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Jidenna On What It Means To Be 'The Chief'

Jidenna's new album, <em>The Chief</em>, is a dedication to his late father.
Courtesy of the artist
Jidenna's new album, The Chief, is a dedication to his late father.

The 2015 hit "Classic Man" introduced the world to Jidenna. His look matched his sound: three-piece suits, polka-dotted ascots and red hair slicked down in a wave that would've made Nat King Cole jealous. At one point, a friend's manager took him aside and said he thought Jidenna had a ton of potential as an artist — but there was just one problem.

"He said, 'You're too perfect,' " Jidenna says. "And man, that stuck with me."

So for his first full-length album, the singer and rapper found himself drawn back to his roots: Nigerian highlife singers and the story of his father, who passed away seven years ago.

"My father would tell the story like this," Jidenna says. "He said, 'You were conceived in Nigeria, and then I brought you to Wisconsin to make damn sure that you and your mother — make sure you had the blue passports.' "

With his Nigerian dad and Bostonian mother, Jidenna spent his childhood moving across cities, continents and boundaries. Now, he's released his debut album, The Chief.

"The chief is really my father and my grandfather," he explains. "It's also my highest self — the best parts of them in me. My father came from a village, and then he and my mother worked hard to create a middle-class upbringing for us. Sometimes we were below the poverty line; sometimes it was an EBT card that we were using for my pops' groceries. But we did get to a decent middle-class life and we did — my siblings [and I] went to great schools.

"So that, I realized, is what a chief is," Jidenna says. "It comes from a place of love, oddly enough, but it is the darkness that can occur in somebody when they're defending the people they love."

That darkness, he recalls, wasn't always easy to see through. In "Bully Of The Earth," he sings about his tumultuous relationship with his father. But according to Jidenna, reconciling himself to that relationship might have been a necessary part of growing up.

"When I was younger, I looked at my father as the bully of the earth," he says. "I hated him, couldn't stand him. Now I got an album dedicated to him. And that's how it goes: You grow up and you realize, hey — the bully was not so bad.

"There's a proverb I use in 'Bully Of The Earth' where I say, 'You're not a man until your father dies,' " Jidenna continues. "My father said that to me — it was one of the last things he said to me before he passed. And I didn't believe in it until he passed."

Hear more of Jidenna's conversation with All Things Considered at the audio link.

Radio editor Monika Evstatieva, web producer Jake Witz and web editor Rachel Horn contributed to this story.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Christina Cala is a producer for Code Switch. Before that, she was at the TED Radio Hour where she piloted two new episode formats — the curator chat and the long interview. She's also reported on a movement to preserve African American cultural sites in Birmingham and followed youth climate activists in New York City.

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SOMOS CONNECTICUT es una iniciativa de Connecticut Public, la emisora local de NPR y PBS del estado, que busca elevar nuestras historias latinas y expandir programación que alza y informa nuestras comunidades latinas locales. Visita CTPublic.org/latino para más reportajes y recursos. Para noticias, suscríbase a nuestro boletín informativo en ctpublic.org/newsletters.

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