Beasts of No Nation is an album by the Nigerian musician Fela Kuti.[2][3] It was released in 1989.[4] Kuti is credited with his band Egypt 80.[5]
Kuti played the title track on his 1986 North American tour and promoted it in interviews.[6] The album sold around 15,000 copies in the United States in its first year of release.[7]
Beasts of No Nation was produced by Wally Badarou.[4] Kuti began thinking about the album while in jail for infractions related to foreign currency and wrote the songs after being released.[9][10] The title track accuses the Nigerian government and military of transgressions against the Nigerian populace; among other grievances, the album also condemns apartheid.[11][12][13] Kuti's use of the phrase basket mouth acknowledges his music's responsibility to protest.[14]
The Gazette called the album "pan-African message music with a capital A for Anger."[23]
AllMusic wrote: "After a few so-so records in the early '80s, Beasts of No Nation was a strong (at times stunning) return to form for Kuti and signaled that his political beliefs kept him from becoming musically lazy."[18] In its 1997 obituary, The Philadelphia Inquirer deemed the album "blunt" and "threatening."[24]Rolling Stone considered it "classic Afro beat."[25]
Track listing
No.
Title
Length
1.
"Just Like That"
22:54
2.
"Beasts of No Nation"
12:42
References
^Green, Tony (6 Nov 1997). "Cool stuff you may not have heard, yet...". The Florida Times-Union. p. D2.