A Kitchener dad-daughter team creates songs for July 1. This year's O Canada has a South African flavour
CBC
Nigerian-born musician-songwriter Tolzee hopes a new song he has released for Canada Day will help younger Nigerians fall in love with the Canadian national anthem.
Tolzee, who lives in Kitchener, Ont., with his family, said releasing a new song on July 1 is his way of contributing to the country he now calls home.
"I believe it's easy to learn things when it's in melodies and rhythms," Tolzee said on CBC Kitchener-Waterloo's The Morning Edition.
Releasing a new song on Canada Day has become an annual tradition for the musician, since 2020. This year's is titled O Canada: amapiano version.
"The theme for this year's song is: we're going back to the Canadian anthem itself because the first year, 2020, was the Canadian anthem and we infused some African beats into it," he said.
"So the African-Nigerian community, they were able to relate with that. This year, we're going back to that but we're making it an amapiano style. Amapiano is a music style that originated from South Africa," he added.
"I just wanted to appeal to the younger generation like the Gen Z, the youth, because they love amapiano a lot."
Tolzee collaborated with his eight-year-old daughter Morolake to produce the songs, saying the experience has helped her discover her strength.
"We did it in 2020 and it was a huge success, and since then, you know, she's never looked back," he said.
For Morolake, working with her father makes her happy because she gets to spend more time with him.
"I like … that we sometimes get to go to different places that we've never been to before in Canada. So it's really fun," Morolake said.
She hopes that by listening to the songs, people will learn "Canada is a good place they could come to."
Tolzee said that as soon as he releases one song, he begins thinking about what the one for the following year should be.
He said there's a theme and goals for each year.