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Congratulations to host Jad Abumrad and the production teams at Audible, Higher Ground, Western Sound and Talkhouse, who today earned a Peabody Award nomination for the groundbreaking podcast, Fela Kuti: Fear No Man. Celebrated in the category of Arts, this marks the latest honor for three-time Peabody Award-winner Jad Abumrad – creator of Radiolab, More Perfect and Dolly Parton's America – who made his triumphant and long-awaited return to audio with Fela Kuti: Fear No Man. As Abumrad's most daring work to date, the series tells the story of one of music's greatest political awakenings: how a classically trained 'colonial boy' named Fela Kuti traveled to America in search of Africa, only to then return home to Nigeria, transform his sound into a battering ram against the state, and create a new musical language of resistance called Afrobeat. It also wonders: In a world that's on fire, what is the role of art? What can music actually…do? Can a song save a life? Change a law? Topple a president? Get you killed?
Listen to Fela Kuti: Fear No Man, and learn more in Jad Abumrad's conversation with Terry Gross, for a recent episode of Fresh Air
Blending oral history, musicology, deep dive journalism and cutting edge sound design, Fela Kuti: Fear No Man was named the #1 Best Podcast of 2025 by The New Yorker, and one of the best podcasts of the year by The Atlantic, The New York Times, The Economist, The Guardian, Vulture, The Week, Podcast Review and others. It is "a beautiful show about a unique figure in musical history who mixed art with activism," says President Barack Obama, who is featured in the series alongside Ayo Edebiri, Brian Eno, Burna Boy, David Byrne, Flea, Jay-Z, Paul McCartney, Questlove, Santigoldand more than 200 other interviews that Jad Abumrad recorded over three years spent traveling to Lagos, London, Paris and Los Angeles, speaking to Fela Kuti's family, friends, closest collaborators and biggest fans, and asking some of the most prescient and pressing questions of the moment.
Earlier this year, Fela Kuti became the first African artist to be honored by the Recording Academy® with a GRAMMY® Lifetime Achievement Award, which he received alongside Carlos Santana, Chaka Khan, Cher, Paul Simon and Whitney Houston. Kuti's 1976 album Zombie was also inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2025, making history as the first Nigerian album to be inducted. 2026 marks the 50th anniversaries of Zombie, and another seminal album, Expensive Shit, which is featured on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. Plans to honor both recordings by the Fela Kuti Estate and Partisan Records will be announced in the coming months.
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