“They claim I worship the devil” – Singer Rema

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  • Rema has shared the weirdest rumour he has ever read about himself online.
  • The singer says being labeled “a devil worshiper” was the weirdest allegation ever spread about him.
  • Rema appeared on a recent episode of the ‘Kids Take Over’ podcast.
“I started the EP trend, everyone followed” – Singer Rema claims

Divine Ikubor, also known as Rema, a Nigerian singer, has shared the weirdest rumour he has ever read about himself online.


The ‘Calm Down’ singer says being labeled “a devil worshiper” was the weirdest allegation ever spread about him.

Rema appeared on a recent episode of the ‘Kids Take Over’ podcast.

The host asked: “What’s the most crazy, untrue thing that you’ve seen online about you?”

Rema replied: “They say worship the devil [laughs]. It’s crazy. I didn’t respond to it because it is not important. It’s a waste of time.”

The artist clarified that the symbols he chose to communicate his art were Edo culture, not diabolical.

Rema also discussed collaborating with Canadian superstar Drake in 2020 on his leaked song ‘Mention Me’.

“I’m happy to work with a legend like Drake. I feel like we are going to make a very huge song if we take our time to build something very strong,” he said.

In other news, ID Cabasa, a veteran Nigerian music producer, has disputed Jamaican reggae icon Buju Banton’s criticism of Afrobeats.

In August, Banton labelled Afrobeats as a “shallow and unsubstantial music genre,” claiming that despite its global popularity, it fails to highlight Africa’s challenges.

Cabasa told media during the late preacher Denis Joseph Slattery’s funeral lecture in Lagos on Thursday that the Jamaican singer does not comprehend the vocabulary or style of Afrobeat.

According to him: “Buju Banton does not understand the genre. Can he speak our language? No.

“When you go online, Nigerians are the most sarcastic people in the world. So when you don’t understand our sarcasm and how we tell our stories, you will think there is no story to it.

“Now, these guys present the truth in a very simple way. And because your (Banton) own generation sang and you were saying so many things, you think you are deeper than them.

“So, these guys, they say stuff. You listen to Burna, BNXN, that we call Buju. You listen to Olamide and Asake. Are you going to tell me that there’s no substance in what Asake is doing?

“That you don’t understand a lot doesn’t mean that you should just criticise it. I think he is falling so much in love with the beat, which was why he said what he said.”

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