Two-time Grammy-nominated Afrobeats icon Asake delivered a special one-night-only performance of his chart-topping album M$NEY at London’s historic Theatre Royal Drury Lane, in what observers are already describing as a watershed moment for the genre’s global ascent.
For centuries, its stage has been home to world-renowned musicals, Shakespearean productions, opera, ballet, and orchestral performances, making it one of Britain’s most celebrated cultural institutions. On Sunday night, however, it became the unlikely yet perfectly fitting home of Afrobeats.
The evening was held as a special invite-only experience, welcoming Asake’s closest friends, family, and hundreds of his top one-percent listeners on Spotify, creating an atmosphere that felt both deeply personal and undeniably historic.
The concert marked the first live performance of material from the album since its release in May, a fact that lent Sunday’s event the weight of a genuine premiere. Fans and industry insiders in attendance knew they were witnessing something that the wider world had not yet seen.
Described as a bold meditation on gratitude, prosperity, spirituality, and ambition, M$NEY reflects Asake’s signature blend of Afrobeats rhythm, melodic innovation, and Yoruba-inspired storytelling. Since its release, the album has topped streaming charts in more than 19 countries, including Nigeria, and peaked at No. 8 in the United States.
The 13-track project is Asake’s most sonically varied to date, opening with a live choral performance, an unusual choice that immediately signals this is not going to be a straightforward Afrobeats record and moving through orchestral arrangements, jazz-tinged strings, dance production, and amapiano before it is done.
Without changing the identity of the genre, the setting simply revealed another dimension of it, one where live instrumentation, theatre, and storytelling elevated the emotional weight of Asake’s music while also not sacrificing its unmistakable energy.
The show did not stop at the album’s tracklist. Backed by a live orchestra, the two-time Grammy nominee performed tracks from the project and also treated guests to four unreleased songs, previewing what may signal an already prolific next chapter from the Nigerian superstar.
By the final act, Asake had become much like a conductor standing before an orchestra, guiding every crescendo, every pause, and every emotional shift with remarkable control, leading both musicians and audience through one shared experience.
The evening closed with one final dance shared between artist and crowd before Asake repeatedly bowed alongside his orchestra in appreciation.
Spotify found a compelling way to translate its digital platform into a tangible cultural experience, framing M$NEY in an intimate, tailored, and premium environment that celebrated both artist and audience.
Before the main event, guests gathered throughout the theater’s magnificent interior, capturing photographs along its sweeping staircases while admiring the breathtaking paintings of artist Maria Kreyn, whose works were inspired by Shakespeare’s Hamlet and Romeo & Juliet, which adorned the historic building.
The entire performance was filmed, with a full concert film to be released on Spotify in the coming days, ensuring that what was witnessed in that storied hall on Sunday night will soon reach the millions of fans around the world who could not be there.
Born Ahmed Ololade, Asake has become one of Africa’s most successful contemporary artists through his distinctive blend of fújì, Afropop, and amapiano sounds, complemented by Yoruba-inspired storytelling.
His debut album, Mr. Money With The Vibe, released in 2022, became the highest-charting Nigerian debut album at the time, while subsequent projects, Work of Art and Lungu Boy, produced hit songs including “Lonely At The Top,” “Remember,” and “Wave.”
Lungu Boy holds the record as the longest-running number-one album in Nigerian chart history, and his 2024 Lungu Boy World Tour recorded sold-out shows at major venues, including Madison Square Garden, Barclays Center, and The O2 Arena.
Following the success of M$NEY, Asake was ranked the No. 15 digital artist globally by Kworb Data, placing him in rare company alongside some of the world’s biggest music acts.
Sunday’s performance was not simply a concert. It was a declaration that Afrobeats belongs on every stage the world has to offer and that Asake intends to be the one leading it there.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
On Sunday, June 21, Asake made history by performing his chart-topping album M$NEY live for the first time at London’s iconic Theatre Royal Drury Lane, backed by a full orchestra and in partnership with Spotify.
The invite-only event, which also unveiled four unreleased tracks, was not just a concert but a defining statement: Afrobeats has arrived at the world’s grandest stages, and Asake is its most compelling standard-bearer.
A concert film of the performance will be available on Spotify in the coming days.





















