Afrobeats Stars Headline the FIFA World Cup 2026 Album

By The Rio Times | Created at 2026-06-23 11:55:41 | Updated at 2026-06-23 15:19:07 3 hours ago

AFRICA · MUSIC

Key Facts

Five African stars: Burna Boy, Davido, Rema, Ayra Starr and Tyla all appear on the official FIFA World Cup 2026 album.

The theme song: Burna Boy’s ‘Dai Dai’, with Colombia’s Shakira, is the tournament’s official theme.

An Afro-Latin mix: African acts share the record with Latin names such as Anitta, Daddy Yankee and Alejandro Fernandez.

Eighteen tracks: FIFA calls it the most extensive music project ever built around a World Cup.

Opening night: Burna Boy is set to perform ‘Dai Dai’ with Shakira at the opening ceremony in Mexico City on 11 July.

Export after oil: Afrobeats is now often called Nigeria’s biggest export after crude oil, heard in more than 180 countries.

Africa is everywhere on the official FIFA World Cup 2026 album: Burna Boy, Davido, Rema, Ayra Starr and Tyla all feature, and Burna Boy’s ‘Dai Dai’ with Shakira is the tournament’s theme song.

FIFA World Cup 2026 album — Afrobeats star Davido performing on stageNigerian superstar Davido, one of five African artists on the official FIFA World Cup 2026 album, on stage. (Photo: Rasheedhrasheed, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons)

Afrobeats stars on the FIFA World Cup 2026 album

When FIFA unveiled the soundtrack to its 2026 tournament in June, the spread of African names was hard to miss. Five of the continent’s biggest acts made the 18-track record.

Burna Boy, Davido, Rema, Ayra Starr and Tyla each took a song, most of them beside global pop and Latin stars.

Burna Boy and Shakira on the theme song

The centrepiece is ‘Dai Dai’, a duet between Nigeria’s Burna Boy and Colombia’s Shakira, chosen as the tournament’s official theme. Davido appears on ‘No Place Like Home’ with Major Lazer and Nelly Furtado.

Rema joins Thailand’s Lisa and Brazil’s Anitta on ‘Goals’, Ayra Starr teams with the US rapper Latto on ‘Show Me’, and Tyla features on ‘Game Time’.

Between them, the five carry songs across pop, dance and hip-hop, not a single niche.

An Afro-Latin meeting

For a tournament hosted across North America, the album reads like a bridge between Africa and Latin America. Afrobeats and amapiano sit next to reggaeton, cumbia and ranchera.

Anitta of Brazil, the Puerto Rican Daddy Yankee, Mexico’s Alejandro Fernandez and Venezuela’s Danny Ocean all feature. It is the kind of South-South pop crossover that barely existed a decade ago.

Afrobeats, Nigeria’s export after oil

The line-up confirms a shift that has been building for years. Afrobeats has gone from Lagos clubs to arenas in London and New York, and is now routinely called Nigeria’s biggest export after oil.

By some counts the genre reaches listeners in more than 180 countries. A World Cup soundtrack is simply the latest, largest stage.

From Lagos to the Azteca

The biggest moment may come on opening night. Burna Boy is billed to perform ‘Dai Dai’ with Shakira at the ceremony in Mexico City’s Estadio Azteca on 11 July.

That would put an African headliner in front of one of the largest live audiences on earth. FIFA has called the wider project its most extensive music initiative for any World Cup.

Why it matters beyond the music

Soft power is the real prize. Every stream and stadium singalong sells Africa as modern, young and culturally central, rather than as a charity case.

For the artists and their countries, the soundtrack is a marketing machine money cannot easily buy. The continent is no longer a guest at the global party; it is helping host it.

Africa’s wider World Cup

The album is only part of Africa’s presence at the 2026 finals. A record ten African teams qualified, the most ever, widening the continent’s footprint on the pitch as well as the playlist.

Sponsors and broadcasters have noticed, courting African audiences and talent as football’s fastest-growing market.

For a tournament shared by the United States, Mexico and Canada, Africa is an unmistakable thread running through it.

Merchandise, watch parties and brand deals tend to follow the music, turning a tournament into a months-long showcase for the continent.

More than one African sound

The line-up also shows Africa exporting several styles at once. Nigeria’s Afrobeats shares the bill with South African Tyla’s amapiano, a slower, more percussive groove.

That range matters. It tells the world the continent is not a single sound but a whole music industry, with stars, genres and rivalries of its own.

A decade ago, few of these names would have featured. Their presence is a measure of how fast African pop has climbed, and a song on the World Cup album can launch a career.

The producers and songwriters behind the scenes travel just as far, shaping hits for artists on several continents.

Frequently asked questions

Which African artists are on the FIFA World Cup 2026 album?

Burna Boy, Davido, Rema, Ayra Starr and Tyla all feature on the 18-track record. They appear beside global pop and Latin American stars.

What is the official theme song?

‘Dai Dai’, a duet between Nigeria’s Burna Boy and Colombia’s Shakira, is the tournament’s official theme. Burna Boy is set to perform it at the opening ceremony.

When and where is the opening ceremony?

The opening ceremony is scheduled for 11 July 2026 at Estadio Azteca in Mexico City. Burna Boy is billed to perform ‘Dai Dai’ with Shakira.

Why is the album seen as an Afro-Latin moment?

African acts share the record with Latin stars such as Anitta, Daddy Yankee and Alejandro Fernandez. It reflects a growing crossover between Afrobeats and Latin pop.

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