is a young man who is high on hope and dreams, dreams that only fit into the big city. So, he plans to leave his village and never returns. “I pack my bags / I’m leaving town/ I bought a one-way ticket / I ain’t coming back,” he narrates. He would later renounce the village and swells allegiance to the city. “Goodbye, friends / And goodbye folks/ I’m heading to the city / And that’s my home.”
BrymO’s perceptions about cities are not the same as that of Timi. His opinion of the city is scary. It’s full of horror. The song is sad and moody, just like many of BrymO’s songs. On the record, BrymO laments the death of goodness, compassion, and love in the city and warns about the reign of evil or terror. The song starts with a news report of a suicide bomber who drives a truck into a market in Borno State and kills a lot of people. After the news report, BrymO starts his narrative:
“There is fire all over the city / No one can sleep / And everyone around me said that/Nothing was heard or seen / Woke up in the city that couldn't sleep / Is burning everywhere/And still nobody cares…” Scary, isn't it?
Neither Timi nor BrymO is wrong: The city is a blend of good and evil. A series of events have proven both artists sentiments right.
Even if Timi’s “Wish Me Well” didn’t tell us whether its narrator makes it in the city, the Cinderella tale of Olajumoke Orisaguna’s rise from abject poverty to wealth is a testimony about the goodness of the city. It’s only in a big city like Lagos that a bread seller can become an overnight celebrity and millionaire. It can never happen in villages.
But, before the Olajumoke Orisaguna fairy tale, there was Timi Dakolo’s fairy tale. Time rose to fame after he won the inaugural Idols West Africa singing contest in 2007. And since his winning, he has been belting out hit after hit.
Also, BrymO’s pessimism about the evil in the city is not out of place. There are Badoo boys, kidnapping, robbery and other anomalies, which destroy lives and properties every day. And the ‘I-still-remember’ line especial, could serve as a reference to BrymO’s fall out with Chocolate City, his former record label. (The video for ‘In The City’ is more expressive. It shows a gory image of a hospital. BrymO is also a victim: he is on a wheelchair, with broken head and blood-stained cloth. The doctor is also depressing: he can be seen seeking solace in a bottle of liquor.)
Both Timi and BrymO have had their shares of the city’s beauty and ugliness. And they capture these unique characteristics of the city in their aforementioned songs.
The city is a mixture of pain and gain, joy and sorrow, good and evil, life and death. The city is a blend of heaven and hell, in fact.
This piece was originally published on filterfree.ng.