“…At the same time, Nigeria’s military ruler tried to gain the upper hand in this field of contention by organising a two-million-person march, a public mega-event that also deployed “artistic resources by the state in the search for hegemony” (Olukotun, 2002: 209). Other scholars have pointed to similar dynamics in countries such as Nigeria in the 1970s (Labinjoh, 1982; Langley, 2010; Sithole, 2012), Zimbabwe (Eyre, 2001), Tanzania (Englert, 2008b; Reuster-Jahn, 2008), Ivory Coast (Schumann, 2013, Schumann, 2015), Angola (Moorman, 2014), Kenya (Mutonya, 2004), Cameroon (Nyamnjoh and Fokwang, 2005), and Uganda (Schneidermann, 2014a; Schneidermann and Diallo, 2016). Schumann (2013) has illustrated that a government’s strategy towards musicians can also shift from co-optation to repression once musicians are no longer considered a necessary tool with which to legitimise its rule.…”