Saturday 12 October 2013

ASSU Made Me Take Part In Project Fame —-Olawale Ojo winner of the MTN Project Fame (Season 6)


Olawale Ayodele Ojo, winner of the MTN Project Fame (Season 6), tells US about his experience in the competition and other issues
Q: Shortly after you were announced winner of the MTN project Fame, you
said your mind was still blank to express how you felt. It is more than 48
hours now, so how are you feeling?
A: I feel blessed. I feel that everything around just worked for me this season
because I didn’t really expect to come out as the winner this season. It’s
about God because I don’t believe there is something I did that others didn’t
do. It was the grace of God and the people that voted for me. I’m really
grateful to all the people that believed in me and voted. I wouldn’t have won
without them. Basically, I feel this is God’s grace because at a point in the
competition, I was almost evicted, so when you look at everything from
beginning to the end, you will realise that it is God’s grace.
Q: If you didn’t envisage winning the competition, what was your plan when
you registered to participate at the auditions?
A: I came up to register when ASUU was on strike, and this was my first time to
participate in a music competition. I didn’t really come with too much
determination, but anywhere I find myself, I always try to give  my best in all
I do. So, when I got into the academy, I didn’t have a choice than to give my
best for everything.
Q: So ASUU strike actually pushed you to Project Fame?
A: Yes, but I believe that is how God wants it to be. The strike is a blessing in
disguise for me.
Q: Who is Olawale?
A: I am a normal guy and like I said, I am into sales and repairs of phones and
laptops, and I do that in school just to make some money. But I love music
so much. I play the piano, drums and I sing in my church choir. I was the
music director of my church choir for two years before I left for school.
Basically, that’s just me. My life has just been music and business. I just
try to add value to myself.
Q: Tell us more about your experience as a phone and laptop repairer?
A: I started as a lover of gadgets because I know much about gadgets. Like
some people will call me pimp. I use to pimp their phones. It was expensive
then to put some media applications like Bible on phones. It was a luxury
then, and that was what I was actually doing. I later graduated into selling
phones. I started knowing the problems that are peculiar with some phones
and how to fix them. I didn’t really go for any special training though. I am
not saying that I am very good at repairs, I do it basically based on the
experience I have with phones.
Q: How lucrative was the business, and did you sponsor yourself to school
with it?
A: I didn’t sponsor myself to school, my parents did that. But there are some
extra money needed in school that you can’t ask your parents; that was the
type of money I was making. At times, I feel like taking some
responsibilities myself, so I need to get extra cash.
As a millionaire now, how do you intend to cope with your colleagues in
school when the ASUU strike is over? Will there be any pressure on you?
A: I think the only change is that I meet a lot of people and people know me
now. I wasn’t this popular, but now I am popular. I think that is just the
difference. I am still Olawale. The only thing different is just that I am now
popular and I have to be more conscious of my career now because I have to
work more on my songs. I have to make sure I don’t disappoint my fans out
there. The work has changed.
Q: Project Fame had produced five previous winners before you. What are your
plans to rank among the most successful ones?
Basically, I am sure that those that have won it before didn’t achieve that
because of what they did, but that is God’s plan for them, and I believe that
God’s time is the best; if you come out at the wrong time, then you might
just crash. I am putting everything to God and I will just play my part, work
hard and make sure I write good songs. But everything depends on God. He
knows when He needs me to come out, when people needs to know me. My
music will not be a do-or-die affair. I didn’t bring myself to the Project
Fame academy, God did, and He is able to sustain me.
You sound very religious…
I won’t say that I’m too religious, but at the same time, I believe so much in
God. Looking at my journey from the beginning of the competition to the end,
it has been God. I was almost evicted at a point.
You started from the church as a choir coordinator, and now you are a
winner of the project fame. Are you going to play gospel or secular music?
I’m not doing gospel music, and my personal composition at the Project
Fame finals wasn’t  gospel music. I believe that God created love and dance,
which is not bad for us. I don’t believe that everything should be gospel;
music should be either positive or negative. Even if a secular song has a
message of love, it is good, but there are some music that don’t deliver love,
and I wouldn’t go into such music.
Q: Before the Project Fame competition, how well did you study the Nigerian
music industry?
I am very observant and listen a lot. I don’t really listen to Nigerian music,
but at a point, I realised that my culture is important, so I started listening to
it. I actually wanted to know what they do that make people scream and
shout their names, understand their kind of music and know the type that
sells. For a song to sell, it has to have African trade mark on it, either you
put Yoruba language or you put pidgin English. WizKid, 2Face, P-Square and
others put something of these languages into their music; that is one major
thing I have discovered. With that, their music flows in a way that even a
roadside mechanic can get your message and enjoy it. That is music that
both the rich and poor can listen to.
Q: Are there any Nigerian artistes that you draw inspiration from?
I don’t draw it from one person. I draw experience from different sources, so
I will say they all have their own peculiarity. I am a very flexible person,
and have decided to throw myself open so I can learn a lot. They are all
great, so I will try picking one or two things from each of them and add them
to my own and pray better things will come out of it by God’s grace.
Q: Despite having a good music background before coming to the Project
Fame, what have you learnt in the academy?
I have learnt to have confidence in myself. I sing in church but have not been
in this kind of platform before. Project Fame is my very first experience, the
first time I will appear on TV. At a point, I became nervous. The first time I
came on stage, it was written all over me that this guy is scared, but the
Faculty members worked on me. I really appreciate them. They helped me
manage those weaknesses and now, I’m more confident on stage and
believe in myself, despite the fact that I have a small stature.
Q: What was the most challenging thing you encountered in the academy?
Like I said, I do business, so am used to it. I don’t have problem with my co-
contestants, don’t quarrel, and I don’t get angry easily, so everything was
just fun for me.
Q: While the competition lasted, was there any other contestant you had
feelings for?
None.
Q: You were never close to any of them?
One thing is that throughout the competition, I made sure I wasn’t too close
to one person. Samuel was my birthday mate; Roland’s bed was beside my
bed. As for Immaculate, I learnt from her. But I didn’t really have a favourite.
Q: Was there any contestant’s eviction that really hit you?
Everybody. During the first eviction in the show, people were weeping, but I
wasn’t crying. At a point, some of them were like ‘come on, are you not
human?’ and I told them that this is a competition and it is normal for
people to be evicted. Besides, your crying won’t bring the person back. I
was determined that even if I was evicted, I won’t cry, but I focussed on my
task. Each time anyone gets evicted, I always feel for them, but that is how
it is meant to be.
Q: Since you emerged winner, have you spoken to your girlfriend on phone?
I don’t have a girl friend.
Q: Why?
Nothing, I’m still young.
Q: How old are you?
I’m just 25.
That is not too young to have a girlfriend
I see myself as a young boy. Look at me, do I look like someone that can
maintain a girlfriend?
Q:But you’re now a millionaire. Your level has changed?
It’s not about the level, I’m still Olawale and I don’t look like someone that
can maintain a girlfriend.
Q: Where do you see Olawale in the next few years?
Majorly, I see myself as a very different person, coming into the music
industry with my own originality, and I don’t want to lose it for any reason.
Q: Who is likely to be the first artiste you will work with?
I don’t know. I can’t really predict. Let’s keep our fingers crossed.

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