
Nearly three decades after his death, the unmistakable pulse of Fela Anikulapo-Kuti’s Afrobeat will echo once again on the world’s biggest music stage.
The legendary Nigerian musician, revolutionary bandleader and cultural dissident will be posthumously honoured with a Special Merit Lifetime Achievement Award at the 2026 Grammy Awards, cementing his place not just as a genre pioneer, but as one of the most influential musical figures of the 20th century.
The award will be presented at the Recording Academy’s Special Merit Awards ceremony, scheduled for January 31, 2026, during Grammy Week—one day ahead of the main Grammy Awards night.
In announcing the honourees via Instagram on Friday, the Recording Academy described Fela as the “architect of Afrobeat,” crediting him with creating a sound that reshaped African music and reverberated far beyond the continent.

“An architect of Afrobeat, honoured for a lifetime of influence,” the Academy wrote. “Fela Kuti was a Nigerian musician, producer, arranger, political radical, activist, and the father of Afrobeat.”
Born in 1938, Fela forged Afrobeat in the late 1960s by fusing funk, jazz, salsa, calypso and traditional Yoruba rhythms into a powerful, polyrhythmic sound that was as confrontational as it was danceable. But beyond music, his work served as a vehicle for fearless political commentary, directly challenging corruption, military rule and social injustice in Nigeria.
The Academy underscored the enduring reach of Fela’s legacy, noting that his influence continues to shape contemporary music across borders and generations.
“His influence spans generations, shaping modern Nigerian Afrobeats and inspiring global artists such as Beyoncé, Paul McCartney, and Thom Yorke,” the statement read. “His legacy lives on not only through his music, but through his family, the Kalakuta Museum, and the New Afrika Shrine.”
The recognition places Fela among an elite circle of past Special Merit Award recipients whose work fundamentally altered the musical landscape. Previous honourees include Whitney Houston, Cher, Paul Simon, Chaka Khan, Carlos Santana, Eddie Palmieri, Sylvia Rhone, John Chowning, and Bernie Taupin.
For many observers, the honour represents a long-overdue acknowledgment of Africa’s outsized contribution to global music history, particularly at a time when Afrobeats—descended directly from Fela’s sonic blueprint—has become a dominant global force.
The celebration of Fela’s legacy comes amid continued Grammy attention on Nigerian music. Contemporary Nigerian stars Burna Boy, Davido, Wizkid, Ayra Starr, and Omah Lay are among artists expected to be in contention for awards at the 2026 ceremony, highlighting the genre’s ongoing evolution and international reach.
As the Grammys prepare to honour Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, the moment stands as both a tribute and a reckoning: a recognition that the rebellious spirit who once sang truth to power from Lagos helped shape the sound of modern global music—and that his voice, defiant and immortal, still resonates.