Legendary Nigerian musician and Afrobeat pioneer Fela Anikulapo Kuti has become the first African artist to receive the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. The honour was announced at the 2026 Grammy Awards, decades after Fela died in 1997.
The Recording Academy described Fela as a revolutionary figure whose music reshaped global sound and political expression. His work blended jazz, funk and traditional African rhythms while delivering sharp critiques of corruption, military rule and social injustice.
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Fela never won a Grammy during his lifetime despite international acclaim. His posthumous recognition is widely seen as a long-overdue acknowledgement of his influence on global music and generations of artists across Africa, Europe and the Americas.
Members of the Kuti family accepted the award on his behalf, describing it as a validation of Fela’s lifelong commitment to artistic freedom and resistance. They noted that his music remains relevant in contemporary political and cultural struggles.
The award has been welcomed across Africa as a milestone moment, reinforcing calls for greater recognition of African pioneers whose contributions have often been overlooked by global institutions.

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