Tiwa Savage, R&B singer, has said many people did not want to invest “money or time” in her when she first moved back to Nigeria from the US.

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The singer said many in the music business lacked faith in her ability to be successful as a female artiste.

Savage made this known on the new episode of African Voices, a programme which airs on CNN.

“When I first moved to Nigeria, I got a lot of people discouraging me about being a female artist, and a lot of people didn’t want to invest money or time because they didn’t think I was lucrative…. Female artists are huge in other parts of the world. It shouldn’t be different in Africa.”

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She said her decision to move back to Nigeria from Los Angeles, US, was motivated by the constant interest in her roots by Americans.

“I worked with a lot of people, and they would be interested by my name… ‘Where’s that from?’ I’d say it’s Nigerian, West African, and they’d say, ‘You’re African?’ and fascinated that I was straight from the Motherland.”

The fascination of her collaborators in the “motherland” gave her an epiphany, Tiwa Savage explained.

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“This was a lightbulb moment. These people were interested in Africa, and here I was running from it.”



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