Most artistes will tell you evolution is planned, but Nigerian music star, Adekunle Gold, says it is felt. And if you have followed his career across nearly a decade of music, you will recognise that quality immediately. He has always known when it was time to change, even when no one else did.

At the intimate dinner held at Vici, Victoria Island, Lagos, on Thursday, May 28, 2026, where The Macallan officially unveiled him as its Brand Ambassador in Nigeria, Adekunle Gold sat down for a fireside conversation that offered a rare and candid window into the creative philosophy that has defined one of Nigerian music’s most compelling careers.
Asked how he knows when it is time to evolve, he answered as directly as he was disarming.
“I honestly cannot tell you. I just know. I just know when it is time to change something. I just have the inkling and then the feeling that it is time to try something new and that is it.”
In an industry where artists are constantly second-guessing the market, chasing trends and trying to reverse-engineer what worked before, Adekunle Gold has built his entire career on something far less calculable. Instinct, trust in his own internal compass. A willingness to move before the moment announces itself.
That willingness has produced one of the most distinct discographies in contemporary Nigerian music, from the highlife warmth of Gold in 2017 to the introspective About 30 in 2018, the global Afropop ambition of Afro Pop Vol. 1 in 2020, the confident swagger of Catch Me If You Can in 2022, the textured sophistication of Tequila Ever After in 2023, the culture-forward boldness of FUJI in 2025 and its deluxe expansion Fuji Xtra in 2026.
Each chapter has felt like a deliberate departure from the one before it. Not restless reinvention for its own sake. Something more considered than that.
“Every album is an era in my life. It is where I am at the moment. From Gold to FUJI is a representation of my journey. I liken my albums to chapters in my own book and episodes in my own series, and the reason I have different names across all these albums is that I take new roles in every series, every episode basically.”
That framing — albums as episodes, eras as roles — reveals something important about how Adekunle Gold understands his own work. He is not simply making music; he is building a body of work that documents a life lived with intention. Each project is less a collection of songs and more a portrait of a man at a specific point in his evolution.
It is a philosophy that resonates deeply with the brand that chose to partner with him. The Macallan, which has spent over two centuries refining its craft without ever compromising on what sits inside the bottle, understands better than most what it means to evolve with purpose. The evening at Vici was built around exactly that parallel, the maturation of a single malt and the evolution of a timeless artist, moving at their own pace, on their own terms.
And with the hints of an EJA NLA 2026 era already beginning to surface, it is clear that Adekunle Gold’s next chapter is already taking shape. Quietly, deliberately and on his own timeline.
As he said himself, he just knows.

