Luna Sage: "I'm Not Choosing Between Nigeria and America"
The Afrobeats-indie star on identity, "Oshun's Daughter," and why genre labels are dead.
Luna Sage's Spotify bio reads simply: "From everywhere. Nowhere. The in-between." It's the kind of statement that could feel pretentious from another artist, but from her it's just honest.
Born in Houston to Nigerian parents, Luna grew up caught between worlds. Her earliest memories are of Fela Kuti records playing at family gatherings and Radiohead blasting from her older brother's room. Both found their way into her music.
"People always ask if I'm making Afrobeats or indie pop," she says over video call from her Houston home studio. "And I'm like — yes. Both. All of it. Genre labels are just filing systems for streaming platforms. Music doesn't actually work like that."
"Oshun's Daughter" — the track that put her on the map — is proof. Over amapiano-inspired log drums and shimmering guitars, Luna sings about ancestry, self-discovery, and finding power in the places between identities. Forty million streams later, the culture agrees.
Written by
Kai Reeves
writer
Electronic music and Afrobeats correspondent. Festival circuit regular.
Featured Artist
Luna Sage
Houston, TX
890K
Listeners
91
Glow Score