ENYINNAYA APPOLOS

As the news of his demise broke, it came with mixed feelings, of both loss and fulfillment. The Igbo nation, Nigeria, and indeed Africa have just witnessed the passing of another legend. Gentleman Mike Ejeagha, the iconic Nigerian folklorist, highlife minstrel, and timeless storyteller, has joined his ancestors at the remarkable age of 95.
Born in Enugu State in 1929, Mike Ejeagha was more than a musician, he was a cultural custodian, a living archive of Igbo wisdom, and a master craftsman of lyrical truth. With his guitar in hand and wisdom on his tongue, he serenaded not just ears, but consciences, with stories that taught, healed, warned, and uplifted. His music was never just entertainment, it was education wrapped in melody.
For decades, his sonorous voice and the plucking of his guitar strings carried the weight of ancestral knowledge. He made folklore danceable. He made proverbs fashionable. His songs, laced with deep Igbo idioms and moral lessons, cut across generations.
Gentleman Mike Ejeagha didn’t merely sing, he preserved. His tireless collection of over 300 Igbo folktales has immortalized stories that might otherwise have been lost. He stood as a bridge between the past and the present, ensuring that the heartbeat of Igbo tradition remained strong in the minds of both the young and the old.
Even in his twilight years, his legacy loomed large, a symbol of artistic purity in an era increasingly divorced from its roots. He remained evergreen, not because he chased trends, but because truth, the kind he sang, never goes out of fashion.
Now, the guitar is silent, the voice stilled. But his songs live on, in our homes, in our hearts, in the rhythms of highlife that continue to echo across the land.
Gentleman Mike Ejeagha did not just live 95 years. He lived a legacy. And legends, they say, do not die, they only change form.
Rest well, Okenye. You told our stories, and in doing so, you became one.
Jee nke oma. Ka chi fo, Mike Ejeagha, the minstrel of our souls.