Eedris Abdulkareem Punished Me, He Never Recognised Me – Timaya
Eedris Abdulkareem had granted a couple of interviews in which he claimed he made Timaya and nurtured him to be the star he is now.
But the self-acclaimed Egberipapa 1 of Bayelsa wasn’t smiling at all when Fim's Multimedia Magazine asked him to react to Eedris’ claim. He thundered,
“When I was with Eedris
Abdulkareem, did he give
me due recognition? Eedris
did not make me who I am
today. I was the one that went
to meet Eedris in his house. He
never treated me well. I would
stay at the front of his gate from
morning till night and he would
send somebody to tell me to
come back after a week.
When I returned the following week, he would not see me. I used my money to pay to attend his shows even though I was his band member. I was not celebrated.
The only money Eedris paid
me in his life was N1, 000
and it was after we had the
Kuramo Beach show. That was
nothing compared to the money
I had been spending on
transport. I was not bothered
because I wanted a platform
and I was learning.
Like I always tell people, whatever you want in life, you just need to make sacrifice. Even if they feed you poop, you are not going to eat it forever. I gained a lot from that experience. It was through him that I met Sound Sultan and a lot of
people.
Eedris and I don’t do the same
kind of music, so he does not influence me musically. I have never been in a studio where he was recording before and he never gave me that opportunity, so how did I learn anything from him,” he queried.
Timaya however admitted that
he learnt one or two things from
Eedris which helped him in life.
“One major thing I learnt from him was his stage performance. He is a lion when he is on stage, he is a super performer and I give that to him. I learnt that from him. For me to have admitted that I was his back-up singer was my way of giving him
due recognition because he did not see me in that light. I could have said I was never with him but because I respect him, I opened up.
There is no way I am going to
write my story without putting
his name.He is still my boss. If
I am in a show and Isee him,
I would prostrate for him.
“It was so bad that he did not even know my name then, he referred to me as Bayelsa boy. If he was going for a show outside Lagos, nobody would tell me. I would eventually know and use my money to transport myself there. I would call his boys and they would tell me the hotel they were lodging and I would take a bike to meet them. In his whole crew, who is better now? I was eager to make it,” he said.
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