
by Higher Ground
<p>In a world that’s on fire, what is the role of art? What can music actually…<em>do?</em></p><p>Can a song save a life? Change a law? Topple a president? Get you killed?</p><p>In<em> Fela Kuti: Fear No Man</em>, Jad Abumrad—creator of <em>Radiolab</em>, <em>More Perfect,</em> and <em>Dolly Parton's America</em>—tells the story of one of the great political awakenings in music: how a classically trained 'colonial boy' traveled to America, in search of Africa, only to return to Nigeria and transform his sound into a battering ram against the state—creating a new musical language of resistance called Afrobeat.</p><p>For years, the world’s biggest stars made pilgrimages to Nigeria to experience Fela’s Shrine, the epicenter of his musical revolution. But when the mix of art and activism got too hot, the state pulled out its guns, and literally opened fire.</p><p><em>Fela Kuti: Fear No Man</em> is an uncategorizable mix of oral history, musicology, deep dive journalism, and cutting edge so