My jewellery are my most expensive fashion items
My jewellery are my most expensive fashion items –Terry G
February 28, 2015
Terry G
Gabriel
Oche Amanyi, popularly known by his stage name Terry G, is a Nigerian
musician and producer, who is widely known for his eccentric
dress-sense, controversial lyrics and awkward identity. He tells Ademola
Olonilua about his career and style in this interview
Why did you decide to go into
sachet (pure) water business when most of your colleagues usually go
into fashion industry if they want to venture into another line of
business away from their career?
I feel water has no enemy and it is a
long term business. I worked so hard for my money and I would not want
to venture into a business that would collapse. It is something I plan
to fall back on later in life. I thank God for my partner, my girlfriend
and the mother of my son, who brought up the idea. I still have other
businesses in mind like opening a bakery and running an orphanage as
well.
Why would you want to open an orphanage?
It is because I want to focus on
abandoned children. Often times, we see new born babies dumped along the
road side or on a refuse dump because their mothers could not take care
of them. I want to take care of such children and they would bear my
surname.
Does it mean you would leave music at some point?
I can never leave music. It is still
music that funds everything. It is just a way of giving back to the
society. I feel I am privileged to be where I am today and we can never
know who is going to be the next leader of this country. Everybody is
very important and I feel abandoned children are normally the ones with
the brightest future if only they have a helping hand. If you look at
most of our leaders today, they were not all from privileged
backgrounds.
You started music from church; do we see you going back to the church to continue your music?
Of course. But I sing both secular and
gospel music too. I feel we are all disciples of God and He knows why He
made the secular music singers more successful. Nevertheless, God is
still involved in my songs and He knows why He is giving us a lot of
fans. The truth is that I perform my gospel songs in churches. There are
reasons why they invite secular musicians to church to perform and it
is because they want us to bring the people from the ‘world’ to the
church. In future, we can still be used by God to change people’s lives.
What is the significance of the bell you normally carry about?
The bell is a wakeup call and I was just
fortunate to be able to create an image for myself. D’banj is known with
his mouth organ and I am known to have a bell. Although I play all the
instruments, I can’t always carry them around, even the saxophone. It
could be heavy sometimes. I really wanted to have an instrument that
could be indentified with my brand. After I sang the song, Apako,
something was missing in my mind. There were lots of instruments in my
studio but I reached out for the bell and as I rang it to the song, they
complemented each other. The song became an instant hit and people
began to reckon with the bell. Now I cannot go anywhere without the
bell.
How do you feel when people have a negative perception about you?
It is allowed, it is my image. I like the
comment people make when they see me in real life. Some ask why I allow
my make-up artiste to paint my face in various funny ways while I am
cute in real life and I say it is because I project craziness. It is my
market.
But of all the words, why did you use craziness to portray yourself?
It is because it is my market. Everybody
has their own market. I did not choose this path. The craziness came as a
song and became an attitude. When I sang, Free Madness, I was
not crazy but people accepted the song and I had to play the part. It
was my fans that made me begin to portray myself as a crazy person. As
they accepted the song, I had to play the part of a crazy man just like
the lyrics of the song say. I cannot mount a stage and sing R&B
songs; people would think something is wrong with me. As the song, Free Madness went viral, I had to go mad.
Why do you like being controversial?
It is what sells. I am not the rave-of
–the –moment artiste but I am still very relevant in the industry and it
is because I am controversial. I love the controversy. I like making
people talk.
People are of the opinion that since you became a father, you have calmed down in your lifestyle, do you agree to that?
Yes it is true. Anybody that has a child
must calm down, it is a general thing. Once you have a child, you must
become a responsible man. That is when people would know that the
madness is deliberate and it is just being done to make money. My son is
a British citizen and he is going back to school in London in March.
This is to show people that I know what I am doing. The craziness is
what puts food on my table and money in my bank accounts. There are
people that support and love it.
When do you intend to get married to your ‘baby mama?’
It will happen very soon but it takes
planning and much more. Ironically, I am facing a lot of pressure
regarding marriage but it is not from either of our families. The
pressure is from outsiders. I want to work hard and be stable. I want to
work to the extent that I would not rely on music because I do music
for fun. Everybody knows that she lives with me and I am already living
like a married man.
What influenced your dreadlocks?
I had to look crazy like my music. I had
to look artistic and I believe the dreadlock has a spiritual meaning in
my life. I value it a lot. My style of music would not be interesting
without this hair. As the hair is growing, my future is growing to be
bigger and better; I respect the hair very much. The hair stands for the
craziness when I am on stage. I cannot imagine myself singing on stage
without the dreadlock. It still stands for my brand.
How long have you been keeping it?
I have had it for over seven years.
Do your tattoos have any meaning?
They all mean personal things to me.
There is one that shows a flaming microphone which represents my music.
There is another which is a wise saying.
Don’t they hurt?
They do and that is why I do not have
many on my body. I doubt I would add others to the few I have.
Everything on my body is positive because my children would see them and
they would want to be like me.
Back then, you pierced your entire face, why did you eventually remove the studs on your face?
I stopped because I already set the pace and everybody is piercing now. I will still do something that they will follow.
What is the most expensive fashion item you own?
It is my jewellery but I cannot say the
amount I bought it for security reasons. They are investments and even
my earring is gold.
What kind of clothes do you feel most comfortable in?
I love looking hip-hop. Dressing is a
style and there are so many reasons I am not on a billboard. I will not
cut my hair for any reason neither would I change my brand. I cannot
lose this image because of my fans and I love them so much.
Why do you like wearing bright coloured clothes?
I like flashy colours because of the kind
of shoes I wear. I like blue, red, and green. I like colours a lot but I
do not like pink. I believe pink and purple are colours for
homosexuals.
What fashion item can you not leave home without?
That would be my jewellery. They call me Mr. Bling Bling, I started it.
What is the biggest fashion mistake you have made?
There was a time I put different colours
on my hair at once. My hair was multi-coloured and I looked like a
masquerade. It had yellow, green and red. That was a big fashion regret
but I just wanted people to talk about my brand. I just started out back
then.
Since you portray craziness with your brand, can you do that hairstyle again?
Never, God forbids.
good one
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