Nothing wrong with copying Olamide – Skales
Better known as Skales, Raoul John Njeng-Njeng’s Grass to Grace tale like a film script. It changed into so horrible that at a time Olamide Adedeji, aka Baddo paid for his song when he didn’t have cash.
Matters were even more difficult for him even as growing up in Kaduna.
The singer as soon as stated he used to sleep in a shopping complex along with his mother. My daddy left us when I was young he said.
He said each time he thinks of what he went, it motivates him to pursuits to work tougher.
“I was born and taken up on the streets,all i am doing right now could be what i learnt at the streets. the streets made me a cross-getter due to the fact i don’t need to go again to the region i was.
“at the streets, i learnt that you have to constantly strive your satisfactory to be anyone in existence. this is the cause i'm operating hard due to the fact lifestyles on the streets isn't an easy one.
When you’ve controlled to sail through, you just need to be greater a success,” Skales said.
He maintained that being at the streets didn’t imply one has no magnificence, nothing that the road additionally produced pinnacle Musicians like Olamide, lil Kesh and 9ice, among others.
Reacting to speculations that his Modern-day track video, AGOLO, changed into a ‘photocopy’ of Olamide’s wo, Shake body crooner said there has been not anything awful if artistes inspired each other.
“because artistes inspire each other, i'm able to in no way go in opposition to anyone who says i copied olamide.
He has constantly influenced me,i recently remembered the story of ways he paid for my music video.
He also said that i have inspired him in such a lot of approaches,but he turned into now not the first individual to shoot a video.
Earlier than i even launched the video, we had a conversation.
Next year, i plan to do more music that is related on the streets because, on the cease of the day, they are the human beings we do track for,” he introduced
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