Cecil Hammond at 50: Two Decades Building Nigeria’s Live Entertainment Industry, and Now a ₦5 Billion Bet on What Comes Next
On April 8, 2026, Flytime Founder/CEO Cecil Hammond marked his 50th birthday by launching the Flytime Foundation, backed by a $4 million commitment (approximately ₦5 billion).
On April 8, 2026, Flytime Founder/CEO Cecil Hammond marked his 50th birthday by launching the Flytime Foundation, backed by a $4 million commitment (approximately ₦5 billion). Targeted at performing arts education, training infrastructure, and industry access, it represents one of the most substantial private-sector interventions in the country’s creative talent pipeline in recent years.
The two day celebration was full of Nigeria’s most influential business, music, art, and cultural leaders. Business titans including Alhaji Aliko Dangote, President of the Dangote Group; Femi Otedola, Chairman of First HoldCo; Dr. Wale Tinubu CON, Group CEO of Oando PLC; Abdul Samad Rabiu CFR CON, Chairman of BUA Group; Dame Dr. Adaora Umeoji OON, CEO of Zenith Bank; and Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede CFR, founder of Coronation Group, sat alongside creative powerhouses including Mo Abudu, CEO of EbonyLife; Genevieve Nnaji, award-winning actress; Tiwa Savage, Grammy-nominated artist; and Don Jazzy, founder of Mavin Records.
During the announcement at the culminating party, Hammond said, “For every artist you see, there are many more who never got the chance, not for lack of talent, but for lack of opportunity.”
The Foundation aims to bridge this gap by underwriting mentorship, equipment access, and structured entry pathways for creatives developing both within and outside formal systems.
The economic logic is straightforward. Nigeria’s creative sector attracts global eyes, but long-term growth is constrained by gaps in technical capacity. Investment at the pipeline level offers a multiplier effect: one trained sound engineer supports dozens of productions, while music business graduates restructure how international deals are brokered.
At 50, the platforms that defined Hammond’s first two decades; including Rhythm Unplugged and Flytime Fest, established visibility and scale. The systems he is now investing in will determine how Nigeria translates that scale into institutional wealth, ensuring the creative sector becomes a primary engine for national prosperity.
Cecil Hammond is widely regarded as the defining force in Nigeria’s entertainment and hospitality industries. As the founder of Flytime Promotions, Hammond has spent over two decades shaping Nigeria’s live entertainment industry through Rhythm Unplugged and Flytime Fest; platforms that have become key defining moments in Lagos’ December season. Hammond’s company has extended beyond music and concerts. His businesses have grown into corporate events for publicly traded institutions, Presidential campaigns, government agencies. His portfolio of ventures spans film with Magicline Films, a talent booking agency, H48, a record label, Flytime Records in partnership with Virgin Music UK, a nightlife establishment, TAPE Lagos in partnership with TAPE London through Rich Hospitality, the Lagos-based group behind Mako Lagos and Koko Beach Hotels and Resorts. Hammond is an avid supporter of charitable initiatives related to education and child well-being in Nigeria. He hopes to achieve more impact through the recently launched Flytime Foundation
