
Few days ago, in Lagos, Sound Sultan wrote his entrance examinations for the legends university. And he passed in glowing colours.
The singer-songwriter-performer used a 
brilliant assembly of poetry, choreography, pantomime, drama, and song, 
to create an unforgettable night for the thousands that came out for his
 12th anniversary concert.
The Harbour Point auditorium must have 
been more than pleased with Sound Sultan, his band, the Crown Troupe, DJ
 Jimmy JATT, the many guest acts, and the creative team, for a brief but
 near-excellent show that proved that not all concerts held outside the 
Eko Hotels’ insanely expensive yet structurally and technically  
inflexible hall, are subpar.
A veteran by all definitions, Sultan did
 not seem like he was trying to prove any point, yet that’s exactly what
 he did – showing, with each set, that he’s not in the league of today’s
 hit-drunk pop stars who have no qualms miming at their own concerts.
Starting from his debut album ‘Kpsheew— the sound of a Frustrated Mouth’, he worked with the band to deliver Jagbajantis, ghen ghen and more, with minor tweaks only ardent fans would notice.
Lanky and fragile in person, the 
boldness and courage of his lyrics made many compare him with Fela since
 the early 2000s. Last night, he brought back those memories again, with
 the power of his lyrics, with some of his Fela-inspired costumes, and 
with a surprise Afrobeat set that featured that genre’s king Femi Kuti.
But Femi was not the only king that came
 out to jam with Sultan. Africa’s king of pop and a legend in his own 
right 2face Idibia joined his friend for a thought-provoking performance
 of ‘bush meat’; while M.I, arguably the leader of Nigeria’s hiphop 
community, joined Sultan for their conscious collabo  ‘2010’.
Just before M.I and 2face, the concert 
paid a powerful tribute to hip hop, with an elaborate freestyle session 
featuring some of the rappers that matter today: Yungsix, Ice Prince, 
Ikechukwu, Dr SID and Uzi. 2face and Timaya would have made that list, 
had the show’s director not chased them off stage, midway into their 
ambush freestyle skit.
Unpredictable from A to Z, a fashion 
session engineered by co-host IK Osakioduwa would lead into a 
performance of Sultan’s ode to plus-sized women ‘Orobo’; just as a brief
 stand-up act by Koffi (who was at his best last night, despite the 
initial lukewarm reception) would lead into, first a drama featuring 
Sound Sultan as groom-to-be who waits impatiently for his bride-to-be 
(Tiwa Savage) during a traditional Yoruba engagement ceremony; and later
 a Sultan-Tiwa duet of ‘Oko won lode’. With Crown Troupe members as 
support cast (friends of the groom, friends of the bride, parents-in-law
 etc), and Koffi as overzealous MC, the wedding episode continues, with 
9ice performing for the ‘couple’, before Fuji giant Adewale Ayuba 
emerges, to entertain them with hits from the 22-year-old evergreen Bonsue
 LP, getting us all on our feet, screaming – such incredibly scripted; 
almost impeccably executed show that the words of no writer can fully 
capture.
In spite of noticeable sound hitches and
 repeated dead air, and a few performances that failed the test, this 
low budget concert gets a first class – where many before it, for 
example, the Davido O.B.O. concert, fails woefully. Young boys like 
Davido should actually have been at Harbour Point last night, taking 
notes.
Welcome to the Legends’ club, Sound Sultan. Please take a bow.