Spotify and fashion collective Severe Nature took Lagos by storm with Afrobeats Culture in Motion, an event that blurred the line between sound and style.
Held at Spotify’s Greasy Tunes Café, the showcase brought together four of Nigeria’s biggest designers, including Móye Africa, I.N Official, KADIJU, and Pièce Et Patch, to reinterpret Afrobeats as fashion.
Unlike typical runway presentations, this was an experience, a fusion of rhythm, texture, and expression that captured the heartbeat of a genre that has defined a generation. The atmosphere pulsed with energy as guests moved through a Spotify-curated soundscape that synced with each designer’s visual narrative.
Christopher Afolabi, director of Art at Severe Nature, explained the intention behind the collaboration: “Partnering with Spotify was essential. They are the sonic architects of the Afrobeats movement globally, and our goal was to build the physical, wearable dimension of the world they’ve helped champion. This showcase wasn’t about clothes inspired by music; it was about creating garments that are the music in their texture, their defiance of convention, and their deep connection to heritage.”
Each designer approached the concept from a different creative angle. Móye Africa revisited ancient Yoruba storytelling through hand-dyed adire and upcycled Aso Oke, blending heritage with modern silhouettes. I.N Official leaned into structured, tech-inspired tailoring that echoed the precision and innovation of Afrobeats’ sound.

KADIJU, on the other hand, offered femininity with courageous ruffles and zero-waste craftsmanship, showing that sustainability and glamour can coexist. Pièce Et Patch rounded out the showcase with a collage of deconstructed denim and recycled fabrics, crafting avant-garde pieces that treated fashion as a living archive.
For Spotify, the collaboration revealed a larger vision that looks beyond music charts to the creative ecosystem shaping global culture. “Afrobeats is a culture, not just a genre. At Spotify, we are committed to amplifying all facets of this culture, giving artists and creators the platforms they deserve,” said Phiona Okumu, head of Music for Sub-Saharan Africa at Spotify. “Severe Nature’s vision to connect sound to style is exactly the kind of innovative, culture-forward initiative we are proud to power. This is a celebration of the architects of a global movement.”What unfolded in Lagos was a statement that creativity in Africa cannot be boxed into one medium. From the rhythm of the drums to the cut of the fabric, Afrobeats Culture in Motion proved that when music meets design, culture doesn’t just evolve — it moves.