You’ve probably been there before.

One day, you鈥檙e streaming music, then you remember that jam way back you haven鈥檛 heard in years. So you go to the search tab on your Apple Music or Spotify, enter the song title and voila, nothing dey there.
This is usually when you begin to doubt your childhood. You wonder all those memories were just uploaded to your brain and Wande Coal鈥檚 鈥淵ou Bad鈥 never really happened. But that鈥檚 not why we鈥檙e here.
Welcome to the world of streaming music, where for a small fee, every song is just a couple clicks away, (except, in this case, the one you actually want to listen to).
You know that infamous story about the record industry鈥檚 collapse and the rise of streaming (pronounce: Apple鈥檚 iTunes) that started in 2009?
Well, streaming is pretty much the main reason music has broken borders, become profitable again and dominated culture in the last few years.
But iTunes wasn’t available in Nigeria until 2013.
Spotify, that best friend that knows the music you like, isn鈥檛 available in Nigeria 11 years after it launched. Boys have their ways of course.
And what they often found was that there were certain classics missing from these libraries.
Here are some that we all have noticed and we just really want to listen to because we paid money for it and whatnot (obvs, this doesn鈥檛 apply to Spotify users).
Wande Coal – You Bad

Too many games of PES 09 played to this album. Too many hopes lifted on dancefloors covered in sweat and (sometimes) cheap liquor. Too many drives home, along with conversations about Wande Coal was the goat.
As far as we know, this album, Wande鈥檚 first and only project under Mo鈥 Hits, is tied up under the terms of his contract with Don Jazzy鈥檚 team. There鈥檚 also some talk about samples that turned out too difficult to clear.
Too bad.
听
听
SDC – Clone Wars 3: The Recession

After years of doing the deal, Nigeria鈥檚 most fearsome duo is finally getting their respect. But one worries that the generation vioa alte hooks on 鈥淧almwine Music鈥 is missing a vital part of the puzzle 鈥 Clone Wars, particularly the third instalment of the series.
Yes. It鈥檚 a mixtape. Yes. It鈥檚 on Soundcloud. But considering that Clone Wars IV is available on Apple Music, the lines begin to get blurred. Surely, it can鈥檛 be too much to ask.
MI Abaga – Illegal Music 2

The few times I鈥檝e met the rapper who soundtracked my late teens, I鈥檝e often joked that this is the album where he decided to work with every young artiste he liked at the time. He denies it every time.
As far as Nigerian rap albums go, this was a passing of the baton, unlike anything before it. Today鈥檚 OGs built around an MI in his prime. This is where you can get Boogey as Brain, and Yung6ix as a Lil Wayne re-incarnate.
I know he said 鈥淚llegal Music Free, No Mason鈥 on the opening track. But you can鈥檛 hide history.
Lagbaja – His Entire Bl**dy Discography

The masked one. Omo baba m鈥檜ko m鈥檜ko. Forebearer of a whole generation of pop acts who today skirt that thing like between pop and indigenous music.
If you鈥檙e lucky, your parents (first generation Lagos baby boys and girls) introduced you to Lagbaja鈥檚 music as a toddler.
Or you heard him on the television, on videotapes of Lekki Sunsplash or on the radio. Either way, Lagbaja was a staple of a generation鈥檚 childhood. Sadly, a generation may never get to hear classics like 鈥淎fricalypso鈥.
2face Idibia – Grass 2 Grace

The greatest pop musician in Nigerian history. 2baba has been a staple of our lives for god knows along. He鈥檚 probably not a vampire but 2face and his music have stayed young since we were kids.
SO CAN SOMEONE EXPLAIN I CAN鈥漈 LISTEN TO 鈥淕RASS TO GRACE鈥 ON APPLE MUSIC?
The second chapter of his journey post-Plantashun Boyz is missing from pretty much every music streaming site. That means classics like 鈥淔or Instance鈥, 鈥淥ne Love鈥 and 鈥淣o Shaking鈥 exist largely in your memory.
WHAT. THE. HELL. MAN.




