By the time December 2022 swung around, there was very little doubt that YBNL newcomer Asake had been the most propulsive voice in Afropop in a year that had seen the genre turn decisively on its head. Asakeβs run from earlier in the year, after the breakout of his Olamide-assisted βOmo Opeβ led to the release of his enchanting debut album Mr. Money With the Vibe, established crowded vocals, futuristic percussive elements and iridescent amapiano-Fuji fusions as the new framework of Afropop while minting hits like βSungbaβ, Terminatorβ, βPeace Be Unto Youβ and βOrganiseβ.
Keen to keep his momentum going and further the narrative of his blistering come-up, Asakeβs sophomore album, Work of Art, coming less than a year after his debut, presents an artist operating at a nearly peerless level. With production still majorly helmed by Magicsticks, the template remains largely the same, but the scale of ambition is stratospheric as Asake aims to present his music as high art. Switching between effervescent live arrangements, jaunty hip-hop-adjacent beats and classic African samples, the air on Work of Art is celebratory and zestful, with the singerβs compelling blend of Yoruba panegyrics and urban slang adding colour to songs like βSunshineβ and βBasquiatβ. In a throwback to his Ololade Asake EP, label boss Olamide makes the only guest appearance here, contributing a standout verse on βAmapianoβ. Still, mostly alone, Asake continues to take inspiration from his journey, spreading himself far and wide to channel bleary-eyed optimism on βLonely at the Topβ and hope on βI Believeβ. Across these 14 songs, Asake invites us into his new reality and tells his story in vivid Technicolor.