Her debut album Joyful, which was first released in 2006, reached Double-Platinum status in France, Platinum in Germany and Poland, Gold status in Switzerland and Italy and Greece. The album was released in the United States on 20 November 2007 by Interscope Records.
Ayọ was born in Frechen near Cologne, Germany. She has a son, Nile, who was born in late 2005 and a daughter, Billie-Eve, born July 2010, with the Sierra Leonian-German reggae singer Patrice, from whom she is now separated. In March 2017, her third child, Jimi-Julius, was born. At the end of 2007, she moved with her family to the Greenwich Village section of Manhattan in New York City. At present, she lives in Brooklyn, New York with her children.
Then-president of UNICEF France, Jacques Hintzy, announced on 4 February 2009 that the singer was named patron of UNICEF to promote the right to education for all children in the world.
The French production company MK2 produced the film Ayo Joy, a 90-minute documentary about the singer and her life, in 2009. The film was directed by Raphaël Duroy.
Early years
Ayọ was born near Cologne, Germany as the fourth child of a Nigerian father and a German-Sinti mother. She lived for a short time in Nigeria as a baby.[citation needed] She has one sister and two brothers. When she was about six years old her mother became addicted to heroin and spent some time in jail. After her parents divorced, she and two of her siblings spent periods of time in care and with foster families. She spent four years in a children's home in Schwalmtal-Waldniel where she learned to play violin and piano and became in 1992 a member of its music band "La Taste". When she was fourteen she was considered old enough by the authorities to live again with her father.
Musical career
At the age of six, Ayọ played the violin for a short time, then turned to the piano and later taught herself to play the guitar. While she was member of the band "La Taste" during her stay at the children's home in Waldniel she and eighteen other young band members recorded during summer 1992 the CD Kido Musik at the recording studio "Man Made Noise". During that time she also appeared for the first time in May 1993 in a music video, La Maladie d`Amour, and performed at a public concert.
When she was about 15, she wrote her first song, which was about her mother, and which helped her to cope with her traumatic childhood. Her musical taste was influenced by her father's large selection of vinyl albums which included Pink Floyd, Fela Kuti, Donny Hathaway, Jimmy Cliff and Bob Marley. When her father, who worked part-time as a DJ while studying engineering in Germany, discovered her singing talent he recorded a first demo tape with her in a studio and allowed her to drop out of school at the age of eighteen.
At twenty-one, Ayọ moved to London and later lived in Paris and New York City. During her time in Paris, her musical talent was noticed by a broader audience, and she gave her first solo concerts, opened 2002 for soul singers Omar and Cody Chesnutt, and signed a contract with Polydor Records.
Shortly after giving birth to her son Nile, she recorded her first album Joyful in January 2006 in the New York Sony studio. The whole disc was recorded in just five days under live conditions, with a group of musicians organized by her producer Jay Newland. The album was released in June 2006 in Europe and Korea, and in November 2007, in the United States and Japan.
At the end of 2007, Ayọ started a concert tour through Germany and the United States. On her American tour she performed with Kenneth "Babyface" Edmonds. On 10 January 2008, she appeared on the Late Show with David Letterman, and on 26 January 2008, The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson, performing her song Down on My Knees. In June 2008, the singer started her second tour through the United States and Canada.
On 10 March 2008, Ayọ started recording on her second album Gravity at Last at the Compass Point Studios in Nassau on the Island of New Providence, The Bahamas. She is co-producing the album with Jay Newland. Her band includes Keith Christopherson (bass), Larry Campbell (guitars and other string instruments), Lucky Peterson (keyboards), Sherrod Barnes (guitar/vocals) and Jermaine Parrish (drums). The album with 13 tracks that were written and composed by the singer was recorded in only 5 days and was released at the end of September 2008 by Universal Music France. The album reached number 1 on the French album charts in October. On 21. In November 2008, Ayọ started her promotion tour for the album in Berlin which includes around 30 concerts in five European countries.
In 2008, Ayo won an EBBA Award for her album Joyful. Every year, the European Border Breakers Awards recognize the success of ten emerging artists or groups who reached audiences outside their own countries with their first internationally released album in the past year.
Ayọ's third album Billie-Eve, named after her daughter, was recorded in New York City with the cooperation of musicians like Craig Ross (guitarist of Lenny Kravitz), the rapper Saul Williams, Matthieu Chedid and Gail Ann Dorsey, bass player of David Bowie. The album is first released on 7 March 2011 in France and Ayọ starts a promotional tour through France and Poland on 21 March 2011. Ayọ signed with MBM Records in 2011 in the US. Billie-Eve was released in the United States on 20 March 2012. At the end of 2011, the singer moved within the Universal Group from the Polydor label to the labels Mercury France and Motown.
In 2013, Ayọ started to record her fourth album Ticket to the World, which was released on 7 October 2013, with the producer Jay Newland who produced also her first two albums. The first single from this album, Fire, has been released on 10 June 2013. A second version of the single featuring the French rapper Youssoupha was released in August 2013. After the album release, Ayọ tours from end of October 2013 for several months through Europe. Most concerts take place in France but she also performs in Luxembourg, Switzerland, Belgium, Poland, Germany, UK, and other countries.
Ayọ was asked by Arte to cover the classic song Sunny by Bobby Hebb as soundtrack for their 2013 Summer of Soul program. From 14 July to 18 August 2013, she presents every Sunday evening this program on the French TV broadcast. The soundtrack was released on 14 July 2013 in France on a special three CD edition by Fnac.
On 10 March 2014 at Le Lido, Ayọ won the category 'Best Female Singer' of the Globes de Cristal Award, which is bestowed by members of the French Press Association recognizing excellence in French art and culture. The other nominees in that category were Carla Bruni, HollySiz, Vanessa Paradis and Zaz.
In 2014, Ayọ organized in Paris undercover with an amateur choir a flash mob in the restaurant Rotonde de la Villette where she sang with the choir her song Who. The film about the action 'Mission Incognito: Ayo', directed by Lorenz Findeisen, was shown on the French-German TV network Arte in August 2014. Other episodes of this series featured the artists Rolando Villazón, Jim Avignon and Ulrich Matthes.
Ayọ was awarded the Grand Prize for SACEM repertoire abroad on 24 October 2014 at Olympia, Paris.
On 21 June 2015, Ayọ released a self-made music video on YouTube (renamed to Send This Message To All Your Friends on 22 June 2015) featuring the song Boom Boom, which she has written 10 months previously and so far only performed at live concerts, to react to the ongoing racial violence in the United States. She announced the release on her official social media accounts on Instagram, Facebook and Twitter.
In an interview in July 2015 Ayọ said that she has left the label Universal after ten years of cooperation because artists become objects in the music industry and she wants to be free.
In 2017, Ayọ released two singles, each accompanied by a music video, from her fifth album announced to be released in October that year. The first single, "I'm a Fool", was released in June and the second single "Paname" (a nickname for Paris and its suburbs) in September.
On 6 October 2017, the fifth album of the singer was released which was named Ayọ after herself.
On 15 October 2019, Ayọ released her single Beautiful under the Wagram Music/3ème Bureau label, a song from her sixth album Royal which was released on 31 January 2020. A second single with the track "Rest assured" was released earlier in January 2020.
Acting career
In April 2014, Ayọ's concert tour was interrupted for several weeks as she played the lead role in the movie Murder in Pacot (Meurtre à Pacot) by the award-winning Haitian filmmaker Raoul Peck, which was filmed in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, in April and May 2014. This is the singers first appearance as an actress in a feature film. The film describes how the life of a rich family in Haiti changes after the 2010 earthquake. Besides Ayọ the film features French actors Alex Descas and Thibault Vinçon and Haitian poet and novice actress Kermonde Lovely Fifi. The script was co-written by the Haitian novelist and poet Lyonel Trouillot and the screenwriter Pascal Bonitzer. The production is supported by the French TV channel Arte, the World Cinema Fund and the European Union. The film will make its world premier at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival on 5 September 2014. The European premiere of the film was in the Panorama category of the 65th Berlin International Film Festival on 7 February 2015. Ayọ, the other leading actors, producer Remi Grellety, and director Raoul Peck attended the second screening of the film on 10 February at the Zoo Palast after a photocall and press conference at the Grand Hyatt hotel.
Ayọ (Joy Ogunmakin) is part of the cast of the German science fiction drama VOLT written and directed by Tarek Ehlail which was filmed around Cologne and scheduled for release in 2016. The German-French co-production is produced by augenschein-Filmproduktion and Les Films D’Antoine. Ayọ plays the role of LaBlanche besides actors Benno Fürmann, Denis Moschitto, and Stipe Erceg. Ayọ Ogunmakin has been nominated in the category 'German Cinema New Talent Award: Actor' at the Filmfest München 2016 for her role in VOLT. The film has its world premiere screening in Munich on the 24. June 2016.
Love and Hate
Ayọ Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
The good old days were full of sunshine now they're full of rain
His arms felt so right and warm every time he touched her
Now his arms feel so cold and wrong but he's her baby's father
What can you do about
Love hate sunshine and rain tears and laughter?
Joy pain go or stay before and after
Joy pain go or stay before and after
Before and after
There she goes now look who follows
After everything now they're all wondering
But they could not separate 'cause their love was stronger than their hate
Even I am much surprised
But they're my flesh my blood and I'm their child
What can you do about
Love hate sunshine and rain tears and laughter?
Joy pain go or stay before and after
Love hate sunshine and rain tears and laughter
Joy pain go or stay before and after
Before and after
All that suffering we can overcome everything
All that suffering you can overcome everything
All that suffering we can overcome everything
All that suffering we can overcome everything
All that suffering we can overcome everything
All that suffering I can overcome everything
Everything everything everything everything
Ayọ's song "Love and Hate" is a reflection on the complex and contrasting emotions that come with relationships. She sings about how a couple who were once in love are now in hate, and how the memories of the good old days feel like a distant dream. The lyrics capture the feeling of disappointment and heartache that can come from the realization that a relationship has changed, and that someone you once loved is now a source of pain.
The chorus serves as a reminder of the paradoxical nature of love and hate. Ayọ sings about how love and hate, sunshine and rain, tears and laughter, joy and pain are all interconnected, and that they are a part of the human experience. She questions what can be done about these emotions, implying that they are a natural part of life, and there is no easy way to control them.
In the second verse, Ayọ sings about how people are always watching and judging others, but they cannot understand the depth of emotions and the complexity of relationships. She talks about her own surprise at witnessing a couple who were once in hate, but are now together again, emphasizing that the power of love can be stronger than hate.
Overall, the song conveys a powerful message about the ups and downs of relationships and how emotions can change over time. It reminds the listener that love and hate are not necessarily mutually exclusive and that people can overcome suffering and find their way back to love.
Line by Line Meaning
They were in love few years ago now they are in hate
Ones who were once in love, now have resorted to hate.
The good old days were full of sunshine now they're full of rain
The happy and bright moments of yesterday have turned into gloom and misery today.
His arms felt so right and warm every time he touched her
Her former partner's embrace used to make her feel comforted and safe.
Now his arms feel so cold and wrong but he's her baby's father
Although the warmth in his embrace is gone, he is still connected to her because of their child.
What can you do about Love hate sunshine and rain tears and laughter?
All the emotions that come with love and hate, the good and the bad times, are simply a part of life and cannot be avoided.
Joy pain go or stay before and after
Happiness and heartbreak are unpredictable and can come and go at any point, before or after anything.
There she goes now look who follows
After everything that's happened, there is still someone who is following her.
After everything now they're all wondering
After all that has happened between the two, everyone is curious and has questions.
But they could not separate 'cause their love was stronger than their hate
Their love ended up being stronger than their negative emotions towards each other, thus they are still connected.
Even I am much surprised
The artist is also shocked by how things have turned out between the two.
But they're my flesh my blood and I'm their child
Although their relationship is complicated, they are still family to the singer, and they remain important.
All that suffering we can overcome everything
Despite all the hardships they have gone through, they believe that they can overcome anything in the future.
All that suffering you can overcome everything
The singer encourages the listener to believe that they too can overcome any hardship they face.
All that suffering I can overcome everything
The singer personally believes that they can overcome any problem they encounter.
Everything everything everything everything
No matter what happens, belief and hope is essential to overcome anything and everything.
Contributed by Christian C. Suggest a correction in the comments below.