Wunmi

Wunmi, real name Ibiwunmi Omotayo Olufunke Felicity Olaiya, is a singer, dancer and fashion designer.[1][2] She was born in the United Kingdom, to Nigerian parents, but spent much of her childhood in Lagos, Nigeria.[2]

She worked with the band Soul II Soul, notably appearing as a dancer in the video for "Back To Life" (1989).[2] Her debut single, "What a See (A Guy Called Gerald Mix)" was released in 1998, and her debut album A.L.A. (Africans Living Abroad) came out on the Documented record label in 2006.[2] A music video was shot for the single "Crossover" and posted on YouTube.

In 2002, she also collaborated with Bugz in the Attic on the Red Hot Organization's tribute album to Nigerian musician Fela Kuti, appearing on a track titled "Zombie (Part One)." The album, Red Hot and Riot, was released to highly favorable reviews across the board, and all proceeds of the album were donated to AIDS charities.

Her forth coming album "See Me" was crowdfunded and co-produced by Kwame Yeboah in his Mixstation studio in Accra, Ghana and Jeremy Mage in Brooklyn, US.

Albums

  • 2006 A.L.A.
gollark: I thought they just had lots of humans running around still.
gollark: Because as a hacky interim solution you could probably have semi-manual ones where a human remotely handles the fine manipulation parts.
gollark: Is there actually anything stopping automatic shelf loaders from working now apart from the difficulty of moving the things around?
gollark: There's some law about how generally the cost of technological things goes down by some factor with every doubling of the scale they're produced at.
gollark: Moving real-world objects around in nonideal conditions is a hard problemâ„¢.

References

  1. Dancing queen Eye Weekly (Toronto) 1 February 2001; accessed 15 September 2007
  2. Africa on your street bbc.co.uk; accessed 15 September 2007


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