Later he abandoned both the sweets-selling trade and embraced music or praise-singing full-time. This vocation took him to many villages in the Musawa area. Finally, he settled in
Bakori after his benefactor, Abdullahi Inde, a prince of Musawa who was working there as a Native Authority official in charge of buying cotton and groundnuts, asked him to move other there. In Bakori, Shata married his first wife, Iya, whose real name was Binta. They had a daughter, Amina, who died in infancy. From his base in Bakori, Shata, with his band, toured all over
Northern Nigeria including
Katsina,
Sokoto and
Kano, which he first visited in the late '40s. In 1952 his stardom began to manifest in
Kano after he performed at a wedding party known as "Bikin 'Yan Sarki" (Wedding of the Princes) where some 12 notable Kano princes married. In 1960 he moved to
Funtua, a more cosmopolitan town not far from
Bakori. Shata made Funtua his home for about forty years - up until his death. Shata could not recall or remember the number of songs he produced, but they are believed to be in thousands. Many of his songs, especially those he produced in his teens, were not recorded. His band was usually made up of 12 men, six drummers and six singers. He signed with
EMI record label in the 1980s becoming their biggest star. He later left EMI and joined
Polygram Records. Shata was famed to have sung for every topic under the Hausa land's sun: agriculture, culture, religion, economy, politics, military, morality and etiquettes, animals, trade, etc. He also sang of unity and the necessity for rehabilitation at the end of the
Nigerian Civil War. He used music to educate and inform people on the many changes in 1970s Nigeria, such
decimal currency and the change to
left hand driving. On his mission to educate through music, he sang about events happening around the world like the
Gulf War of 1991. A common theme in his songs is the importance of unity, a message incredibly important in post-civil war Nigeria. Shata is also particularly famous for always improvising his songs or poems and composing lyrics in the moment. The chorus members of Shata's band are his apprentices and have usually worked with him for a considerably long time. Because of this, the chemistry within the band is great. Shata used body movements and gestures as instructions for the members. In an interview with the Scholar Danbatti Abdulkadir, one of the members of the band describes one of the gestures as the 'mouth technique' where Shata turns to the chorus before the start of a song and points to is mouth then says "bakina" meaning "my mouth". The chorus then knows when to join in and what to sing. The interviewee also confirms that the songs are never practiced or rehearsed before a performance. == Activism ==