other titles...

Fela Kuti

Original Suffer Head (2024 Reissue)

limited "ewuro" (light green) lp - £21.99 | Buy
This edition of 'Original Sufferhead' is a major event.
Fela Kuti

Excuse-O (2024 Reissue)

very limited orange lp - £19.99 | Buy
First reissued as part of 'Fela Kuti Box Set #5', curated by Chris Martin & Femi Kuti in 2021, here the album gets a break-out edition of its own.
Fela Kuti

Why Black Man Dey Suffer (2024 Reissue)

very limited translucent yellow lp - £21.99 | Buy
First reissued as part of 'Fela Kuti Box Set #5', curated by Chris Martin & Femi Kuti in 2021, here the album gets a break-out edition of its own.
Fela Kuti

Shakara (50th Anniversary Edition)

Limited Pink LP with gold obi strip + bonus yellow 7" - £26.99 | Buy
“Shakara” is the 6th in the series of celebratory Fela 50th Anniversary reissues.
Fela Kuti

Roforofo Fight (50th Anniversary Edition)

Limited Edition Orange and Green 2LP - £25.99 | Buy
By 1972, when Music of Fela: Roforofo Fight was originally released (on two vinyl albums, Music of Fela Volume One and Volume Two), Fela was becoming one of the...
Alagbon Close (50th Anniversary Edition)
  1. Alagbon Close
  2. I No Get Eye For Back

Fela Kuti

Alagbon Close (50th Anniversary Edition)

Knitting Factory
  • limited "Jollof" translucent orange LP

    Released: 11th Oct 2024

    £23.99
    Buy

'Alagbon Close' was the first of Fela’s albums to have a sleeve designed by Ghariokwu Lemi, whose artwork fast became an integral part of Fela's catalogue and Afrobeat's message.

The disc was named after the headquarters of the Nigerian Criminal Investigation Department in Lagos. The title track concerns two police raids on Fela’s house, in April and May 1974. On the first occasion, they came looking for weed but could not find any. On the second, they attempted to plant a joint on Fela, but he grabbed it and swallowed it. He was detained at Alagbon Close for three days, while the police waited for the evidence to drop into his slop bucket.

Fela was locked in a communal cell the prisoners jokingly called Kalakuta Republic (“kalakuta” is Swahili for “rascal”). His cellmates engineered a 'feces switch' and Fela was pronounced innocent. On his release he renamed his house Kalakuta Republic. “Alagbon Close” calls out the Nigerian police’s violence and arrogance and apparent immunity from prosecution. “Nothing special about uniform,” sings Fela. “Uniform na cloth na tailor dey sew am like my dress,” replies the chorus (meaning: just because you are wearing a uniform does not make you above the law).