Current:Home > Markets'Struggler' is Genesis Owusu's bold follow-up to his hit debut album -FutureFinance
'Struggler' is Genesis Owusu's bold follow-up to his hit debut album
View
Date:2025-04-27 12:48:51
A funny thing happened on Australia's music scene a couple of years ago. Genesis Owusu was a brand new artist dropping his debut album, Smiling With No Teeth. The album, his first full-length LP, started winning awards. And not just one or two. Owusu eventually won practically ALL the music awards Australia had available: The Aria, the Australian Music Prize, the Rolling Stone Australia Award, the Air Awards...you get the idea.
But Genesis Owusu wasn't about to rest on his laurels.
With his second LP — Struggler — Owusu takes an ambitious step forward. It's a concept album revolving around the tortured life of a cockroach — but Owusu treats this roach's existence as a sort of epic narrative, the kind that would naturally include a dialogue with the almighty.
"It's an album that was definitely framed by the last few years of this chaotic and absurd world that we've all lived in," Owusu told Morning Edition's A Martinez. "Being in Australia, we suffered extremely crazy bushfires and then hailstorms, and then we all went through COVID together. Every day through that, we all still got up and put on our ties and kept on trucking."
For Owusu, the roach metaphor captures the sometimes helpless feeling of persevering against overwhelming forces. On the song "The Roach," his protagonist exclaims, "I'm a roach, don't knock me on my back/ Legs in the air, hope God don't attack."
Owusu says the God figure stands in for "these huge, unrelenting, uncontrollable forces that, by every logical means, should have crushed us a long time ago. But for some reason, somehow, someway, we just keep on roaching to live another day."
Or as his protagonist puts it in the song "Stay Blessed:" "Now we fill the ground/ If you kill me now, you gon' deal with Roach number two!"
Genesis Owusu was born Kofi Owusu-Ansah to parents who moved the family from west Africa to Australia when he was still a toddler. He says the move immediately positioned him as an outsider. "I had never met white people. White people had never met me. People expected me to walk a different way, talk a different way. Because I guess back then, the only Black people that a lot of Australians had knowledge of at the time was 50 Cent and Eddie Murphy. So I was, like, either like the gangster or the comedian, and I didn't really fit into either of those roles. So I had to learn how to be myself from a young age."
To placate his parents, Owusu studied journalism at university. but he always knew that music was his true calling. "My parents flew all the way from from Ghana to give me and my brother an education. And they're very proud of what we do now [his brother, Kojo, is also a musician]. But they were definitely under the general immigrant mentality of: our sons are going to be doctors, lawyers, engineers. So I think I went to [university] to, you know, give them a little gift and show them that I appreciate their efforts."
His debut album decisively conquered his adopted country — and yes, won his parents' approval. Now, with Struggler, Owusu's set his sights on the rest of the world. "I've proved all I needed to prove to Australia, and now I'm just making what's genuine and what's authentic."
veryGood! (547)
Related
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Excellence Vanguard Wealth Business School: The Investment Legend of Milton Reese
- Oklahoma vs Tennessee score: Josh Heupel, Vols win SEC opener vs Sooners
- Justin Herbert injury update: Chargers QB reinjures ankle in Week 3
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Unique Advantages of NAS Community — Unlock Your Path to Wealth
- Week 3 fantasy football rankings: PPR, half-PPR and standard leagues
- Running back Mercury Morris, member of 'perfect' 1972 Dolphins, dies at 77
- Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
- Unique Advantages of NAS Community — Unlock Your Path to Wealth
Ranking
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- For Christopher Reeve's son Will, grief never dies, but 'healing is possible'
- Alaska Airlines grounds flights at Seattle briefly due to tech outage
- 'The Substance' stars discuss that 'beautiful' bloody finale (spoilers!)
- Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
- 'How did we get here?' NASA hopes 'artificial star' can teach us more about the universe
- Nick Cannon Shares One Regret After Insuring His Manhood for $10 Million
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Lace Up
Recommendation
Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
Families from Tennessee to California seek humanitarian parole for adopted children in Haiti
Climate change leaves some migrating birds 'out of sync' and hungry
Trial in daytime ambush of rapper Young Dolph 3 years ago to begin in Memphis
Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
In Ohio, drought and shifting weather patterns affect North America’s largest native fruit
Proof Gisele Bündchen's Boyfriend Joaquim Valente Is Bonding With Her and Tom Brady's Kids
Real Housewives of Beverly Hills’ Annemarie Wiley Discovers Tumors on Gallbladder