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Davido, Chidinma, Others Champion New Nollywood Sound Tracks

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Soundtrack for Nollywood films have always been but after a while, the culture stopped for several reasons.
Larry Gaga, Davido, Chidinma, Vector are some of the music acts championing the new wave of soundtracks for Nollywood productions.
Since the turn of the year, Nollywood has seen an upturn in official soundtrack culture. Larry Gaga is also one of the driving factors in the relatively new niche.
Producers of ‘Living In Bondage: Breaking Free’ and ‘MTV Shuga Naija’ have teamed up with Larry Gaga to produce original soundtracks that can be additional sources of revenue for the respective TV productions. MTV Shuga is known to have produced each season with a soundtrack and music acts like Ice Prince, KCee, Seyi Shay and J Martins have appeared on soundtrack of the youth oriented TV series.
Larry Gaga is taking the lead in 2019 as he’s working with Davido for’Living In Bondage: Breaking Free’, the highly anticipated sequel to 90s hit, ‘Living in Bondage,’ and also with Vector on MTV Shuga Naija 4.
Tunde Kelani, Kingsley Ogoro were some of the leading filmmakers, who ensured they had a soundtrack for their big films in the 90s. [Channels TV]
This follows the template of Hollywood to create original soundtracks that are unique to the film they are meant to support.
This way, the budget is adequately spent and revenue streams can be generated. As in Hollywood movies like ‘Birth of a Nation,’ the soundtracks are not even played in the movie. As a result, in that clime, movie soundtracks generate tens of millions of dollars and platinum certifications – for moving one million units in equivalence of albums sales.
Sadly, Nollywood doesn’t have that structure. Selling movies and music is already a chore. Artists have to scramble for streaming/sales revenue from their music. That is after paying PROs and composers first. This is because the Nigerian clime is not healthy for music sales at this time. Thus, Nollywood producers have rarely explored the idea of independent original movie soundtracks.
From the days of popular soap operas like Papa Ajasco, Super Story, Palace, Everyday People, Family Circle and others, there were theme songs. These theme songs are popular with their audience. However, they were not the true test of original soundtracks.
A genuine original soundtrack has to be a set of specially composed songs for a movie. Nollywood definitely saw a lot of that in the 80’s and 90’s, but not until the late 90’s and the 2000s did original soundtracks have a home in Nollywood. Producers like Late Hubert Ogunde, Tade Ogidan, Tunde Kelani, Kingsley Ogoro and so forth worked with music professionals to craft original songs for their films.
During this period, singers like Mike Nliam, Stanley Okoria, Sammie Okposo, Sola Allyson-Obaniyi and recently Tope Alabi worked with the movie directors and producers to lend their singing abilities to their stories. Their voices became synonymous with the home video era. As they became brands, their sounds also found a place in people’s hearts. However, even with all these stars, most Nigerian producers never film produced independent albums from their movies.
Some of the few who created original soundtracks independent of movies are Tade Ogidan for ‘Madam Dearest,’ and Bimbo Oshin for ‘Eji Owuro’. However, most people simply ignored this avenue to add some notoriety and impact to their movies. OSTs are also a source of additional funds for movies.
Well, a combination of factors the first of those factors is a problem of funding. A few years ago, E.TV Africa used to do a jingle every quarter of an hour. It was frustrating, but it gave us a few facts. One of those facts is that Nollywood movies were made with an estimated $10,000 and under. At the time, $10,000 was between one million Naira and N1.5 million.
Running on such a shoestring, you cannot then afford to expend energy on music that might or might not sell. Sometimes, like with ‘Eji Owuro,’ and Sola Allyson-Obaniyi, the music requires little push to take off, but a lot of times, the music requires great sound, production, mixing and marketing. Those require funds and Nollywood cannot afford it.
This is aided by how dysfunctional the Nigerian music industry is. Record sales are a very unreliable means of revenue generation. It’s already hard enough to sell movies, producers didn’t want to add the additional stress of music when revenue is far from guaranteed.
In other cases too, ignorance played a role. A lot of producers with good, marketable music didn’t just realize that their music can be marketed. One of such examples is ‘Oyato,’ the 2000’s socio-political flick that starred Tony Umez, Omotola Jalade-Ekeinde. The music on that movie was so good, yet it was never marketed independently of the film. Same is applicable to ‘Koto Aiye’ and ‘Koto Orun’, some of the many productions by late actor and producer, Alhaji Yekini Ajileye.

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‘Lie From The Pit Of  Hell,’ Family Debunks Pete Edochie’s death Rumours

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The family of veteran Nollywood actor, Pete Edochie, has dismissed viral rumours circulating on social media claiming that the film icon is dead.

Reacting to the reports in a video shared on his Instagram page on Tuesday, the actor’s eldest son, Leo Edochie, described the claim as false and malicious.

“I’ve been receiving text messages and calls over the nonsense post by some people that our father, Chief Pete Edochie, is dead. It is a lie from the pit of hell,” he said.

Leo added that the actor is alive and in good health, condemning those responsible for spreading the rumour.

“Our father is alive, hale and hearty. And if you wish someone dead, two things usually happen. The person will live very long and you will die before him. Shame to all of you,” he said.

The rumour had sparked concern among fans before the family’s clarification.

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‘Mother’s Love’ Challenges Nigerian’s Film Portray Of Motherhood

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Omotola Jalade-Ekeinde critiques Nollywood’s lack of mother-daughter stories ahead of her directorial debut, ‘Mother’s Love.’ See the cast and 2026 release date.

Nollywood veteran actress Omotola Jalade-Ekeinde is making her directorial debut with a different and sharper focus. Speaking recently with Newsmen,, the screen icon highlighted a glaring void in the industry’s catalogue, which is the authentic reality of mother-daughter relationships.

“We don’t have too many films that explore or showcase the relationship between mothers and daughters,” Omotola said during the interview, describing the subject as something deeply personal to her.

Speaking honestly about raising her first daughter, she admitted she had only one mode at the time, which was discipline. “I didn’t do a good job,” she said plainly, explaining that she understood motherhood strictly through control, not softness or emotional openness.

At the centre of Mother’s Love is Adebisi, a sheltered young woman from a wealthy home whose life is shaped by her father’s rigid control. Her first taste of freedom comes through NYSC, where distance from home allows her to begin discovering who she is outside her family’s expectations. She forms a friendship with a young man from a more modest background, and through him, starts to see the world and herself differently.

But the emotional core of the film isn’t Adebisi’s rebellion. It’s her mother. Long after being presented as quiet and compliant, she slowly reveals a resolve when her daughter’s safety and future are threatened. As secrets surface and buried grief comes into view, Mother’s Love becomes less about youthful independence and more about maternal sacrifice, unspoken trauma, and the emotional costs of survival inside a patriarchal home.

The Tide Entertainment reports that the film doesn’t shy away from weighty themes by including PTSD, unresolved grief, and social inequality at the centre of the story. It is far removed from the soft-focus sentimentality that often defines Mother’s Day-style narratives.

It also marks Omotola’s directorial debut, a significant moment considering how long she has shaped Nollywood from the front of the camera. She stars in the film alongside a mix of familiar faces and newer talent, including Ifeanyi Kalu, Olumide Oworu, and Noray Nehita.

Beyond the film itself, Omotola’s  interview touched on a tension that has been simmering in Nollywood for a while now: how movies are marketed in the age of TikTok. Addressing the growing expectation for actors and filmmakers to create viral dance content to promote their work, she didn’t mince words. The pressure, she said, is exhausting and unnatural.

For her, the industry wasn’t meant to function this way. Still, she was careful not to judge anyone else’s approach. Everyone invests differently, carries different risks, and should be allowed to promote their films however they see fit.

“Do whatever you can do. It’s exhausting, it’s not natural. For me, the film industry is not supposed to be like that. We are encouraging nonsense if we are doing that. It doesn’t mean that whoever is doing it is wrong.”

Her comments arrive not long after the public back-and-forth between Kunle Afolayan and Funke Akindele over marketing styles, a debate that quickly turned into a proxy war between prestige storytelling and viral strategy. Omotola’s stance sits somewhere calmer. She understands the shift social media has brought, but she’s also clear about her own boundaries.

Omotola’s critique about the lack of mother-daughter stories isn’t unfounded. In Nollywood, mothers often exist as symbols rather than people. They’re either saintly figures who pray endlessly for their children or villains whose cruelty drives the plot forward. What’s missing is intimacy, the negotiations, and the regrets. The love that exists alongside resentment and misunderstanding.

Films rarely sit with the emotional complexity of women raising daughters in systems that also failed them. There’s little room for mothers who made mistakes but are still trying, or daughters who love their mothers while questioning the damage they inherited. Mother’s Love attempts to occupy that space, offering a more grounded portrayal that reflects lived experience rather than archetypes.

That’s where the film’s potential impact lies, in the decision to centre a relationship that Nollywood has largely flattened. If it works, it could open the door for more stories that treat motherhood as a lived, evolving reality rather than a fixed moral position.

Mother’s Love, directed by and starring Omotola Jalade Ekeinde, had its world premiere at the 50th Toronto International Film Festival on September 6, 2025. The film is set for a nationwide cinema release in Nigeria on March 6, 2026.

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Funke Akindele’s  Behind The Scenes Crosses ?1.77bn

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Funke Akindele’s Behind The Scenes becomes Nollywood’s highest-grossing film of 2025, earning ?1.77bn in under four weeks.

Multi-award-winning actress and producer Funke Akindele has done it again, and this time, the numbers speak louder than applause.

Her latest film, Behind The Scenes, has officially emerged as the highest-grossing Nollywood film of 2025, pulling in an astonishing ?1.767 billion in less than four weeks.

The Tide Entertainment reports that Funke Akindele Makes Box Office History as Behind The Scenes Crosses ?1.77bn
Earlier in its release cycle, the film’s distributor, FilmOne Entertainment, revealed that Behind The Scenes smashed five opening-weekend records, including the highest single-day gross ever recorded on Boxing Day, with ?129.5 million in one day. That announcement already hinted that something unusual was unfolding.

Reacting to the milestone, FilmOne described the moment as both surreal and communal, crediting audience loyalty for pushing the film to the top spot once again as the number-one movie of the weekend. And that sentiment feels accurate. This wasn’t just ticket sales; it was momentum.

What makes this achievement even more striking is that Behind The Scenes is Funke Akindele’s third film to cross the ?1 billion mark. Before now, there was A Tribe Called Judah, and then Everybody Loves Jenifa, a film that didn’t just open big, but went on to become the highest-grossing Nollywood film of all time. At this point, it’s no longer a fluke. It’s a pattern.

Part of Behind The Scenes’ success lies in strategy. The film enjoyed advanced screenings on December 10 and 11, quietly building curiosity and conversation before its nationwide release on December 12. By the time it officially hit cinemas, audiences already felt like they needed to see it.

Then there’s the cast. The film brings together a lineup that feels deliberately stacked: Scarlet Gomez, Iyabo Ojo, Destiny Etiko, Tobi Bakre, Uche Montana, and several others. Familiar faces, strong fan bases, and performances that kept word-of-mouth alive long after opening weekend.

Still, beyond timing and casting, there’s something else at work here. Funke Akindele understands Nigerian audiences. Their humour, their pacing, their emotional buttons. She doesn’t guess, she calculates, experiments, listens, and refines. That understanding has slowly turned into box-office dominance.

Behind The Scenes crossing ?1.77 billion isn’t just another headline; it’s confirmation. Funke Akindele has moved from being a successful actress to becoming one of the most reliable commercial forces Nollywood has ever produced. Three-billion-naira films don’t happen by luck. They happen when storytelling, business sense, and audience trust align.

And right now, that alignment seems firmly in her hands.

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