Oyinda is a mysterious figure in the new world. In a time where artists are drawn to viral fame, pop hits and sex, sex, sex, the music Oyinda puts out with it’s husky enchanting tempo and glitchy beats seem more like songs of substance from a musician in pursuit of true artistry, full of layers of sounds and visions.
Not much is known of Oyinda. Glance at her Wikipedia page and it leaves you with little to create a full picture. She keeps it that way hiding underneath her long black mane and metal adorned fingers, letting only her music seep out to the limelight. Her voice is an enigmatic instrument with vocals that neither push nor pull the music, rather lets it swirl into the melody and carries it to the last note like a crowned monarch returning from the battlefield. It’s music that Nina Simone would no doubt be happy to pass her torch to, from beyond the grave. Simone unsurprisingly is someone that greatly inspired Oyinda.
“Nina is Goddess,” Oyinda says her voice filled with admiration, “Listening to her so much definitely influenced me a lot.  I wrote “The Devil is Gonna Keep Me,â after I listened to her nonstop for a month. Thatâs a song that I loosely based off of âStrange Fruit.â Thatâs the vibe that Ninaâs performance of that song just really evokes. I really appreciated her timbre and her tone.”
Oyinda grew up in London by way of Nigeria in a traditional family and she was always expected to go on to be a doctor or a lawyer like most first generation Africans. Music was never a huge part of her upbringing.Â
“Itâs pretty complicated. I donât come from a musical family. I didnât grow up with a lot of records or variety of [music] being played in the house. It was mostly like, the three CDs my mum was listening to, or maybe kids radio or Disney movies or what Iâd watch on TV. Which is probably why Iâm so influenced by film scoring because all of the kids shows youâd watch growing up a lot of the mood and everything is influenced by the within music in the show. And shows that I still love today, like Samurai Jack, are all about the music rather than the dialogue. I thought that was really cool.”
Her musical calling came full force when in 2014 she booked her first show, Lollapalooza. The set booking was prompted by only two songs that were released unto the world wide web,”Rush of You” and “What Still Remains,”sending the internet into a frenzy for more music. Since them Oyinda has moved to New York and continues to experiment and work on her craft. We catch up with the brooding beauty to wax poetic about Michelle Obama,  find out the inspirations behind her cine-noir style, her destiny to be in the music industry and maintaining her sense of self.
How do you feel about being in New York?
New York is just kind of that place that is more accessible. You can meet other creatives and explore that different side than what youâre creating yourself. I feel like what I was finding in London was that it was more closed off and more of a scene and exclusivity. I donât think Iâm⊠my personality was with that. Iâm too much of a hermit to try and break through those kinds of boundaries.
 Youâre so stylish and very–you have this kind of branded mystique. I love that you have directed all of your own beautiful and moody music videos. You produced them, you wrote them, and directed them.
I feel like I have a vibe and if people donât get it, then youâre at risk for that male gaze. Or someone elseâs point of view coming across, but it doesnât fit the tone per se. Iâve worked with people who are very collaborative and let me have a more hands on approach. And I do my own styling. Iâve been doing my own styling, I might not forever, but I found it was really important to do as much as I can myself. And itâs a better experience for me too, if I get to explore and figure out what I like and what I donât like and learn different aspects of myself along the way.
Thatâs so important for artists–the male gaze and that different perspective. Itâs really nice when artists are fully immersed in the song and the aesthetics and everything. You can really see that theyâre showing themselves off as an artist. It feels more authentic that way, I think.
Right. Yeah. I think so. I think itâs more personal that way. But, there are ways to collaborate with people. It just becomes⊠at a certain stage itâs less of a risk because people know you as an artist already and they just wanna explore a different side of you as an artist. But where, itâs the earlier stages, people want to project the ideas that they have of you–rather than getting to know you.
And you are kind of in the early stages. It seems like you⊠exploded out of nowhere. It wasnât a very traditional kind of grooming into the music industry.
[laughs] Yeah, no…
What has it been like navigating the industry, putting out a few songs, playing a set, being seen by the booker of Lollapalooza, then booking that festival! People being so excited about your music online and you are so buzzy? Whatâs the whole thing been like for you?
I donât even know how to describe it. I mean. I did a showcase–just two songs–when I got booked for Lollapalooza. It was just very random. It made me extra anxious, and I already deal with anxiety. [laughs] It was an overwhelming experience, but luckily, I rose to the challenge and wrote a bunch of songs for it. I just had fun. It was easier because I was performing with my mates and I feel like having them be a part of what I do just makes me that much more grounded.
I like being able to grow with the people around me. I like it to be like a shared experience. Itâs been really cool to create. Itâs been different to create at someone elseâs pace rather than my own. That has been a struggle. I really like to take my time. And I know itâs the day and age where everything is instant gratification. I just never been with it. [laughs] Iâm a very old soul. I donât know how to keep up with it sometimes. But, itâs fun. Itâs all good.
I know the feeling. I feel like, dealing with facebook and social media–we need to see you now, we wanna hear your music now! Where are you?! What are you doing?! Who are you with?! Who are you dating?! People are so in your face, especially if they like a product that youâre putting out, they really wanna know everything about it. Itâs so easy. You can type in anything and all this stuff comes up. But itâs kind of interesting about you. When youâre trying to do research about you–you type in your name–even your Wikipedia is very mysterious. I think thatâs cool.
[laughs] That’s so funny that I even have one! I havenât even read it yet. I donât even want to open that gate and be like, âWhat?! Oh. Okay.â
So now you are a  public figure. What are your parents think about it? Are they ever like, âOh my god, this is exciting!â?
I mean⊠growing up as a kid, I was always that oddball who likes to hang out with herself and just create my own imaginary playground. I feel like theyâve already–at least my mum–noticed at an early age that I was just one of those creatives. But, she always told me that music was a hobby, so it was really hard for her to let me actually delve into it. And thatâs understandable–coming to a foreign country and not knowing how to navigate those things. And you know, as a kid growing up, you resent that. But now that Iâm older, I understand where she was coming from.
Even now, it was a struggle. But once I booked my first show, which was Lolla–luckily! She was like, âBe a lawyer!âÂ
Thatâs so great. I think thatâs the universe pushing you in this direction and saying, âWe need your music. We need you to perform and make stuff because itâs really important for civilization.â You never know.
Yeah, I feel like God just gives us what we can handle. And I kind of just really, really needed music in my life. And I feel like the way I approach a lot of things is very musical and itâs very scored and moody. I just felt like–I couldnât think any other way. Everything happens for a reason. Iâm lucky that I get to do what I love–and really delve into it now with both hands. I feel like now that I have this chance I get to know a side of myself that I wasnât allowed to explore.
Itâs been really fun. Iâve been producing myself and writing myself. Everything is really coming from me.
Thatâs wonderful and awesome. Where do you feelâŠ. Where do you get your strength or power from? Like, inspirations or mantras? Or just like, how do you feel like youâve gotten to this point?
My mumâs pretty religious. [laughs] So, growing up in the church and growing up in that kind of household⊠It just made me naturally a grounded person. It kind of went hand in hand. [laughs] I donât think I could have been any other way if I had grown up in a religious household. I feel like it comes with that, with that structure.
Yeah. My mom and dad too are very religious, especially my mom. Sheâs the prayer warrior. Everytime I talk to her sheâs like, âI just finished praying.â and I’m like âI know, mom.âÂ
Haha, It was one of my friends birthday recently and my mom called us and was just like praying for him.
It’s really sweet and so special, especially as you get older. Like, when I was younger, I think I was a little embarrassed, you know? My house smells like fish, or my parentsâ accents, or just being this indie person and having a different background family. I always felt so different. But now that I get older, it is kind of like a grounding experience. It makes me feel very special that they instilled fear and being a good person and helping others–that kind of thing. I think thatâs really important for a person.
Yeah, absolutely. I think itâs also different when youâre growing up in a foreign country and youâre also one of the few people of color. I think itâs a naturally different and more jarring experience where youâre gonna really wanna absorb your surroundings and figure out how to navigate. I feel like thatâs just a part of growing up.
Do you feel any debut album pressure? Whatâs it gonna be like? All your EPs have been so well-received and people are like, âMore, more, more!â How do you feel about finally releasing the debut debut?
Iâm still working on the last EP, so Iâve just been feeling really guilty. Every time, even with the first EP, [it was], âOh, whenâs your debut album coming out?â And I knew I was going to do two more EPs [laughs]. Uhh⊠sorry. No idea!
But I donât feel pressure to make an amazing debut album–Iâm just gonna make an album.
Good!
The EPs were the first few songs I had ever written, so really, I can only do that. Thereâs no hit or miss with me. Itâs just, okay, Iâm gonna write songs. And if I love them, I do, and if I donât, well, theyâre not gonna be there.
Thatâs amazing, I love your attitude. I like that youâre like, âIâm gonna keep doing my thing.â It makes it feel more authentic. Itâs not like youâre putting out music just to have a hit. Like, âListen to the club! Come see me!â It feels real, real personal and beautiful.
I feel like everyone approaching music, of course, wants their music to be successful. And I think youâre never gonna know if itâs gonna be a hit, unless youâre writing true pop structures. Iâve always set out to create something different. And I feel like all the people Iâm influenced by do just that. I just always wanted to create a mood and create a zone.
And again, from being so influenced by films growing up, always wanted to create a short film in my EP, or like a cool mood that tells an actual arc or tells a story. Thatâs just always been important to me. So as much as I would love to have a single, thatâs not precedent in what Iâm creating. Itâs–is the vibe right? Is the mood there? Can you hear every single detail even with the sound effects, synth, fuzz, and distortion is there? Does that fit the mood? Does that help the story? I would love it if people could still get the same message from the track and the lyrics should coincide. Everything is supposed to be there for a reason. Or even if itâs not, and theyâre the polar opposite of each other, thatâs gonna be purposeful. Iâm always going to create to the integrity of the song and the integrity of the track rather than my own agenda because I just cCan you tell me who are some of the most powerful people that you know are? This is going to be in our Power issue, so I wanted to know who you see as powerful or just some shout outs of powerful people.
I think of Michelle Obama.
Love her.
The fact that sheâs our first black, female First Lady–and hopefully President, someday.
Me too, me too!
She is so hardworking . Sheâs changed so many individualsâ lives and our lives in general. Being a black females and being told that weâre at the bottom of the food chain–and to just be a First Lady like her is just so inspiring. What she does for children⊠sheâs amazing.
I have to jump in on Michelle Obama. Sheâs changed my life–my momâs life, my sisterâs lives. Itâs been, you know, being a black woman and always being told, âNo one wants [you].â Thereâs so much negative propaganda that goes on in the media against black women. I just think that–and probably you too–I was shielded from the typical rhetoric because you had parents from a different place. So if youâre looking at the TV and go, âIâm ugly,â theyâre like, [in an accent] âWhat are you talking about?!â
I was always told that I was beautiful and that I do anything. But in the media, they tell you youâre not shit, youâre not gonna succeed, men donât wanna date you, you canât own your own business–youâre gonna clean houses. That was never my life. So it feels so good to see Michelle Obama stand there with such confidence and love for herself and others. I just adore her.
Iâve had two different experiences, because I grew up away from home majority wise. I was at boarding school in London, so I had both sides of that.
So glamorous.
Going to school, I was definitely called ugly so many times or had racist slurs said to me. And thatâs just growing up. Now that youâre older, obviously you grow a thicker skin from that. But, itâs a problem when you think, âOh, thatâs just normal,â and they teach you that thatâs normal.
It shouldnât be. So thatâs why I think having her as a First Lady is so inspiring.
Okay, next one: Serena. Like I just watched her documentary. Such a strong woman, athlete, human being. Overall, so inspiring, and see what she had to deal with, too? Itâs just insane.
There are so many people when you actually think about it. Itâs great to be a woman in this world right now, if you think about it. I think there are so many people who do such great things. Angelina Jolie was always someone I loved watching as a kid because she was such a tomboy. Growing up, she was teaching kids how to be a humanitarian and I think thatâs really important too. I think itâs great to teach our young generations how to help others and how to be less selfish. The name of the game is about being selfish if you want to be ahead at the game–you have to think of yourself first. And thatâs a tough world to live in.
But I donât know, thereâs so many powerful people. Bernie Sanders? He pulled a lot of people to speak out and to really strive for something more than themselves. He brought a generation together in order to evoke the same feelings and to be outspoken and to really want more for the future. I think heâs a powerful, powerful man. I hope one day he gets another chance. But you never know.
I know. There are a lot of people. I think, actually, youâre one of them. Hearing your boarding school story–thatâs so horrifying. Kids are cruel. But Iâm so glad you blossomed into who you are. And also, youâre one of the prettiest people Iâve ever seen. When I saw your music video, I was like, âOh my god! Sheâs amazing!â Youâre just so good. Youâre gonna have a long, beautiful, amazing career, so keep doing what youâre doing.
photos / Jason Rodgers @ The Brooks Agency NYC
styling / Â Bianca BaileyÂ
hair & makeup / PhoenixÂ
photo assistant  / Victor DemeesterÂ