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  • 10 of the Best Female Vocalists in Afrobeats

    The voices that makes you pause mid-song and check who is singing again.

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    We all love a good debate about who鈥檚 the greatest this or the GOAT that, but when it comes to female vocalists in Afrobeats, the conversation is long overdue. This isn鈥檛 only about who has the most hits or whose song was on your Instagram story last week. This is about who can sing, has the voice that makes you pause mid-song and check who is singing again.

    To draw up this list, I used a scoring framework across ten metrics: vocal ability, cultural impact, commercial success, consistency and longevity, live performance, songwriting and artistry, awards and recognition, international reach, peer and critical acclaim, and fan base and engagement. Every artist was scored according to this metric and the weighted total determined the final ranking.

    10. Qing Madi

    Qing Madi was born in 2006. Let that sink in. By 2022, her breakout single 鈥淪ee Finish鈥 had gone viral on TikTok and was topping Apple Music charts in Nigeria and Uganda. 鈥淥le鈥, featuring BNXN, confirmed this wasn鈥檛 a lucky break. Apple Music inducted her into its 2024 Rising Class alongside Tyla, Spotify named her an EQUAL Africa Artist, and she won The Headies Award for Songwriter of the Year in 2025. At 18.

    Her debut album, I Am the Blueprint, spans songs she wrote as early as 14. The deluxe edition featured a remix of 鈥淰ision鈥 with Chl枚e Bailey and collaborations with Kizz Daniel. Her longevity score is low for the obvious reason that she鈥檚 just getting started. But everything about her trajectory says this list will look very different in five years.

    9. Chidinma

    Chidinma Ekile walked into the Project Fame West Africa audition in 2010 as one of 8,000 hopefuls and walked out as the winner. 鈥淜edike,鈥 her first hit song, became her signature, and the nickname Miss Kedike stuck. It becomes more of a thing like, 鈥渢his babe can sing.鈥 With her angelic voice, she racked up hit after hit: 鈥淓mi Ni Baller,鈥 鈥淔allen in Love,鈥 鈥淥h Baby鈥 with Flavour and 鈥淛ankoliko鈥 with Sound Sultan.

    In May 2021, she announced she was leaving secular music entirely to focus on gospel music and ministry. She signed with EeZee Concepts and released worship tracks like 鈥淛ehovah Overdo鈥 and 鈥淜o S鈥橭ba Bire鈥, which have earned her a new audience without erasing what she built before. Whether Chidinma is singing about love or leading worship, her voice remains the same. She鈥檚 versatile and brave enough to use her voice on their own terms.



    8. Seyi Shay

    By 14, Seyi Shey was touring the world with the London Community Gospel Choir. She signed a deal with a label affiliated with George Martin (the man who produced The Beatles), joined the group From Above managed by Mathew Knowles, supported Beyonc茅 on her 鈥淚 Am鈥︹ world tour, and wrote songs for Mel C of the Spice Girls. She did all these before most Nigerians even knew her name.

    When she relocated to Nigeria in 2011, 鈥淚rawo鈥 earned her the Next Rated nomination at The Headies 2013. Her debut album, Seyi or Shay, features Wizkid, Flavour, and Femi Kuti. She has also released songs with gripping vocal moments such as 鈥淩ight Now,鈥 鈥淵olo Yolo,鈥 and 鈥淎ir Brush鈥, which are relatively popular. She later served as a judge on Nigerian Idol. She might be on a (probably deliberate) hiatus from the spotlight, but she isn鈥檛 forgotten, and her talent remains undeniable.

    7. Omawumi

    Omawumi walked out of Idols West Africa in 2007 as first runner-up, and from that moment, it was clear she wouldn鈥檛 be easily forgotten. 鈥淚n the Music鈥 shows off her vocal dexterity; 鈥淚f You Ask Me鈥 is one of the most quoted lines in Nigerian pop culture. 鈥淢egbele鈥 showcases the soulful, roots-oriented side of her artistry. Her voice effortlessly pulls from highlife, soul and Afrobeats.

    Like Waje, Omawumi鈥檚 talent far exceeds her commercial metrics. She has won The Headies Award for Best R&B/Pop Album, acted in films like The Bling Lagosians, and her live performances consistently leave audiences genuinely moved. But Omawumi is a star because of her voice. She remains one of the most genuinely gifted vocalists Afrobeats has ever produced.

    6. Niniola

    Niniola Apata is the queen of the Afro-house crossover, and nobody else is even close. She came through Project Fame West Africa in 2013, and that live vocal training show. Niniola鈥檚 voice is commanding. 鈥淢aradona鈥, produced by Sarz, is a dancefloor hit with a vocal performance that鈥檚 appealing and seductive. The track鈥檚 success led to a remix by DJ Snake, which boosted her international profile. Her albums This Is Me and Colours and Sounds showcase a serious range, from the uptempo madness of 鈥淏oda Sodiq鈥 to smoother, introspective moments like.

    While most female Afrobeats artists operated in the R&B-pop lane, Niniola took a hard left into house music, creating a sound that belongs entirely to her.


    READ NEXT: 10 of the Best Nigerian Albums With No Skips


    5. Waje

    If we鈥檙e talking about vocal power that induces goosebumps, Waje is there. Her range is staggering, her control is surgical, and so is her ability to carry emotion through a note or two. If you鈥檙e in doubt, listen to 鈥淪o Inspired鈥 or 鈥淚 Wish鈥 and feel something. Her work on 鈥淩ight Here鈥 with 2Baba and solo tracks like 鈥淐oco Baby鈥 show her versatility. Waje is a vocalist鈥檚 vocalist.

    Though Waje has been famously underserved by the commercial side of the industry, and she has spoken openly about considering quitting music, she remains respected and revered. She coached on The Voice Nigeria, mentoring the next generation, and remains one of the artists to call when there鈥檚 a need for a voice that can carry a chorus.

    4. Simi

    Simi鈥檚 voice is unmistakable. There鈥檚 a sweetness and clarity to her voice that鈥檚 difficult to replicate. She鈥檚 the kind of artist who gets you groovy with her melodies and also the kind you fully appreciate, especially when you sit down and actually listen. Her lyricism carries a specificity that sets her apart. The mastery of language and the relatability of an average Nigerian person鈥檚 romantic experience are impressive. 鈥淛oromi,鈥 鈥淛AMB Question,鈥 and 鈥淪mile for Me鈥 are songs she has written about love and daily life with a tenderness that makes you feel like she鈥檚 talking directly to you. And it doesn鈥檛 stop here.

    鈥淒uduke,鈥 the lullaby she wrote for her unborn daughter, became one of Nigeria鈥檚 most-streamed songs of that year, and it crossed over to audiences all over the world. Simi might not shout the loudest among her peers, but when she sings, everybody pays attention.

    3. Ayra Starr

    Ayra Starr didn鈥檛 creep into the conversation when she arrived at the Afrobeats scene in 2019; she kicked the door in. Her voice is husky, textured, and almost raspy, yet soft when the song calls for it. From good time and party to women empowerment to love and longing to coming-of-age, introspection and grief, she has songs with diverse themes that challenge her vocals in different tones. But the Sabi Girl sauce is always there. Songs like 鈥淎way鈥, 鈥淏loody Samaritan,鈥 鈥淪ability,鈥 鈥淥run鈥 and 鈥淗ot Body鈥 confirm she鈥檚 one hell of a singer.

    Her hit single 鈥淩ush鈥 made her the youngest African female artist to surpass 100 million YouTube views. A Grammy nomination, collaborations with Kelly Rowland and Wizkid, and international tours. All of this, while still in the early chapters of her career, is impressive. Her longevity score is naturally lower, but everything else is stacking up at a pace that should terrify every other artist on this list. If she sustains this trajectory, the number one spot will be a possibility.


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    2. Asa

    Asa鈥檚 catalogue is evidence that the singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist doesn鈥檛 oversing or make music only for hits. She sits inside the song and lets every word do its work. 鈥淛ailer,鈥 on a deeper look, is a protest song, but disguised as a folk ballad, and it鈥檚 a national hit. From 鈥淏e My Man鈥 to 鈥淔ire on the Mountain鈥 to 鈥淪atan Be Gone鈥, every song is a story.

    She writes everything she sings, her albums are conceptually rich, and her live performances are legendary. She has won France鈥檚 Prix Constantin, performed on the biggest stages in Europe and Africa, and maintained a career spanning nearly two decades without controversy. When you think of Asa, she鈥檚 a voice and an icon of substance that always finds its audience.

    1. Tiwa Savage

    Tiwa Savage鈥檚 voice is warm, honeyed and flexible. She can rock Afrobeats, R&B, pop, dancehall and street-hop like the MOTHER that she is. She鈥檚 the Queen of Afrobeats, and it’s not only because she鈥檚 been around for a minute. Before she became a household name, she was writing songs, backing up Whitney Houston, and training at Berklee College of Music. From 鈥淜ele Kele Love鈥 to 鈥淎ll Over鈥 to 鈥淪omebody鈥檚 Son鈥 with Brandy, and even landing on Beyonc茅鈥檚 The Lion King: The Gift, Tiwa has shown a remarkable ability to evolve without ever losing the essence that makes her voice special.

    Over a decade-plus of relevance in Afrobeats, she has headlined festivals, won Headies and MTV Africa Music Awards, and built a global fan base. In terms of the voice, the business, the longevity and cultural weight, nobody has done it longer or more consistently than her.


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