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Let's Celebrate This Christmas

Richard Shekari

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Let's Celebrate This Christmas is a joyful, faith-centred Christmas song that calls hearts back to the true meaning of the season. Rooted in hope, kindness, and peace, the song invites listeners to lay down their burdens, rejoice in Christ’s birth.
richard shekari
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Born on April 11, 1981, in Bauchi State, Nigeria, Richard Shekari. I love adding a unique blend of rhythm, rhyme, and soul to my creations. Abuja, Nigeria.
I am Richard Shekari, a multifaceted artist and humanitarian based in Abuja, Nigeria. Born on 11 April 1981 in Bauchi, my relationship with music began early in life, long before I fully understood how deeply it would shape my identity. What started as a simple involvement in church would eventually become the foundation of my artistic journey, guiding me through seasons of devotion, rebellion, discovery, and ultimately reconciliation between two very different musical worlds. My earliest musical training came in the early 1990s when I joined the church choir as a tenor. At that age, I did not see it as training or preparation for anything greater. I simply loved the atmosphere of music in the churchthe way voices blended together, the way melodies could lift the entire congregation, and the sense that music could carry prayers when words alone seemed insufficient. Singing in the choir taught me discipline, harmony, and attentiveness. I learned how voices could complement each other and how structure in music could bring order and beauty to sound. More importantly, those years instilled in me a deep awareness that music had a spiritual dimension. It was not just performance; it was communication between the human heart and the divine. The choir also taught me humility. In a choir, the individual voice is never meant to dominate the whole. Each singer contributes to something larger than themselves. This understanding would stay with me for years, even during periods when my life seemed to move far away from those early lessons. The choir did more than teach me how to sing; it introduced me to music as service, as worship, and as a way of lifting others. However, as I entered my teenage years in the late 1990s, I went through a period of rebellion that many young people experience when trying to find their place in the world. Questions about faith, authority, identity, and purpose began to stir within me. That rebellion gradually pushed me away from the church environment where my musical journey had begun. In that space of questioning and emotional intensity, I found myself drawn to rap music. Rap provided something the choir had not given me at the time: a raw and direct outlet for personal expression. While the choir had taught me melody and harmony, rap introduced me to rhythm, wordplay, and storytelling. It was a world where emotions could be spoken boldly, where struggles and frustrations could be transformed into poetry over beats. I began experimenting with rhymes, writing lines, and crafting verses, often simply playing with language and sound. At first, it was just youthful exploration, but gradually I realised that writing itself was becoming a powerful tool for me. Through rap, I developed the writing skills that would later define much of my creative work. The discipline of fitting words into rhythm sharpened my awareness of syllables, timing, and lyrical structure. I learned how to compress ideas into powerful lines, how to create imagery with language, and how to tell stories that could capture a listener’s attention. Rap was not just music for me; it became a training ground for my voice as a writer. During that period, I released two underground rap albums. These projects were part of my attempt to fully explore that path and understand where it might lead. Though the albums circulated only within limited spaces, they represented an important stage of my artistic growth. They allowed me to experiment, to take risks, and to push the boundaries of my creativity. Yet, despite the excitement and freedom I felt in that world, my rap career was relatively short-lived. By around 2010, that chapter of my life had come to an end. Looking back today, I understand that those years were not a detour but an essential part of my development. At the time, the two pathsthe church choir and rap musicseemed completely opposite. One was rooted in spiritual devotion and communal harmony, while the other thrived on individual expression and raw honesty. Yet those differences are precisely what shaped the artist I have become. The choir gave me melody, reverence, and an understanding of music as a sacred act. Rap gave me lyrical courage, storytelling ability, and the technical tools to shape words into rhythm and meaning. Where the choir taught me how to lift voices toward heaven, rap taught me how to speak honestly from the depths of the human experience. One nurtured my spirit; the other sharpened my craft. Today, my musical style is the meeting point of those two journeys. The choir boy in me still seeks to glorify God through melody and worship, while the writer formed during my rap years brings structure, poetic depth, and expressive freedom to every song I create. When I write and compose today, I often feel those two influences working together. The melodies carry the echoes of my early choir days, while the lyrics reflect the rhythmic precision and storytelling instincts I developed through rap. As a songwriter within the gospel genre, I strive to create music that resonates deeply with listenersnot only spiritually but emotionally and intellectually as well. My songs are meant to be both prayer and reflection, combining heartfelt worship with thoughtful lyrics that invite people to examine their own journeys. Beyond songwriting, I also take part in mixing and mastering my music. I enjoy shaping the sonic character of my songs until they reflect what I like to call my “perfect taste (lol). For me, this stage is just as creative as writing the song itself, because it allows me to sculpt the emotional atmosphere of the music and present it in the most authentic way possible. My creative expression also extends into the literary world, where I have authored several engaging titles. Writing books allows me to explore ideas and stories in greater depth than music alone sometimes permits. Just as with my songs, my literary work seeks to offer reflection, insight, and storytelling that can connect with readers across different genres and backgrounds. When I look at my journey as a whole, I no longer see two conflicting musical paths. Instead, I see two necessary seasons that shaped who I am today. The choir gave me the heart of worship, while rap gave me the voice of expression. Together, they formed the foundation of my artistic identity and continue to influence every piece of music and writing I create today.
Song Info
Genre
Pop Indie Pop
Author
Richard Shekari
Rights
Richard Shekari and Denijel Medic
Uploaded
December 13, 2025
Track Files
MP3
MP3 8.4 MB 320 kbps 3:40 minutes
Meta Data
BPM
0
Vocals
Character
Energy
relaxed, cool
high-energy
Danceable
coffee-place
dancefloor
Positivity
dark, sad, angry
happy
Appeal
unique
radio-friendly
Story behind the song
Celebrate This Christmas was born out of a quiet reflection on how easily the true meaning of Christmas can be overshadowed by noise, pressure, and worldly distractions. Rather than writing a song about spectacle or tradition alone, I felt led to create something that gently calls the heart back to Christ to the Prince of Peace who stepped out of heaven and into our brokenness. The verses grew from a pastoral desire to speak directly to people carrying unseen burdens, reminding both brother and sister that there is light, hope, and divine timing in God’s care. The chorus became a communal invitation not just to sing, but to rejoice together in the Saviour whose peace does not fade with the season. The spoken words reflect a deeply personal moment of gratitude and surrender, acknowledging Jesus not only as King, but as Friend One who left His throne to walk in the dust for our sake. The bridge closes the song as an offering, returning everything back to God in worship and asking that His presence would refine our hearts to honour Him truthfully. Produced alongside DanMed, this song became more than a Christmas release; it became a shared act of worship and a reminder that Christmas is ultimately about presence God with us and the peace He brings to the world.
Lyrics
Celebrate This Christmas Verse 1: When the snow begins to fall, you can hear the Saviour calling. Don't let the world be the reason your tears start falling-bring your burden to the Son of the Morning. Let His light within you shine; don't worry, brother, it will be fine. Everything has its time-so stay kind. And sister, celebrate life... come, let's celebrate life. Chorus: Let's celebrate this Christmas-come, rejoice in the Prince of Peace. Let's celebrate our Saviour, who brings us heaven's perfect peace. Let's celebrate Jesus-yes, celebrate the Prince of Peace. Let's celebrate our Saviour, who brings us peace from heaven high. Verse 2: A love like no other, from a King whose kingdom is just and fair. A firstborn unlike any other, sent by the Father to save us all. Come, let's share the good news with the world- Let the whole wide world know His holy name. He brings us healing from above- Let the whole wide world know His holy name. Spoken Words: Jesus, You are my Saviour. You left Your throne on high and stepped into the dust to save me. Jesus, You called me friend- What more can I offer than my heart and soul? Take it all, O Lord. Bridge: Holy Father, here we stand before Your throne with our songs. Receive our praise, accept our offering-our hearts are Yours alone. Holy Father, here we stand before Your throne with our songs. Let the fire of Your presence shape our hearts to worship true. *Chorus* Produced by DanMed. Written and Performed by Richard Shekari.
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