Iyeoka Ivie Okoawo is a Poet and Recording Artist, a 2010 TED … Read Full Bio ↴Music
Iyeoka Ivie Okoawo is a Poet and Recording Artist, a 2010 TED Global Fellow, the 2nd place 2009 Individual World Poetry Slam Champion, and a spokesperson for the Amenawon Foundation. Daughter of Nigerian-born parents who both hold Doctorate degrees from Boston University, Iyeoka was a practicing pharmacist before launching her career as a poet, singer, activist and educator. In her native Esan language, Iyeoka means “I want to be respected.” By channeling her culture and ancestral influences, she delivers an authentic and inspiring message of healing through accessing the power of the moment.
Iyeoka began her musical career by founding the group The Rock by Funk Tribe, a collective of musicians that enabled her to interweave her poetry with jazz, blues, funk, and gospel. She released her first solo full length album of poem-songs called “Black and Blues” in 2004 through Phanai Records and then began to tour and make numerous appearances on other artist’s albums, including The Press Project’s “Get Right” album and “Memoirs of the Tempo” by Tempo Valley.
In 2007, Iyeoka released her second album of poetry and music fusion “Hum The Bass Line” again on Phanai Records. In 2008, she recorded a live album in Hawaii called Live @ KTUH – Honolulu. That same year, Iyeoka lent her vocal talent to a cover of U2′s hit song “Desire” for a compilation of U2 covers called “In The Name Of Love: Africa Celebrates U2.” The album featured Grammy Award-winning/nominated African artists including Angelique Kidjo, Les Nubians, Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars, Vieux Farka Toure, Vusi Mahlasela and the Soweto Gospel Choir with proceeds benefiting the Global Fund.
In 2009, Iyeoka decided to transform her sound and songwriting approach and began working with producer David Franz (in collaboration with her original producer, Francis Phan) to create more traditional song forms. Iyeoka released two EPs that year called “This Time Around” and “Run Into the Rain.” The new music infused more pop, R&B, dance, and hip hop into the mix, creating an “electronic soul” sound.
In November of 2010, Iyeoka released her new album, SAY YES, containing nine songs and two poems, through the Underground Sun artist development company. It is the first “Evolving Album(tm)” where purchasers will receive added content for free as the album evolves. Even before the album’s release, the first song “The Yellow Brick Road Song” was featured in an episode of the new hit HBO series “How To Make It In America” and is now the official theme song of the USA Network’s show “Fairly Legal.”
Iyeoka is currently touring in support of the new album and her poetry. In the past, Iyeoka has toured in support of artists such as Femi Kuti, Zap Mama and Soulive, as well as played musical festivals like Bonnaroo. The buzz surrounding her poetry has also garnered her national attention through performances at the TBS Trumpet Awards, the Sullivan Honors Awards at the Kennedy Center and Russell Simmons’ Def Poetry Jam on HBO.
Iyeoka is a powerful songstress whose lyrical prowess and vocal talents invoke the spirit of soul-shakers Nina Simone, Sade, Lauryn Hill and Amy Winehouse. A story teller to the core, Iyeoka’s hope-filled words pour out from within and build momentum based on truth. As the words transform into songs, they reemerge as unique, emotionally complex gifts to her audience, touching on a wide range of issues–love, women, culture, struggle, and relationships, among many others.
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Poetry
“My goal is simple…I just want to move the world one poem at a time.”
Iyeoka Ivie Okoawo is a Poet/Recording Artist, the 2nd place 2009 Individual World Poetry Slam Champion and a 2010 TED Global Fellow. A first-generation Nigerian-American, Iyeoka was a practicing pharmacist before launching her career as a poet, presenter, activist and educator. Among Iyeoka’s individual lists of credits is performing at the Kennedy Center for an award event honoring activist and actress Mia Farrow, being commissioned by Discovery Channel for their 2008 brand campaign, being commissioned by a top-twenty ad agency to write a piece for a diversity training tool, receiving a 2011 Independent Music Award nomination for her R&B song “This Time Around”, a Massachusetts Industry Committee Hip-Hop Award for Spoken Word Artist of the year, and a New England Urban Music Award for the Best Female Spoken Word Poet. She holds the distinction of being the only member of the nationally competing Boston Lizard Lounge Slam team to have earned her position nine years in a row. Iyeoka is currently partnering with selective arts organizations to present her WORD SPEAKING TRIBE’S Professional Development Workshops on a 2010 nationwide tour.
A storyteller to the core, Iyeoka’s hope-filled poems come from within and build momentum with truth transformed into songs that reemerge as unique, emotionally complex gifts to her audience, touching on a wide range of issues-love, women, culture, struggle, relationships, among many others. The buzz surrounding her poem and songs has garnered her national attention through performances at the TBS Trumpet Awards, the CBS hip hop show The Source All Access and Russell Simmons’ Def Poetry Jam airing on HBO. Iyeoka also has opened for the Tony Award winning Def Poetry Jam on Broadway tour at the Colonial Theater in Boston. Sharing the stage with recording artists Chuck D of Public Enemy, Musiq Soul Child and Vivian Greene to poets Gil Scot Heron, Sonia Sanchez, and Amiri Baraka—Iyeoka has held true to her core.
Across the nation, at venues ranging from universities, large concert halls, and neo-soul clubs to venerable spoken word haunts like the Nuyorican Poets Café; Iyeoka’s warm spirit, stirring lyrics and passionate performances leave audiences not only entertained but visibly overcome with emotion. Widely considered one of the top performance poets in the country, Iyeoka has earned her reputation by performing on the National Poetry Slam circuit for well over a decade, with the Jeff Robinson Trio and as a member of the acclaimed Bull Horn Collective and Blackout Arts Collective.
A gifted performer, Iyeoka’s acting prowess has been featured as the title character in a PBS documentary on Harriet Tubman, as well as an off-Broadway play produced by Thema Bryant Davis. Her poem on Rwanda is also featured in a documentary film “Rwanda Rising” that is Executive Produced by Andrew Young the former ambassador to the United Nations.
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Workshops
Creating Your Current Anthem
The process of creating your current anthem is a profound practice that helps to uplift the spirit and reintegrate the subconscious with the paths in life that we hope to deliberately choose for ourselves. Working with simple moments that trigger empowerment—breathing, listening, movement, singing anything, speaking in your words is a cleansing process that reconnects you with your ability to summon balance and healing.
The focus of this workshop is to introduce participants to a process of exercising the habitual patterns that feed the creative experience enabling you to create a composition of celebration and recognition that in every moment we can be truly present for the motion in our journeys that launches new paths to renewal.
Through a combination of breathing exercises, writing prompts, improvisation, artistic demonstrations from the facilitators and a supportive environment to explore the gathering of inspiration, you will have the opportunity to transform your authentic voice.
In addition to creating your own anthem, you will learn the tools that propel words to shift from the page to the stage. This workshop is for both the beginner and experienced writer, the slam poet, actors and even non-writers who seek to discover the empowering medium of transforming your life with poetry and the organic ways to express it.
The Testifying Goddess
Here we celebrate our true Goddess nature and learn how to amalgamate her into every aspect of our creative lives. Here we experience deliberate spiritual nourishment and attention to recharge our spirits, bodies and our hearts. We envision the path of strengthening our self-image by cultivating love for our body, the temple of our spirit. This process shifts participants into celebrating our enlightened energy at every stage of our journey in life. Through creative writing exercises and personal testimonies we share about love, pain, changes, the art of sharing your Testimony, and poetic exploration within our sacred circle creating a magical blend of unity, the impact of ritual, laughing, singing, healing, meditating, honoring, opening and connecting. New friendships in this environment go deep fast, and we create a community of Testifying Goddesses that can catapult personal connections with the potential for resonance long after the experience is over. Iyeoka Okoawo is a Poet and Vocalist and a workshop facilitator for both the youth and adults. She inspires women to embrace their creative expression and goddess nature, and enables them to step into their power, opening to the joy of a spiritual and creative life connection. Iyeoka is a nationally award winning poet and a guest Visiting Teacher at the Esalen Institute. Iyeoka has hosted “The Testifying Goddess Weekend” several times with women empowerment retreats and leadership conferences.
Poetry Slam All-Star Showcase & Workshop
What do you get when you combine Poetry with Storytelling, Comedy, Dramatic Monologue, Battle Rap, Song, and Dance? You have an art form called Performance Poetry! What happens when these new performers compete, judged by members of the audience? You get a Poetry Slam. And what elite final event remains after thousands of poets from across the globe compete for a year? You get the Individual World Poetry Slam (iWPS). Iyeoka Ivie Okoawo is a 10 year slam veteran of this art form, the 2nd place champion of the 2009 IWPS competition and frequent presenter at the Esalen Institue, founded in 1962 as an alternative educational center devoted to the exploration of the human potential.
Iyeoka Ivie Okoawo hosts a Poetry Slam All-Star showcase that includes an option to participate in a Master Workshop that guides participants in creating their own current anthem.
Workshop For the Brave New Voice
Living as a professional artist takes initiative and perseverance. If we are to survive doing what we love we must first find the avenues and pathways to succeed within it.
ART AS LIFE is a new PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM that introduces youth poets to the ins and outs of creating a viable foundation into navigating potential future income streams and career opportunities in spoken word. This workshop will give access to resources for individual art funding, a comprehensive “cheat-sheet” for establishing a strategic professional resume, and information on expanding your artistic profile and repertoire beyond the “slam”. Drawing from roundtable discussions, research on best practices in the spoken-word field, and artists’ on-the-ground experience, this workshop incorporates a step-by-step overview of the topic, partner exercises and case studies. We will present “the process of becoming”, putting your art into action (ie: teaching, mentoring, project development etc), and working through the social/familial/political challenges of a career as an artist. Handouts will include University slam resources, a Find Your Approach list to begin framing your career strategy, and quick tips for building your support group.
Wordshop Lecture:
“Reveal your anthem, Unveil yourself”
Iyeoka is a poet, recording artist, a 10 year veteran of “slam poetry”, and a 5x finalist at the National Poetry Slam. Iyeoka is currently the 2nd place 2009 Individual World Poetry Slam Champion and a recipient of the 2008 National Performance Network/NCCC Artist of Color Residency Award.
Iyeoka Ivie Okoawo lectures on the impact of poetry on the creation and inspiration of songwriting and music. The presentation includes an analysis of the direction and potential of the poetry and music genre to expand into the mainstream. The goals of the lecture are to inspire poets to explore the options of interacting and collaborating with musicians from rehearsing to improvisational techniques. Iyeoka provides exercises that highlight the process of cementing your personal foundation, encouraging artists to “reveal your anthem, unveil yourself”. She dialogues with young and seasoned poets alike on techniques of strengthening your brand to the development and expansion of your current catalogue of work to categorize your poetry. She speaks of the importance of identifying your uniqueness and capitalizing on the crafted integration of your multiple artistic talents.
Sinnerman
Iyeoka Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
Do you know how it feel?
Set your soul on fire
Sometimes I feel like my heart is on fire
Do you know how it feel?
Set your soul on fire
And now I know
From the bottom of my heart
Sinnerman, where you gonna run to?
Sinnerman, where you gonna run to?
Sinnerman, where you gonna run to?
All along that day
Well I run to the rock, please hide me
I run to the rock, please hide me
I run to the rock, please hide me, lord
All along that day
But the rock cried out, I can't hide you
The rock cried out, I can't hide you
The rock cried out, I ain't gonna hide you guy
All along that day
I said, rock, what's a matter with you rock?
Don't you see I need you, rock?
Lord, lord, lord
All along that day
So I ran to the river, it was bleedin'
I run to the sea, it was bleedin'
I run to the sea, it was bleedin'
All along that day
So I ran to the river, it was boilin'
I run to the sea, it was boilin'
I run to the sea, it was boilin'
All along that day
So I ran to the lord, please hide me lord
Don't you see me prayin'?
Don't you see me down here prayin'?
But the lord said, go to the devil
The lord said, go to the devil
The lord said, go to the devil
All along that day
So I ran to the devil, he was waitin'
I ran to the devil, he was waitin'
I ran to the devil, he was waitin'
All on that day
Sinnerman you ought a be praying
Sinnerman you ought a be praying
Sinnerman you ought a be praying
All on that day
I cried
Power (Power)
Power (Power)
Power (Power)
Power (Power)
Bring down (Bring down)
Power (Power)
Power (Power)
Power!
Sinnerman you ought a be praying
Sinnerman you ought a be praying
Sinnerman you ought a be praying
Sometimes I feel like my heart is on fire
Sometimes I feel like my heart is on fire
Sometimes I feel like my heart is on fire
Sometimes I feel like my heart is on fire
Sometimes I feel like my heart is on fire
Sometimes I feel like my heart is on fire
Sometimes I feel like my heart is on fire
Sometimes I feel like my heart is on fire
The song “Sinnerman” by Iyeoka is about the struggles of the human soul and the relentless pursuit of redemption. The opening lyrics “Sometimes I feel like my heart is on fire, do you know how it feels?” are a reflection of the internal turmoil and restlessness that we may all feel at some point in our lives. The repeated phrases “Sinnerman, where you gonna run to?” and “All along that day” are a reminder of the inevitability of judgement day and the need for salvation. The plea for help to the rock, the sea, and finally the Lord Himself, and the ultimate rejection by the Lord and direction to go to the devil, poignantly highlights the desperation felt by the sinner seeking absolution. The repeated chants of “Power” emphasize the need for a higher power to break the chains of sin and provide redemption.
One interesting interpretation of the song is that the devil, in offering the sinner the power that she seeks, is a metaphor for temptation. The devil’s offer is ultimately a trap, and the salvation that the sinner seeks can only be found through prayer and submission to a higher power.
The intense, dynamic rhythm of the song is heavily influenced by African American gospel and blues music, and the lyrical themes reflect the religious and spiritual roots of these genres. The haunting melody and powerful vocals of Iyeoka highlight the emotional depth of the lyrics, making “Sinnerman” a thought-provoking and soul-stirring piece of music.
Line by Line Meaning
Sometimes I feel like my heart is on fire
I sometimes feel emotionally overwhelmed and consumed by passion
Do you know how it feel?
Do you understand the intense emotions I am experiencing?
Set your soul on fire
Become deeply passionate and committed to something
And now I know
Through my experiences, I have come to understand
Sinnerman, where you gonna run to?
Sinnerman, where will you seek refuge or salvation?
All along that day
Throughout that time of reckoning and judgment
Well I run to the rock, please hide me
I look to a source of stability or protection for safety and comfort
The rock cried out, I can't hide you
Even this source of refuge or protection is unable to provide safety
I said, rock, what's a matter with you rock?
I am confused and frustrated by the lack of protection or refuge from the rock
So I ran to the river, it was bleedin'
I sought refuge in an environment of pain and suffering
I run to the sea, it was bleedin'
I looked to a vast and seemingly infinite body of suffering for comfort
So I ran to the lord, please hide me lord
I turned to a higher power for protection and salvation
But the lord said, go to the devil
Even the ultimate source of protection and salvation refused to help, and instead directed me towards evil
So I ran to the devil, he was waitin'
I succumbed to the temptation of evil and sought refuge in it
Sinnerman you ought a be praying
A call to reflect on one's sins and seek redemption through prayer
Power (Power) Bring down (Bring down) Power!
A declaration for the need for a greater force or power to intervene
Writer(s): David Matthew Franz, Iyeoka Ivie Okoawo
Contributed by Lauren B. Suggest a correction in the comments below.
@youtubekanal9892
Sometimes I feel like my heart is on fire
Do you know how it feel?
Set your soul on fire
Sometimes I feel like my heart is on fire
Do you know how it feel?
Set your soul on fire
And now I know
From the bottom of my heart
Sinnerman, where you gonna run to?
Sinnerman, where you gonna run to?
Sinnerman, where you gonna run to?
All along that day
Well I run to the rock, please hide me
I run to the rock, please hide me
I run to the rock, please hide me, lord
All along that day
But the rock cried out, I can't hide you
The rock cried out, I can't hide you
The rock cried out, I ain't gonna hide you guy
All along that day
I said, rock, what's a matter with you rock?
Don't you see I need you, rock?
Lord, lord, lord
All along that day
@VideoMaker-vk7jt
sometimes i feel like a motherless child.....she did an amazing job with this version. have always loved Nina's version most but Ms. Iyeoka you really made this your own and it's amazing!
@busrayalcn5292
Best cover of this beautiful song. Iyeoka killed it😘😘😘
@user-ip1eb8zl6n
Достойная преемница Нины Симон! В абсолютном стиле! Класс!!!
@dannybourne_
oh yes ! Fantastic rendition. More music like this please.
@Sergei-ww8ed
Мне 54 и только неделю назад я с удивлением открыл такую певицу!
@annapaza215
Cudownie❤
@youtubekanal9892
Sometimes I feel like my heart is on fire
Do you know how it feel?
Set your soul on fire
Sometimes I feel like my heart is on fire
Do you know how it feel?
Set your soul on fire
And now I know
From the bottom of my heart
Sinnerman, where you gonna run to?
Sinnerman, where you gonna run to?
Sinnerman, where you gonna run to?
All along that day
Well I run to the rock, please hide me
I run to the rock, please hide me
I run to the rock, please hide me, lord
All along that day
But the rock cried out, I can't hide you
The rock cried out, I can't hide you
The rock cried out, I ain't gonna hide you guy
All along that day
I said, rock, what's a matter with you rock?
Don't you see I need you, rock?
Lord, lord, lord
All along that day
@sohelmohammadrana
Voice on fire!
@nizamicavadov9668
Bravo! What an amazing perfomance! I am very grateful, thank you very mach!
@gulgundalay8369
Güç güçlü bir ses yorum harika akıcı gücün kalbi müdanasız güc