Falz Drops “Ole,” Blasting Nigerian Leaders Over Insecurity and Hardship

Date:

Falz has released a hard-hitting new song titled “Ole,” taking direct aim at Nigerian leaders over insecurity, corruption and economic hardship. The track continues the rapper’s long tradition of using music as social commentary.

Nigerian rapper Falz who released the protest song Ole

A protest song with a sharp message

“Ole,” which means “thief” in Yoruba, channels public frustration over governance and rising hardship. Falz uses pointed lyrics and his trademark wit to challenge leaders he accuses of failing ordinary Nigerians.

The song lands at a moment of heightened anxiety over insecurity, including high-profile abductions, and growing anger over the cost of living. For many listeners, it gives voice to widely shared grievances.

Falz, the activist artist

Falz, son of human rights lawyer Femi Falana, has built a reputation as one of Nigeria’s most socially conscious musicians. Songs like “This Is Nigeria,” “Talk” and “Johnny” have repeatedly tackled corruption, injustice and insecurity.

“Ole” fits squarely within that body of work. Rather than chasing only commercial appeal, Falz again positions himself as a commentator willing to confront power through his art.

Why it strikes a chord

Protest music has a deep history in Nigeria, from Fela Kuti onwards, and Falz draws on that lineage. By naming hardship and insecurity directly, he taps into emotions many Nigerians are feeling right now.

Online, the song sparked strong reactions, with listeners praising its boldness and circulating its sharpest lines. That engagement is part of how protest songs build influence beyond the charts.

Art as accountability

“Ole” is a reminder that Nigerian artists often double as critics of those in power. Whether or not it changes policy, it keeps difficult conversations in the public eye.

For Falz, the goal appears unchanged: to entertain while holding leaders to account, and to make sure ordinary people’s frustrations are heard.

Christopher
Christopher
I cover music at Viorah TV, focusing on artists, releases, industry trends, and music culture. My content explores how sound, creativity, and performance shape the global music landscape.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Share post:

Subscribe

Popular

More like this
Related

Stakeholders Warn Against Overturning Taraba APC Primary

Table of ContentsWhat stakeholders said about the Taraba APC primaryA contested resultWider tension in Taraba APCWhy it mattersHow primary disputes unfold Stakeholders have warned against...

Yelwata Memorial: First Monument to Victims Unveiled in Benue

Table of ContentsWhat the Yelwata memorial commemoratesNames set in stoneA contested and sensitive contextRemembrance and accountabilityWhy it matters A Yelwata memorial has been unveiled in...

Cross River Coffee Drive Trains Farmers for Seedling Rollout

Table of ContentsInside the Cross River Coffee PlanTraining Comes FirstReviving a Lost CropWhy the Cross River Coffee Revival MattersWhat Farmers Should Expect Cross River coffee...

Nigeria-UK Trade Talks Target £1.2bn Data Gap

Table of ContentsWhat the Nigeria-UK trade gap is aboutCustoms cooperation at the centreWhat exporters stand to gainWhy it matters Nigeria-UK trade officials are moving to...