“FEMUA is like an octopus”, journalist Selay Kouassi tells me. “Its tentacles stretch and multiply each year; a hybrid cultural event with real social impact.” He’s not wrong. What began as a music festival has become a national moment: part stadium-sized concert series, part social platform, part soft-power summit. Now in its 17th edition, the Festival des Musiques Urbaines d’Anoumabo (FEMUA) drew over 100,000 spectators to Abidjan and the inland city of Daloa, with artists from more than 30 countries. For founder A’Salfo, of Magic System fame, “it’s music’s version of the African Cup of Nations”, a reference to the continent’s beloved football tournament, won by the Côte d’Ivoire a year ago.
But FEMUA doesn’t just kick off. It weighs in. Since it began, the festival has built schools, clinics…
