Friday Freebies: Azonto Ghost – Exclusive 320

Friday Freebies: Azonto Ghost – Exclusive 320

 

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After tracking him down for a few months, I was finally able to sit down with the Azonto Ghost himself, beatmaker and vocalist extraordinaire Mr Bisa Kdei. The full story is coming next week in the Lungu Lungu column, meanwhile kpbs conscious DJs can grab the exclusive 320 version of Azonto Ghost here, and follow Kdei on Twitter for more goodness!

 

RELATED

Lala Shishi :Shatta wale – My Level

Lala Shishi :Shatta wale – My Level

My level is the biggest song from Shatta Wale this year. Its a street anthem and its currently enjoying radio and club plays all over the country. On My Level, Shatta Wale talks about how far he is come in this industry. Starting of as Bandana , going on a hiatus and...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – September 28

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – September 28

DJ Pizaro: This week we have La vie là-bas by Togolese act Toofan , Fakye by Highlife act Bisa K'dei, sultry Nana Yaa drops a new one called Woman Power , Dancehall Queen Mzvee features Kuami Eugene on Bend Down and  Ruff Town Records new signee Wendy Shay...

Lala Shishi :Mr Real ft Obadice & Idowest – Legbegbe

Lala Shishi :Mr Real ft Obadice & Idowest – Legbegbe

This is one of the biggest Afrobeats song on the african continent today. The song has an afrohouse vibe to it and you cant help but " Shaku Shaku " when you hear it. There's an interesting story behind this hit song and that is why we feature it on Lala Shishi this...

Friday Freebies: Azonto Ghost – Exclusive 320

 

55380_3174621584631_403195518_o

After tracking him down for a few months, I was finally able to sit down with the Azonto Ghost himself, beatmaker and vocalist extraordinaire Mr Bisa Kdei. The full story is coming next week in the Lungu Lungu column, meanwhile kpbs conscious DJs can grab the exclusive 320 version of Azonto Ghost here, and follow Kdei on Twitter for more goodness!

 

RELATED

Lala Shishi :Shatta wale – My Level

Lala Shishi :Shatta wale – My Level

My level is the biggest song from Shatta Wale this year. Its a street anthem and its currently enjoying radio and club plays all over the country. On My Level, Shatta Wale talks about how far he is come in this industry. Starting of as Bandana , going on a hiatus and...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – September 28

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – September 28

DJ Pizaro: This week we have La vie là-bas by Togolese act Toofan , Fakye by Highlife act Bisa K'dei, sultry Nana Yaa drops a new one called Woman Power , Dancehall Queen Mzvee features Kuami Eugene on Bend Down and  Ruff Town Records new signee Wendy Shay...

Lala Shishi :Mr Real ft Obadice & Idowest – Legbegbe

Lala Shishi :Mr Real ft Obadice & Idowest – Legbegbe

This is one of the biggest Afrobeats song on the african continent today. The song has an afrohouse vibe to it and you cant help but " Shaku Shaku " when you hear it. There's an interesting story behind this hit song and that is why we feature it on Lala Shishi this...

Friday Freebies – BIG FKN GUN, DJ Znobia, Alidu, Murlo, DJ Zhao

Friday Freebies – BIG FKN GUN, DJ Znobia, Alidu, Murlo, DJ Zhao

 

artworks-000045809819-uk914v-t500x500

Been drooling over this one for a few days now, finally up on soundcloud. BIG FKN GUN is the bomb as explained more thoroughly here. Okmalumkoolkat from Dirty Paraffin has a flow that has been driving me nuts ever since I heard their Greatest Hits mixtape. And Spoek, does he still need to be introduced?

dj znobia

DJ Znobia is one of my all time musical heroes. The guy has done more to shape kuduro or tarraxinha into what we now know them to be, than any other angolan or Portugues artist I can think of. On this track he goes bananas over a very, very famous sound. Bloooohoooooooood!

Screen-Shot-2013-04-19-at-3.33.24-AM

 In case you didn’t know… we will be releasing a so far so siiiiiiiick remix EP of new unreleased tracks by Mohamed Alidu, whom you can read about here. The first remix was just released as a teaser via the XLR8R website, and features the work of…. Murlo! A current favorite of mine, check these crazy tunes.

heartoflight_800

What better way to leave you than with, quite simply, the best music in the world. Orchestrated by a knowledgeable and sensitive selector, DJ Zhao. Check out the always appropriate 2 hour Chop Chop supermix he did for Akwaaba’s 2 years, as well as his recently uploaded collection of extra worthy mixes.

Screen-Shot-2013-04-19-at-3.54.13-AM

In other news, big up to The Republic for their feature in the Guardian! And a special shout out to SanSe my DJ partner in crime in Accra, who turns the big 4-0! And is about to celebrate in style, with Ackah Blay’s full highlife band… chale more vim, enjoy the weekend!

 

RELATED

Lala Shishi :Shatta wale – My Level

Lala Shishi :Shatta wale – My Level

My level is the biggest song from Shatta Wale this year. Its a street anthem and its currently enjoying radio and club plays all over the country. On My Level, Shatta Wale talks about how far he is come in this industry. Starting of as Bandana , going on a hiatus and...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – September 28

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – September 28

DJ Pizaro: This week we have La vie là-bas by Togolese act Toofan , Fakye by Highlife act Bisa K'dei, sultry Nana Yaa drops a new one called Woman Power , Dancehall Queen Mzvee features Kuami Eugene on Bend Down and  Ruff Town Records new signee Wendy Shay...

Lala Shishi :Mr Real ft Obadice & Idowest – Legbegbe

Lala Shishi :Mr Real ft Obadice & Idowest – Legbegbe

This is one of the biggest Afrobeats song on the african continent today. The song has an afrohouse vibe to it and you cant help but " Shaku Shaku " when you hear it. There's an interesting story behind this hit song and that is why we feature it on Lala Shishi this...

Friday Freebies – BIG FKN GUN, DJ Znobia, Alidu, Murlo, DJ Zhao

 

artworks-000045809819-uk914v-t500x500

Been drooling over this one for a few days now, finally up on soundcloud. BIG FKN GUN is the bomb as explained more thoroughly here. Okmalumkoolkat from Dirty Paraffin has a flow that has been driving me nuts ever since I heard their Greatest Hits mixtape. And Spoek, does he still need to be introduced?

dj znobia

DJ Znobia is one of my all time musical heroes. The guy has done more to shape kuduro or tarraxinha into what we now know them to be, than any other angolan or Portugues artist I can think of. On this track he goes bananas over a very, very famous sound. Bloooohoooooooood!

Screen-Shot-2013-04-19-at-3.33.24-AM

 In case you didn’t know… we will be releasing a so far so siiiiiiiick remix EP of new unreleased tracks by Mohamed Alidu, whom you can read about here. The first remix was just released as a teaser via the XLR8R website, and features the work of…. Murlo! A current favorite of mine, check these crazy tunes.

heartoflight_800

What better way to leave you than with, quite simply, the best music in the world. Orchestrated by a knowledgeable and sensitive selector, DJ Zhao. Check out the always appropriate 2 hour Chop Chop supermix he did for Akwaaba’s 2 years, as well as his recently uploaded collection of extra worthy mixes.

Screen-Shot-2013-04-19-at-3.54.13-AM

In other news, big up to The Republic for their feature in the Guardian! And a special shout out to SanSe my DJ partner in crime in Accra, who turns the big 4-0! And is about to celebrate in style, with Ackah Blay’s full highlife band… chale more vim, enjoy the weekend!

 

RELATED

Lala Shishi :Shatta wale – My Level

Lala Shishi :Shatta wale – My Level

My level is the biggest song from Shatta Wale this year. Its a street anthem and its currently enjoying radio and club plays all over the country. On My Level, Shatta Wale talks about how far he is come in this industry. Starting of as Bandana , going on a hiatus and...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – September 28

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – September 28

DJ Pizaro: This week we have La vie là-bas by Togolese act Toofan , Fakye by Highlife act Bisa K'dei, sultry Nana Yaa drops a new one called Woman Power , Dancehall Queen Mzvee features Kuami Eugene on Bend Down and  Ruff Town Records new signee Wendy Shay...

Lala Shishi :Mr Real ft Obadice & Idowest – Legbegbe

Lala Shishi :Mr Real ft Obadice & Idowest – Legbegbe

This is one of the biggest Afrobeats song on the african continent today. The song has an afrohouse vibe to it and you cant help but " Shaku Shaku " when you hear it. There's an interesting story behind this hit song and that is why we feature it on Lala Shishi this...

Steloo & Yaw P – Nagba

Steloo & Yaw P – Nagba

Brand new video from Steloo and Yaw P! Watch and spread, and read the story (originally published on Fader’s site):

Accra has over 30 radio stations. That’s a lot, and compared to other cities I’ve lived in, there’s a lot of music actually worth hearing. I’ve heard kuduro on the radio here, Congolese music, even 1980s electrofunk! And of course tons and tons of azonto, afrobeats and hiplife. With that said, when it comes to playing contemporary Ghanaian artists making music that is not mainstream, suddenly there is a significant void.

There are pockets however, as certain radio stations and certain radio personalities keep an open window for new sounds and new ideas. Such is the case with Eddy Blay, a Ghanaian music industry veteran, who now has a primetime show on Accra’s X FM. In the mid-2000s Eddy had a show on Vibe FM, where he occasionally played house music. This is where Steloo first heard house: “This guy had some crazy stuff,” he recalls of Eddy Blay. “The way he was jamming to the music really got me going.” This was a turning point for Steloo: “Everyday the virus grew stronger in me, then I became a full addict.”

Meanwhile, Yaw P was rapping with a partner who made beats, but after the producer left, Yaw started creating music himself and took an interest in forging his own sound. “We couldn’t do what we are doing if we didn’t have our own studio. The engineers wouldn’t have the time to discuss what we are trying to do, because they have a bunch of other people coming through.” So Yaw P was fortunate enough to be able to experiment with his sound. When he met the house-lover Steloo, the duo gelled and came up with their unique sound, a hip-hop backbone with strong electronic music elements.

When Yaw P and Steloo contacted me, they were pushing “Oi Mate,” an intense techno anthem which I assumed to be coming from London:

I was wrong. The duo is local and I met them shortly after. We bonded over our eclectic electronic taste, and since then they have been sending me track after track of surprising, creative electronic music. But this last track sped things up quite a bit: “N’agba” is dubstep. Mixed, of course, with some dope acoustic drumming. The result is something out of a rave—only filled with Ga fishermen.

 

“N’agba” means problem in Ga. Yaw P was already working on a dubstep beat when Steloo picked it as the backdrop for his concept. In the song Steloo asks defiantly: What’s your problem? Aren’t you happy? Should I get you a bottle of Fanta for you to be happy? He also tells me “the beat itself has that vibe of, ‘Who really wants to cause a problem? Who do you have a problem with over here?’ It has some attitude in it.”

Although here in Ghana there isn’t that much space yet for their sound, the duo have been encouraged by a number of key players: Eddie Blay still supports Steloo, and helped him land a radio show on X FM. DJ Vision, an old friend of Steloo’s now at Y FM, is also a big backer of house music in Ghana, and he has helped push Steloo and Yaw P’s music. Accra[dot]Alt have also pushed the duo, offering them a spot for the second time at their recent (amazing) Ind!e Fuse event in Accra. It’s exciting to see such different people coming together to promote an innovative sound, and it was equally exciting for me to sit down with Yaw P and Steloo to witness how focused and committed they are.

IMG_8448 (1)

Since they have covered most potential outlets in Ghana, the two spend lots of time pushing their music online, posting and connecting with the world via Facebook or Twitter. Among other things, this DIY strategy got their music to be played on Big Brother Africa, arguably the most influential pan-African TV show. It is also how I connected with them!

Today, the two remain hungry for new musical discoveries, Steloo actively researches music as he puts together his weekly show on X FM, while Yaw P is relentless in the studio, dishing out beat after beat: together they keep expanding, and judging by the increasing quality of their music, we are in for many more rounds of musical treats.

RELATED

Lala Shishi :Shatta wale – My Level

Lala Shishi :Shatta wale – My Level

My level is the biggest song from Shatta Wale this year. Its a street anthem and its currently enjoying radio and club plays all over the country. On My Level, Shatta Wale talks about how far he is come in this industry. Starting of as Bandana , going on a hiatus and...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – September 28

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – September 28

DJ Pizaro: This week we have La vie là-bas by Togolese act Toofan , Fakye by Highlife act Bisa K'dei, sultry Nana Yaa drops a new one called Woman Power , Dancehall Queen Mzvee features Kuami Eugene on Bend Down and  Ruff Town Records new signee Wendy Shay...

Lala Shishi :Mr Real ft Obadice & Idowest – Legbegbe

Lala Shishi :Mr Real ft Obadice & Idowest – Legbegbe

This is one of the biggest Afrobeats song on the african continent today. The song has an afrohouse vibe to it and you cant help but " Shaku Shaku " when you hear it. There's an interesting story behind this hit song and that is why we feature it on Lala Shishi this...

Steloo & Yaw P – Nagba

Brand new video from Steloo and Yaw P! Watch and spread, and read the story (originally published on Fader’s site):

Accra has over 30 radio stations. That’s a lot, and compared to other cities I’ve lived in, there’s a lot of music actually worth hearing. I’ve heard kuduro on the radio here, Congolese music, even 1980s electrofunk! And of course tons and tons of azonto, afrobeats and hiplife. With that said, when it comes to playing contemporary Ghanaian artists making music that is not mainstream, suddenly there is a significant void.

There are pockets however, as certain radio stations and certain radio personalities keep an open window for new sounds and new ideas. Such is the case with Eddy Blay, a Ghanaian music industry veteran, who now has a primetime show on Accra’s X FM. In the mid-2000s Eddy had a show on Vibe FM, where he occasionally played house music. This is where Steloo first heard house: “This guy had some crazy stuff,” he recalls of Eddy Blay. “The way he was jamming to the music really got me going.” This was a turning point for Steloo: “Everyday the virus grew stronger in me, then I became a full addict.”

Meanwhile, Yaw P was rapping with a partner who made beats, but after the producer left, Yaw started creating music himself and took an interest in forging his own sound. “We couldn’t do what we are doing if we didn’t have our own studio. The engineers wouldn’t have the time to discuss what we are trying to do, because they have a bunch of other people coming through.” So Yaw P was fortunate enough to be able to experiment with his sound. When he met the house-lover Steloo, the duo gelled and came up with their unique sound, a hip-hop backbone with strong electronic music elements.

When Yaw P and Steloo contacted me, they were pushing “Oi Mate,” an intense techno anthem which I assumed to be coming from London:

I was wrong. The duo is local and I met them shortly after. We bonded over our eclectic electronic taste, and since then they have been sending me track after track of surprising, creative electronic music. But this last track sped things up quite a bit: “N’agba” is dubstep. Mixed, of course, with some dope acoustic drumming. The result is something out of a rave—only filled with Ga fishermen.

 

“N’agba” means problem in Ga. Yaw P was already working on a dubstep beat when Steloo picked it as the backdrop for his concept. In the song Steloo asks defiantly: What’s your problem? Aren’t you happy? Should I get you a bottle of Fanta for you to be happy? He also tells me “the beat itself has that vibe of, ‘Who really wants to cause a problem? Who do you have a problem with over here?’ It has some attitude in it.”

Although here in Ghana there isn’t that much space yet for their sound, the duo have been encouraged by a number of key players: Eddie Blay still supports Steloo, and helped him land a radio show on X FM. DJ Vision, an old friend of Steloo’s now at Y FM, is also a big backer of house music in Ghana, and he has helped push Steloo and Yaw P’s music. Accra[dot]Alt have also pushed the duo, offering them a spot for the second time at their recent (amazing) Ind!e Fuse event in Accra. It’s exciting to see such different people coming together to promote an innovative sound, and it was equally exciting for me to sit down with Yaw P and Steloo to witness how focused and committed they are.

IMG_8448 (1)

Since they have covered most potential outlets in Ghana, the two spend lots of time pushing their music online, posting and connecting with the world via Facebook or Twitter. Among other things, this DIY strategy got their music to be played on Big Brother Africa, arguably the most influential pan-African TV show. It is also how I connected with them!

Today, the two remain hungry for new musical discoveries, Steloo actively researches music as he puts together his weekly show on X FM, while Yaw P is relentless in the studio, dishing out beat after beat: together they keep expanding, and judging by the increasing quality of their music, we are in for many more rounds of musical treats.

RELATED

Lala Shishi :Shatta wale – My Level

Lala Shishi :Shatta wale – My Level

My level is the biggest song from Shatta Wale this year. Its a street anthem and its currently enjoying radio and club plays all over the country. On My Level, Shatta Wale talks about how far he is come in this industry. Starting of as Bandana , going on a hiatus and...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – September 28

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – September 28

DJ Pizaro: This week we have La vie là-bas by Togolese act Toofan , Fakye by Highlife act Bisa K'dei, sultry Nana Yaa drops a new one called Woman Power , Dancehall Queen Mzvee features Kuami Eugene on Bend Down and  Ruff Town Records new signee Wendy Shay...

Lala Shishi :Mr Real ft Obadice & Idowest – Legbegbe

Lala Shishi :Mr Real ft Obadice & Idowest – Legbegbe

This is one of the biggest Afrobeats song on the african continent today. The song has an afrohouse vibe to it and you cant help but " Shaku Shaku " when you hear it. There's an interesting story behind this hit song and that is why we feature it on Lala Shishi this...

Kyekyeku – “Pay Me (Friday Night)”

Kyekyeku – “Pay Me (Friday Night)”

white-kente620

Originally published in the Lungu Lungu column at the Fader.

Yesterday was Ghana’s independence day: the nation is 56 years young. For the occasion, I had written a kind of “state of the Ghanaian music industry” piece, which makes sense as Ghana’s Musicians’ Union organizes the first ever Ghana Music Week, hosting a massive concert featuring many of Ghana’s top artists, with the Ghana Music Awards are right around the corner too. So the music industry here is buzzing like crazy.

But as I started to write about all of this, I realized I was not only missing a lot of important bits, I was also writing overly technical stuff about how the industry works—not a very promising piece. This is when I had the type of epiphany I feel can only happen in Ghana. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve felt cornered into inextricable situations here, which suddenly open up thanks to some extra random coincidence. Well this morning, as I wrapped my head around making sense out of an industry which possibly makes no sense to anybody at all, I received the cornerstone of what I should really be writing about: some proper palm wine music.

Kyekyeku—pronounced tchetchekoo—is a name you hear in Accra if you go out to listen to live music. I’ve heard him accompany countless shows on the guitar, and just last week, I heard him perform an impromptu palm wine piece at the Republic, one of my favorite joints in Accra. I was finally compelled to reach out to him, not knowing he has not only recorded some tracks already, but he has done so in collaboration with the carrier of Ghana’s palm wine tradition, Agya Koo Nimo.

Palm wine music is the melodic backbone of Ghanaian highlife: picture a bunch of guys under a tree, sipping on palm wine, playing the guitar and singing along. While the concept is simple, palm wine chords are quite complex: I remember when I met Koo Nimo in Kumasi in 2010, listening to his music and thinking immediately about Brazil. He told me: “Palm wine music is complex chords assembled into simple melodies. Bossa nova or chóro have simple chords assembled into complex melodies.”

Since that day, I dream of the time when palm wine music reaches the same level of international recognition as bossa nova. As I spoke with Kyekyeku I realized that day may be coming sooner than I thought.

Kyekyeku has an advantage: he trained with the keeper of palm wine music in its purest form, but as a young musician playing on Accra’s live circuit, he is immersed into modern Ghanaian music. His decision to “zero in on palm wine music” as he tells me, only happened recently. “I play all sorts of music, but I want to be known for palm wine.”

That’s a significant challenge, considering Kyekyeku is a very popular musician here, who is choosing an avenue few dare to get into. “For me it was a very daring move to make,” he says, “because I have to give up on a lot of the cool stuff going around. That’s the dilemma for a lot of young people here: highlife is considered old and archaic, so everybody’s trying to do azonto and stuff, which is not bad, but things have to be balanced out.”

I am a huge fan of all things azonto and fruity loops, however, as Kyekyeku puts it, “things have to be balanced out,” and clearly the balance is off. There is little live music, and way too few holders of the palm wine and highlife melodic tradition. Even when I first came to Ghana in 2007, you heard a lot of highlife, Ofori Amponsah type digital highlife. Today, hearing new highlife songs is all too rare—gospel aside, but that’s a whole different story.

The song featured today is a Ghanaian classic (also covered recently by the Busy Twist), musically close to its roots, with linguistic twists courtesy of Kyekyeku to make the lyrics more palatable to a young audience. “Some of the slang and jargon I use in the song is very modern, whereas Koo Nimo sings in a very traditional way. We blend energies and feelings, to show that this music is dynamic. It’s a way to connect with both the old and new generations.” The two also connect with the world as they feature Indian tabla master Vishal Nagan.

Ironically, the conclusion of this story is the same I had intended in my initial analytical piece: if Ghana’s music industry needs one thing, it’s more musicians. The Ghanaian government, foreign consulting firms and local media moguls are discussing what complex strategies need to be implemented, when Kyekyeku is already a living example of the simple steps that need to be happening: train more musicians. Make instruments more accessible. Restore pride in musicianship by making it possible for musicians to make a living.

Ghana’s live music scene was once one of the liveliest in the continent. Today, live music options are few and far between. Before Ghana gives birth to the next Michael Jackson, it will need the next Quincy Jones, and for that to happen, it will need more performances, enabling more experimentation, more creative exchange. In other words: more live music. Some already know that, and are already making moves. More vim to you Kyekyeku.

RELATED

Lala Shishi :Shatta wale – My Level

Lala Shishi :Shatta wale – My Level

My level is the biggest song from Shatta Wale this year. Its a street anthem and its currently enjoying radio and club plays all over the country. On My Level, Shatta Wale talks about how far he is come in this industry. Starting of as Bandana , going on a hiatus and...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – September 28

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – September 28

DJ Pizaro: This week we have La vie là-bas by Togolese act Toofan , Fakye by Highlife act Bisa K'dei, sultry Nana Yaa drops a new one called Woman Power , Dancehall Queen Mzvee features Kuami Eugene on Bend Down and  Ruff Town Records new signee Wendy Shay...

Lala Shishi :Mr Real ft Obadice & Idowest – Legbegbe

Lala Shishi :Mr Real ft Obadice & Idowest – Legbegbe

This is one of the biggest Afrobeats song on the african continent today. The song has an afrohouse vibe to it and you cant help but " Shaku Shaku " when you hear it. There's an interesting story behind this hit song and that is why we feature it on Lala Shishi this...

Kyekyeku – “Pay Me (Friday Night)”

white-kente620

Originally published in the Lungu Lungu column at the Fader.

Yesterday was Ghana’s independence day: the nation is 56 years young. For the occasion, I had written a kind of “state of the Ghanaian music industry” piece, which makes sense as Ghana’s Musicians’ Union organizes the first ever Ghana Music Week, hosting a massive concert featuring many of Ghana’s top artists, with the Ghana Music Awards are right around the corner too. So the music industry here is buzzing like crazy.

But as I started to write about all of this, I realized I was not only missing a lot of important bits, I was also writing overly technical stuff about how the industry works—not a very promising piece. This is when I had the type of epiphany I feel can only happen in Ghana. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve felt cornered into inextricable situations here, which suddenly open up thanks to some extra random coincidence. Well this morning, as I wrapped my head around making sense out of an industry which possibly makes no sense to anybody at all, I received the cornerstone of what I should really be writing about: some proper palm wine music.

Kyekyeku—pronounced tchetchekoo—is a name you hear in Accra if you go out to listen to live music. I’ve heard him accompany countless shows on the guitar, and just last week, I heard him perform an impromptu palm wine piece at the Republic, one of my favorite joints in Accra. I was finally compelled to reach out to him, not knowing he has not only recorded some tracks already, but he has done so in collaboration with the carrier of Ghana’s palm wine tradition, Agya Koo Nimo.

Palm wine music is the melodic backbone of Ghanaian highlife: picture a bunch of guys under a tree, sipping on palm wine, playing the guitar and singing along. While the concept is simple, palm wine chords are quite complex: I remember when I met Koo Nimo in Kumasi in 2010, listening to his music and thinking immediately about Brazil. He told me: “Palm wine music is complex chords assembled into simple melodies. Bossa nova or chóro have simple chords assembled into complex melodies.”

Since that day, I dream of the time when palm wine music reaches the same level of international recognition as bossa nova. As I spoke with Kyekyeku I realized that day may be coming sooner than I thought.

Kyekyeku has an advantage: he trained with the keeper of palm wine music in its purest form, but as a young musician playing on Accra’s live circuit, he is immersed into modern Ghanaian music. His decision to “zero in on palm wine music” as he tells me, only happened recently. “I play all sorts of music, but I want to be known for palm wine.”

That’s a significant challenge, considering Kyekyeku is a very popular musician here, who is choosing an avenue few dare to get into. “For me it was a very daring move to make,” he says, “because I have to give up on a lot of the cool stuff going around. That’s the dilemma for a lot of young people here: highlife is considered old and archaic, so everybody’s trying to do azonto and stuff, which is not bad, but things have to be balanced out.”

I am a huge fan of all things azonto and fruity loops, however, as Kyekyeku puts it, “things have to be balanced out,” and clearly the balance is off. There is little live music, and way too few holders of the palm wine and highlife melodic tradition. Even when I first came to Ghana in 2007, you heard a lot of highlife, Ofori Amponsah type digital highlife. Today, hearing new highlife songs is all too rare—gospel aside, but that’s a whole different story.

The song featured today is a Ghanaian classic (also covered recently by the Busy Twist), musically close to its roots, with linguistic twists courtesy of Kyekyeku to make the lyrics more palatable to a young audience. “Some of the slang and jargon I use in the song is very modern, whereas Koo Nimo sings in a very traditional way. We blend energies and feelings, to show that this music is dynamic. It’s a way to connect with both the old and new generations.” The two also connect with the world as they feature Indian tabla master Vishal Nagan.

Ironically, the conclusion of this story is the same I had intended in my initial analytical piece: if Ghana’s music industry needs one thing, it’s more musicians. The Ghanaian government, foreign consulting firms and local media moguls are discussing what complex strategies need to be implemented, when Kyekyeku is already a living example of the simple steps that need to be happening: train more musicians. Make instruments more accessible. Restore pride in musicianship by making it possible for musicians to make a living.

Ghana’s live music scene was once one of the liveliest in the continent. Today, live music options are few and far between. Before Ghana gives birth to the next Michael Jackson, it will need the next Quincy Jones, and for that to happen, it will need more performances, enabling more experimentation, more creative exchange. In other words: more live music. Some already know that, and are already making moves. More vim to you Kyekyeku.

RELATED

Lala Shishi :Shatta wale – My Level

Lala Shishi :Shatta wale – My Level

My level is the biggest song from Shatta Wale this year. Its a street anthem and its currently enjoying radio and club plays all over the country. On My Level, Shatta Wale talks about how far he is come in this industry. Starting of as Bandana , going on a hiatus and...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – September 28

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – September 28

DJ Pizaro: This week we have La vie là-bas by Togolese act Toofan , Fakye by Highlife act Bisa K'dei, sultry Nana Yaa drops a new one called Woman Power , Dancehall Queen Mzvee features Kuami Eugene on Bend Down and  Ruff Town Records new signee Wendy Shay...

Lala Shishi :Mr Real ft Obadice & Idowest – Legbegbe

Lala Shishi :Mr Real ft Obadice & Idowest – Legbegbe

This is one of the biggest Afrobeats song on the african continent today. The song has an afrohouse vibe to it and you cant help but " Shaku Shaku " when you hear it. There's an interesting story behind this hit song and that is why we feature it on Lala Shishi this...