Asiwaju of Ijesaland, High Chief Olayinka Fasuyi, has called on government at all levels to exploit the power of music to help Nigerians out of depression.
He said the power of music can help several Nigerians who may have either fallen into depression or are suffering diverse mental health issues as a result of the prevailing economic problems in the land.
Fasuyi made the call while speaking during a special musical orchestra, held in Ilesa, Osun State as part of the activities lined up to mark his 70th birthday.
The Asiwaju of Ijesaland, who is the founder of the Ibadan Business School, said the transformative power of music which has, for centuries, formed an integral part of human culture, has a special place in people’s lives.
Fasuyi, the Chairman/Founder of the Supreme Management Training and Consultancy Services Limited, spoke during an evening of scintillating classical and contemporary musical orchestra by Prince Abiodun Lufadeju, the composer of Ijesa Anthem, and his ensemble of musicians.
“Music has great powers in its effects,” Fasuyi declared. “It is therapeutic. When optimally harnessed, it has great potential to heal those Nigerians in depression occasioned by the struggling economy or causes that distress the soul.
“When people sing, or dance, sorrow flees. No song has a sour taste. In Biblical times, David used the power of music to heal King Saul who was struggling with serious mental health issue.
“David used music to curry favour from God. Even after committing murder, and other sins, remorseful David sang high praises to God, and God not only forgave him, God still maintained that David was a man after His heart.”
Asiwaju Fasuyi also went down memory lane to recall how music rescued him from looming failure in his undergraduate days at the University of Ibadan.
Economics, he said, was his favourite subject in secondary school and at advanced level, where he soared like an eagle.
He added that when he gained admission into the University of Ibadan, the tide changed and economics, his first love, almost became his Achilles’ heel.
He said Mathematics, a major component of his course of study, became so hard that it constituted a serious weakness and threat to his overall strength.
It would have led to his downfall, Fasuyi, then a party freak, frankly said, adding that he discovered the power of music.
“Economics was tough for me in the university,” Asiwaju Fasuyi emphasised. “But I found healing and an enduring solution in Chief Commander Ebenezer Obey’s music.
“Before reading, or attempting any problem, I would play Obey’s music, and pronto, the mathematical problem would be solved.”
Stressing that good music has been an integral part of his existence ever since, Fasuyi advised “governments, organisations, religious and social, to explore the power of music to encourage and motivate, by organising regular musical concerts.”
On health other distressing situations, Fasuyi said: “It is not every problem that is solved through medication. Music has the power to solve the most intractable of all issues, especially depression or mental health issues.
“That’s why I use this occasion to urge governments-both federal and at the sub-national levels-to invest more in music, and creative arts generally. They will be amazed at the results the efforts would produce.”
He praised the Federal Government for the pragmatic way it has been helping Nigerian youths through its solid support for the creative industry, through the Federal Ministry of Art, Culture, Tourism and Creative Economy.
The ministry, Asiwaju Fasuyi said, has been doing a great job in promoting and developing arts, culture, and creative industries in the country, providing gainful employment and respectable income for Nigerian youths.