How Mainland Block Party Is Taking Afrobeats Global
Anyone familiar with Lagos knows itâs famously split in two. The Island, home to upscale neighborhoods and trendy spots, is seen as the cityâs most desirable area. The Mainland, where most Lagosians live, is rich in culture but often dismissed for its lack of polish. When the Mainland Block Party launched in 2018, its founders set out to shift that perception by throwing the coolest party youâve ever attended.
âWe just wanted to make sure that people understood that living on the Mainland doesnât mean that youâre ratchet or doesnât mean that it canât be safe,â says Rebecca Momah, the Deputy Team Lead of the organization. âPeople can also have fun on the Mainland. The Block Party was built on community, and we made sure everybody felt welcomeâ.
Ever since the initial Block Party in Ikeja, Lagosâ capital, its relevance has stretched beyond mainland Lagos to other parts of Africa and even the world. Itâs organized a nationwide tour with ODUMODUBLVCK, been headlined by Davido, and now, itâs hosting a show in New York City. This show is in collaboration with OkayAfrica as part of the platformâs 15th anniversary celebrations. Although scene-defining, the wins of the Mainland Block Party reveal essential lessons on how to build and retain community.
âEvery new Block Party is a new reason to show people why weâre the ones,â says Tobi Mohammed, co-founder of Mainland Block Party. âAt some point, it started to feel like weâre loved, and I felt that shift, of course, being able to sell tickets into thousands or multiples of hundreds, in cities that we didnât start from. Itâs a blessing itself. People have spent more and didnât have those results. I would say that we kinda have this mindset of âfight for it, and just be grateful about it when you win.â So every endeavor feels new.â
Constant reinvention has been a defining mark of Block Party. âTo earn a new city or be grounded in that city,â says Mohammed, in description of what theyâre always looking to achieve. With Mainland Block Party sharing the same founders as the music agency Plug NG â Asa Asika and Bizzle Osikoya â thereâs strong incentive to burrow into deeper levels of youth culture, with Mohammed once revealing that entertainment chose him, and before working in the scene, he used to watch these men he now calls partners on-screen, with utmost respect for what theyâre doing to uplift what he described as âcoolness currency.â
âTheyâre new things every time,â says Momah about the lessons theyâve gotten from organizing the events. âItâs not the same every time; every event is dynamic in its own way. The biggest lesson there for me is, youâre a master at this, but thereâs also room for you to learn. You canât say you know it all [about] doing events; you have to give yourself room to grow, you have to give yourself room to listen, you have to give yourself room to take feedback.â
âDigital is the new coal,â infers Mohammed, âso you have to reinvent yourself and ask yourself how you can always catch up on that wave.â Reiterating the need to keep an open perspective, their words show how Mainland Block Party has been able to keep afloat in an ever-shifting industry, becoming a sort of precursor to Lagosâ rave scene that has since become a strong feature of the cityâs nightlife and an influencer of homegrown Afrobeats.
For Mainland Block Party, itâs been a steady journey towards global domination, and the New York event is the next phase of their phenomenal run. Before now, theyâve had two intercontinental events, one in London and the other in the U.S., headlined by Afro rap artist Zlatan. But that was a pop-up, not really an all-out show, and with the New York show, theyâre bringing the flamboyant ODUMODUBLVCK to imprint the Afrobeats experience on that stage.
âExpensive o,â jokes Mohammed when asked about how they have gone about organizing the New York Block Party event. âJust look at it as a newborn baby trying to find their feet in this world,â says Momah. âThatâs just how to crown the entire process. So weâre in a new place, new city, new people; people behave differently there, inasmuch as theyâre Nigerians there, obviously, weâre not only trying to cater to the Nigerian audience. Weâre trying to conquer globally; itâs not been easy, but we thank God. We thank God that we have good heads on our shoulders. And weâre open to partnershipsâI feel like the key thing that has helped so far in this journey are collaborations.â
Apart from collaborations with platforms like OkayAfrica, Mohammed says team members on the ground form part of the community it takes âto raise a great child,â like Block Party.
With another U.S. event planned with DJ Maphorisa and a new segment of their Lagos party titled Respect the DJ, itâs very much clear that the Block Party intends to take over the world. Surely they have the required toolsâitâs only a matter of time.

