Lala Shishi :Sarkodie – Ye Be Pa Wo

Lala Shishi :Sarkodie – Ye Be Pa Wo

Sarkodie – Ye Be Pa Wo Lyrics

{Intro}
Its MOG baby
Ahh ba
Ah yeah
Ok yen ko3
Tia

{Verse 1}
Na se wo ti wiasi na se wa no da a
Se obi ye wo bibi nas3 wo ka a
Wo nya siki na wo si wo de be num nsa a
Wo nfa nyame se wo kra ne wa gyekwa a
Ah ye be tu wo fu na se wonfa a
Na se daakye bi nyame ma owo mba a
Na s3 wo fr3 wo ba kitua no na s3 wanba a
Wa wari na se wo pe mba a

Ye Be Pa Wo is a twi word which translates into english as ” You Will Be Exposed

{ In this first verse Sarkodie talks about gossips , hateful people ,alcoholics , disrespectful people and adulterers. He admonishes them that if they dont change their ways they will give birth to children who will grown up and be like them. }

 

{Chorus}
Endi3 masa y3 b3 pa wo, na yen pa wo sen
Na wa sua nuama pii, Ye b3 pa wo y3n pa wo sen
(Aban b3 pa wo) na ye pa wo sen, Na wa sua nuama pii yen pa wo sen
(Wo girl b3 pa wo) wo b3 damu counter back
Ye b3 kye wo asan hwi wo after that
Y3 b3 joojo wo you’ll be embarrassed
Ey3 wo se wo huo den a ko sua karate

{ Here he warns people with criminal attitude to change or they will be exposed “Ye Be Pa Wo”  and arrested by the police .}

{Verse 1}
Aban siki na wo san ti mu chobo
Asore fuo tithe na wo de num koko
wo fa wo yeri 3kyi a wo de sikai 3kya wo sobo
Ama huo f3 o so mo da su p3 nkoso
)t3 nfikyre na wo ko shi wee b(t(
Kronfua a way3 wonsa s3 apkoso
Sesa wo suban na nyame huo wo mob(
Adwene bone nti na wo nya hot)
Cocoa kratye a na wa josi wo scale wo ti h) na bu nkrasefuo fa so
Ye b3 kye woa tum a yen granti wo bail
Di asem pa o na obia bo wa abaso
Bafuo a wo ti abusua mu de abr)
wa sh3da na wo de yen hy3br3 di agoro
Osofuo wu ogyena b3dwamu de atr)
Ye ni b3 ti na apr) ba tia

{ Here he talks about corrupt government officials , church people who steal church money , thieves, cocoa farmers who cheat (adjust their scales below the minimum requirement) , witches in the extended family who torment their family with the aim of destroying their lives and a pastor who preaches lies, they are all warned because they will be exposed * Ye Be Pa Wo * }

{Chorus}
y3 b3 pa wo, na yen pa wo sen
Na wa sua nuama pii, Ye b3 pa wo y3n pa wo sen
(Aban b3 pa wo) na ye pa wo sen, Na wa sua nuama pii yen pa wo sen
(Wo girl b3 pa wo) wo b3 damu counter back
Ye b3 kye wo asan hwiwo after that
Y3 b3 joojo wo you’ll be embarrassed
Ey3 wo se wo huo den a ko sua karate. (Now)

{ Here he warns people with criminal attitude to change or they will be exposed “Ye Be Pa Wo”  and arrested by the police .}

{Verse 2}
Hmm Wo ye ajoma w) ECG
Woti connection a wo y3 IGP
Nia 3b3towo no wo b3 nya high BP
Wa browsi ma ma won tumi hia PC
Won p3 hua sem a de asempa
Wiase gyapadi3 gyai p3 nkwa
Se 3b3 si wo yea a, 3y3 adi3 miensa
Nukr3, ajoma den, sro agyenkwa
O police nia kronfuo abo wu paa
Proy3 ketaasi ky3 ne azaah
Osofo penyin a woko achia ne ada
Ko bo mpanye wo b3 hy3 dem awi anyaa
Ghana mbaa nso b3 da ne slay queens
Instagram na mu de yi amanfuo
Ye b3 hyia mo nso na mo hy3 fake jeans
Ankonyia na mo ko hu opambuo

{ Sarkodie takes on ECG(Electricity Company of Ghana the main distributors of electricity in ghana) he talks about their workers who engage in illegal connection , he also mentions police men who work with armed robbers to rob innocent people( in recent times some policemen have been exposed in working with armed robbers ), he also talks about hypocritical pastors who go to Atwea Mountains ( popular place for prayer ) and come back to engage in sinful acts , he also talks about the surge in ” Slay Queens” a term used to describe women who do not have a wealthy background but appear as if they do. He says they usually post nice pictures on instagram but when you meet them they’re nothing like how they look on the internet. He also advices that if you’d make it in this life you have to follow 3 things. Be truthful , hard work and the fear of God. }

 

{Chorus}
y3 b3 pa wo, na yen pa wo sen
Na wa sua nuama pii, Ye b3 pa wo y3n pa wo sen
(Aban b3 pa wo) na ye pa wo sen, Na wa sua nuama pii yen pa wo sen
(Wo girl b3 pa wo) wo b3 damu counter back
Ye b3 kye wo asan hwi wo after that
Y3 b3 joojo wo a you’ll be embarrassed
Ey3 wo se wo huo den a ko sua karate. Ahh

{ Here he warns people with criminal attitude to change or they will be exposed “Ye Be Pa Wo”  and arrested by the police .}

{Outro}
Na se wo ti wiasi na se wa no da a
Se obi ye wo bibi nas3 wo ka a
Wo nya siki na wo si wo de be num nsa a
Wo nfa nyame se wo kra ne wa gyekwa a
Ah ye be tu wo fu na se wonfa a
Na se daakye bi nyame ma owo mba a
Na s3 wo fr3 wo ba kitua no na s3 wanba a
Wa wari na se wo pe mba a. Aban b3 pa wo
Posegee on the mix

Here he talks about corrupt government officials , church people who steal church money , thieves, cocoa farmers who cheat (adjust their scales below the minimum requirement) , witches in the extended family who torment their family with the aim of destroying their lives and a pastor who preaches lies, they are all warned because they will be exposed * Ye Be Pa Wo *

 

 

Lala Shishi – explain the song, in Ga.

Every week, we will shed some light on the meaning of current hits in and out of Ghana: many bangers have an underlying message or social commentary, carried out using sophisticated and ever evolving wordplay – an aspect that is vastly lost in translation. The music videos don’t always unlock the true meaning or intricacies of hit songs, and lyrics alone are not always enough to understand the numerous double entendre and wordplays, so… here we go!

RELATED

Lala Shishi :King Monada – Malwedhe

Lala Shishi :King Monada – Malwedhe

We chanced on an article " Collapsing "disease" hits Zim, SA ", intrigued we decided to find out what is causing this "disease" and if there is any cure . You might have seen videos from South Africa and Zimbabwe, were people listen to a song , it gets to the chorus...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – October 5

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – October 5

Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it's about time we let you in on the tracks that drive us crazy! DJ Pizaro: This week we have How Much Remix by Ghanaian hiphop sensation Medikal featuring Sarkodie & Omar Sterling , Kere Oh! by MasterKraft featuring Broda...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – November 12

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – November 12

DJ Pizaro: This week we have Everyday by Patoranking , One Ticket by Kizz Daniel featuring Davido , Supa by R2bees featuring Wizkid, Bra Fie by Fuse ODG featuring Damian Marley and Text Me By T'neeya . Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it's about time we let you in...

Lala Shishi :Sarkodie – Ye Be Pa Wo

Sarkodie – Ye Be Pa Wo Lyrics

{Intro}
Its MOG baby
Ahh ba
Ah yeah
Ok yen ko3
Tia

{Verse 1}
Na se wo ti wiasi na se wa no da a
Se obi ye wo bibi nas3 wo ka a
Wo nya siki na wo si wo de be num nsa a
Wo nfa nyame se wo kra ne wa gyekwa a
Ah ye be tu wo fu na se wonfa a
Na se daakye bi nyame ma owo mba a
Na s3 wo fr3 wo ba kitua no na s3 wanba a
Wa wari na se wo pe mba a

Ye Be Pa Wo is a twi word which translates into english as ” You Will Be Exposed

{ In this first verse Sarkodie talks about gossips , hateful people ,alcoholics , disrespectful people and adulterers. He admonishes them that if they dont change their ways they will give birth to children who will grown up and be like them. }

 

{Chorus}
Endi3 masa y3 b3 pa wo, na yen pa wo sen
Na wa sua nuama pii, Ye b3 pa wo y3n pa wo sen
(Aban b3 pa wo) na ye pa wo sen, Na wa sua nuama pii yen pa wo sen
(Wo girl b3 pa wo) wo b3 damu counter back
Ye b3 kye wo asan hwi wo after that
Y3 b3 joojo wo you’ll be embarrassed
Ey3 wo se wo huo den a ko sua karate

{ Here he warns people with criminal attitude to change or they will be exposed “Ye Be Pa Wo”  and arrested by the police .}

{Verse 1}
Aban siki na wo san ti mu chobo
Asore fuo tithe na wo de num koko
wo fa wo yeri 3kyi a wo de sikai 3kya wo sobo
Ama huo f3 o so mo da su p3 nkoso
)t3 nfikyre na wo ko shi wee b(t(
Kronfua a way3 wonsa s3 apkoso
Sesa wo suban na nyame huo wo mob(
Adwene bone nti na wo nya hot)
Cocoa kratye a na wa josi wo scale wo ti h) na bu nkrasefuo fa so
Ye b3 kye woa tum a yen granti wo bail
Di asem pa o na obia bo wa abaso
Bafuo a wo ti abusua mu de abr)
wa sh3da na wo de yen hy3br3 di agoro
Osofuo wu ogyena b3dwamu de atr)
Ye ni b3 ti na apr) ba tia

{ Here he talks about corrupt government officials , church people who steal church money , thieves, cocoa farmers who cheat (adjust their scales below the minimum requirement) , witches in the extended family who torment their family with the aim of destroying their lives and a pastor who preaches lies, they are all warned because they will be exposed * Ye Be Pa Wo * }

{Chorus}
y3 b3 pa wo, na yen pa wo sen
Na wa sua nuama pii, Ye b3 pa wo y3n pa wo sen
(Aban b3 pa wo) na ye pa wo sen, Na wa sua nuama pii yen pa wo sen
(Wo girl b3 pa wo) wo b3 damu counter back
Ye b3 kye wo asan hwiwo after that
Y3 b3 joojo wo you’ll be embarrassed
Ey3 wo se wo huo den a ko sua karate. (Now)

{ Here he warns people with criminal attitude to change or they will be exposed “Ye Be Pa Wo”  and arrested by the police .}

{Verse 2}
Hmm Wo ye ajoma w) ECG
Woti connection a wo y3 IGP
Nia 3b3towo no wo b3 nya high BP
Wa browsi ma ma won tumi hia PC
Won p3 hua sem a de asempa
Wiase gyapadi3 gyai p3 nkwa
Se 3b3 si wo yea a, 3y3 adi3 miensa
Nukr3, ajoma den, sro agyenkwa
O police nia kronfuo abo wu paa
Proy3 ketaasi ky3 ne azaah
Osofo penyin a woko achia ne ada
Ko bo mpanye wo b3 hy3 dem awi anyaa
Ghana mbaa nso b3 da ne slay queens
Instagram na mu de yi amanfuo
Ye b3 hyia mo nso na mo hy3 fake jeans
Ankonyia na mo ko hu opambuo

{ Sarkodie takes on ECG(Electricity Company of Ghana the main distributors of electricity in ghana) he talks about their workers who engage in illegal connection , he also mentions police men who work with armed robbers to rob innocent people( in recent times some policemen have been exposed in working with armed robbers ), he also talks about hypocritical pastors who go to Atwea Mountains ( popular place for prayer ) and come back to engage in sinful acts , he also talks about the surge in ” Slay Queens” a term used to describe women who do not have a wealthy background but appear as if they do. He says they usually post nice pictures on instagram but when you meet them they’re nothing like how they look on the internet. He also advices that if you’d make it in this life you have to follow 3 things. Be truthful , hard work and the fear of God. }

 

{Chorus}
y3 b3 pa wo, na yen pa wo sen
Na wa sua nuama pii, Ye b3 pa wo y3n pa wo sen
(Aban b3 pa wo) na ye pa wo sen, Na wa sua nuama pii yen pa wo sen
(Wo girl b3 pa wo) wo b3 damu counter back
Ye b3 kye wo asan hwi wo after that
Y3 b3 joojo wo a you’ll be embarrassed
Ey3 wo se wo huo den a ko sua karate. Ahh

{ Here he warns people with criminal attitude to change or they will be exposed “Ye Be Pa Wo”  and arrested by the police .}

{Outro}
Na se wo ti wiasi na se wa no da a
Se obi ye wo bibi nas3 wo ka a
Wo nya siki na wo si wo de be num nsa a
Wo nfa nyame se wo kra ne wa gyekwa a
Ah ye be tu wo fu na se wonfa a
Na se daakye bi nyame ma owo mba a
Na s3 wo fr3 wo ba kitua no na s3 wanba a
Wa wari na se wo pe mba a. Aban b3 pa wo
Posegee on the mix

Here he talks about corrupt government officials , church people who steal church money , thieves, cocoa farmers who cheat (adjust their scales below the minimum requirement) , witches in the extended family who torment their family with the aim of destroying their lives and a pastor who preaches lies, they are all warned because they will be exposed * Ye Be Pa Wo *

 

 

Lala Shishi – explain the song, in Ga.

Every week, we will shed some light on the meaning of current hits in and out of Ghana: many bangers have an underlying message or social commentary, carried out using sophisticated and ever evolving wordplay – an aspect that is vastly lost in translation. The music videos don’t always unlock the true meaning or intricacies of hit songs, and lyrics alone are not always enough to understand the numerous double entendre and wordplays, so… here we go!

RELATED

Lala Shishi :King Monada – Malwedhe

Lala Shishi :King Monada – Malwedhe

We chanced on an article " Collapsing "disease" hits Zim, SA ", intrigued we decided to find out what is causing this "disease" and if there is any cure . You might have seen videos from South Africa and Zimbabwe, were people listen to a song , it gets to the chorus...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – October 5

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – October 5

Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it's about time we let you in on the tracks that drive us crazy! DJ Pizaro: This week we have How Much Remix by Ghanaian hiphop sensation Medikal featuring Sarkodie & Omar Sterling , Kere Oh! by MasterKraft featuring Broda...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – November 12

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – November 12

DJ Pizaro: This week we have Everyday by Patoranking , One Ticket by Kizz Daniel featuring Davido , Supa by R2bees featuring Wizkid, Bra Fie by Fuse ODG featuring Damian Marley and Text Me By T'neeya . Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it's about time we let you in...

DJ Spotlight: DJ Fro (Ghana)

DJ Spotlight: DJ Fro (Ghana)

Music, especially of the loud, danceable kind, is ubiquitous in most of Africa. Yet DJs, the artisans behind the walls of sound, often remain in the shadow. This is not how we roll: we want you to find out who is pushing the envelope throughout the continent.

This week we feature DJ Fro from Accra, Ghana.

 

When did you start DJing – and what or who were your early passions and influences?

It all started in 2012, at the University of Cape Coast where I had my tertiary education. I was in my hall of residence, Kwame Nkrumah Hall one evening and I didn’t like the music that was being played via the hall’s radio so I called the request line to ask them to play something better. They said, “If you can do a better job come downstairs to the studio then” so I went over and played a few songs using Virtual DJ, soon they had a lot of hall mates calling in to say they were enjoying the songs. I was told to come play every Friday evening and that’s where my unprofessional career as a DJ started. Soon after, my professional career as a DJ also started when I started my internship as IT Support at Xfm and was given the opportunity to DJ live on air.

 

What type of DJ are you and how do you fit into the industry in Ghana ?

I believe a “Mobile DJ” best categorizes me currently. I mostly play Afrobeats, Hiphop (both new school and old school), Funk, Afrohouse, Deephouse, Funky House, Reggae/Dancehall, Moombahton, Grime and Afroswing. However, I’ve always loved to DJ on radio to promote Afrobeats and Ghanaian music. I currently still promote Afrobeats and Ghanaian music, so I guess that’s how I fit into the entertainment industry in Ghana as a DJ.

 

What single night out has been the most memorable for you? As a DJ? As an attendee?

Well, this question is golden! There has definitely been many memorable nights but the most memorable one for me as a DJ and an attendee was when I DJ’ed at an event by Xfm where I met my girlfriend 5 years ago. There were many DJ’s on rotation that night so I was able to have a dance with her and that was the start of something magical for me.

 

What is your goal as a DJ, and what are the next steps for you to get there?

As a DJ, I aim to own a radio station someday so I can share my love for music with Africa and the entire world.

 

Can you tell us a bit about this mix, what it represents and means to you? Does it reflect what you sound like when djing live? 

I made this mix to illustrate how songs from “some unsung” music artists in Africa also fit in the mainstream Afrobeats scene. Yes, we can mix it up not always music from the popular artists. This mix mostly has new music from Africa for the period of July to the start of August with your favorite unsung artist also in mind.

 Tracklist

  1. Juls ft. Kwesi Arthur & Akan – Saa Ara
  2. Tiwa Savage ft. Duncan Mighty – Lova Lova
  3. Simi – I Dun Care
  4. Osa – Body Bad
  5. Joyce Olong – Lush Vibes
  6. Zed Ay Kay ft. Dahlin Gage & Yaa Pono – Lemonade
  7. Harmonize ft. Sarkodie – DM Chick
  8. Fuse ODG – Island
  9. Ciara ft. Tekno – Freak Me
  10. R2bees – We Dey Vibe
  11. King Promise – Abena
  12. Max Le Daron ft. Joey le Soldat, Gan Gah & Eli A Free – Sougri
  13. Mr. Eazi ft. Mo-T – Property
  14. Busiswa ft. Moozlie – Bad Galz
  15. 2Baba ft. Perruzi – Amaka
  16. ToyBoi – Somtin
  17. Samini – Give Me Love (Overseas Riddim)
  18. Gafacci & Moni ft. Joey B – Juana
  19. Sarz x Wurld – Trobul
  20. Quayba – G.O.D. (Good Ole Days)
  21. Bwoy Tab – Tso Kpa Kpa
  22. Elevated ft. Joe El Amadi & JiggyJegg – Omo De Yi
  23. E.L – Yo Geng
  24. Joey B – You Peh
  25. Skales ft. Yung L & Endia – Pass
  26. Joey B ft. Wanlov x PonoBiom – Beautiful Boy
  27. Ryderz x Samini – BKBK (Boko Boko)
  28. M.anifest ft. Worlasi – Okay

RELATED

Lala Shishi :King Monada – Malwedhe

Lala Shishi :King Monada – Malwedhe

We chanced on an article " Collapsing "disease" hits Zim, SA ", intrigued we decided to find out what is causing this "disease" and if there is any cure . You might have seen videos from South Africa and Zimbabwe, were people listen to a song , it gets to the chorus...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – October 5

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – October 5

Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it's about time we let you in on the tracks that drive us crazy! DJ Pizaro: This week we have How Much Remix by Ghanaian hiphop sensation Medikal featuring Sarkodie & Omar Sterling , Kere Oh! by MasterKraft featuring Broda...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – November 12

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – November 12

DJ Pizaro: This week we have Everyday by Patoranking , One Ticket by Kizz Daniel featuring Davido , Supa by R2bees featuring Wizkid, Bra Fie by Fuse ODG featuring Damian Marley and Text Me By T'neeya . Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it's about time we let you in...

DJ Spotlight: DJ Fro (Ghana)

Music, especially of the loud, danceable kind, is ubiquitous in most of Africa. Yet DJs, the artisans behind the walls of sound, often remain in the shadow. This is not how we roll: we want you to find out who is pushing the envelope throughout the continent.

This week we feature DJ Fro from Accra, Ghana.

 

When did you start DJing – and what or who were your early passions and influences?

It all started in 2012, at the University of Cape Coast where I had my tertiary education. I was in my hall of residence, Kwame Nkrumah Hall one evening and I didn’t like the music that was being played via the hall’s radio so I called the request line to ask them to play something better. They said, “If you can do a better job come downstairs to the studio then” so I went over and played a few songs using Virtual DJ, soon they had a lot of hall mates calling in to say they were enjoying the songs. I was told to come play every Friday evening and that’s where my unprofessional career as a DJ started. Soon after, my professional career as a DJ also started when I started my internship as IT Support at Xfm and was given the opportunity to DJ live on air.

 

What type of DJ are you and how do you fit into the industry in Ghana ?

I believe a “Mobile DJ” best categorizes me currently. I mostly play Afrobeats, Hiphop (both new school and old school), Funk, Afrohouse, Deephouse, Funky House, Reggae/Dancehall, Moombahton, Grime and Afroswing. However, I’ve always loved to DJ on radio to promote Afrobeats and Ghanaian music. I currently still promote Afrobeats and Ghanaian music, so I guess that’s how I fit into the entertainment industry in Ghana as a DJ.

 

What single night out has been the most memorable for you? As a DJ? As an attendee?

Well, this question is golden! There has definitely been many memorable nights but the most memorable one for me as a DJ and an attendee was when I DJ’ed at an event by Xfm where I met my girlfriend 5 years ago. There were many DJ’s on rotation that night so I was able to have a dance with her and that was the start of something magical for me.

 

What is your goal as a DJ, and what are the next steps for you to get there?

As a DJ, I aim to own a radio station someday so I can share my love for music with Africa and the entire world.

 

Can you tell us a bit about this mix, what it represents and means to you? Does it reflect what you sound like when djing live? 

I made this mix to illustrate how songs from “some unsung” music artists in Africa also fit in the mainstream Afrobeats scene. Yes, we can mix it up not always music from the popular artists. This mix mostly has new music from Africa for the period of July to the start of August with your favorite unsung artist also in mind.

 Tracklist

  1. Juls ft. Kwesi Arthur & Akan – Saa Ara
  2. Tiwa Savage ft. Duncan Mighty – Lova Lova
  3. Simi – I Dun Care
  4. Osa – Body Bad
  5. Joyce Olong – Lush Vibes
  6. Zed Ay Kay ft. Dahlin Gage & Yaa Pono – Lemonade
  7. Harmonize ft. Sarkodie – DM Chick
  8. Fuse ODG – Island
  9. Ciara ft. Tekno – Freak Me
  10. R2bees – We Dey Vibe
  11. King Promise – Abena
  12. Max Le Daron ft. Joey le Soldat, Gan Gah & Eli A Free – Sougri
  13. Mr. Eazi ft. Mo-T – Property
  14. Busiswa ft. Moozlie – Bad Galz
  15. 2Baba ft. Perruzi – Amaka
  16. ToyBoi – Somtin
  17. Samini – Give Me Love (Overseas Riddim)
  18. Gafacci & Moni ft. Joey B – Juana
  19. Sarz x Wurld – Trobul
  20. Quayba – G.O.D. (Good Ole Days)
  21. Bwoy Tab – Tso Kpa Kpa
  22. Elevated ft. Joe El Amadi & JiggyJegg – Omo De Yi
  23. E.L – Yo Geng
  24. Joey B – You Peh
  25. Skales ft. Yung L & Endia – Pass
  26. Joey B ft. Wanlov x PonoBiom – Beautiful Boy
  27. Ryderz x Samini – BKBK (Boko Boko)
  28. M.anifest ft. Worlasi – Okay

RELATED

Lala Shishi :King Monada – Malwedhe

Lala Shishi :King Monada – Malwedhe

We chanced on an article " Collapsing "disease" hits Zim, SA ", intrigued we decided to find out what is causing this "disease" and if there is any cure . You might have seen videos from South Africa and Zimbabwe, were people listen to a song , it gets to the chorus...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – October 5

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – October 5

Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it's about time we let you in on the tracks that drive us crazy! DJ Pizaro: This week we have How Much Remix by Ghanaian hiphop sensation Medikal featuring Sarkodie & Omar Sterling , Kere Oh! by MasterKraft featuring Broda...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – November 12

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – November 12

DJ Pizaro: This week we have Everyday by Patoranking , One Ticket by Kizz Daniel featuring Davido , Supa by R2bees featuring Wizkid, Bra Fie by Fuse ODG featuring Damian Marley and Text Me By T'neeya . Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it's about time we let you in...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – August 17

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – August 17

DJ Pizaro: This week we have Posh by Mayorkun , a remix to Things we do for love by rap duo Ko-Jo Cue & Shaker featuring Kidi and Sarkodie, Fall on them by Aramide and Timaya, Yoruba recording artist Olamide with Motigbana , legendary DJ Jimmy Jatt features Olamide and Reminisce Small Girl Big God, the untouchable Patoranking drops Heal D World , producer cum dj Juls features Kwesi Arthur and Akan on Saa Ara and last but not the least Stay Woke by Darkovibes featuring Stonebowy .

Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it’s about time we let you in on the tracks that drive us crazy!

RELATED

Lala Shishi :King Monada – Malwedhe

Lala Shishi :King Monada – Malwedhe

We chanced on an article " Collapsing "disease" hits Zim, SA ", intrigued we decided to find out what is causing this "disease" and if there is any cure . You might have seen videos from South Africa and Zimbabwe, were people listen to a song , it gets to the chorus...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – October 5

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – October 5

Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it's about time we let you in on the tracks that drive us crazy! DJ Pizaro: This week we have How Much Remix by Ghanaian hiphop sensation Medikal featuring Sarkodie & Omar Sterling , Kere Oh! by MasterKraft featuring Broda...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – November 12

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – November 12

DJ Pizaro: This week we have Everyday by Patoranking , One Ticket by Kizz Daniel featuring Davido , Supa by R2bees featuring Wizkid, Bra Fie by Fuse ODG featuring Damian Marley and Text Me By T'neeya . Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it's about time we let you in...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – August 17

DJ Pizaro: This week we have Posh by Mayorkun , a remix to Things we do for love by rap duo Ko-Jo Cue & Shaker featuring Kidi and Sarkodie, Fall on them by Aramide and Timaya, Yoruba recording artist Olamide with Motigbana , legendary DJ Jimmy Jatt features Olamide and Reminisce Small Girl Big God, the untouchable Patoranking drops Heal D World , producer cum dj Juls features Kwesi Arthur and Akan on Saa Ara and last but not the least Stay Woke by Darkovibes featuring Stonebowy .

Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it’s about time we let you in on the tracks that drive us crazy!

RELATED

Lala Shishi :King Monada – Malwedhe

Lala Shishi :King Monada – Malwedhe

We chanced on an article " Collapsing "disease" hits Zim, SA ", intrigued we decided to find out what is causing this "disease" and if there is any cure . You might have seen videos from South Africa and Zimbabwe, were people listen to a song , it gets to the chorus...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – October 5

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – October 5

Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it's about time we let you in on the tracks that drive us crazy! DJ Pizaro: This week we have How Much Remix by Ghanaian hiphop sensation Medikal featuring Sarkodie & Omar Sterling , Kere Oh! by MasterKraft featuring Broda...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – November 12

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – November 12

DJ Pizaro: This week we have Everyday by Patoranking , One Ticket by Kizz Daniel featuring Davido , Supa by R2bees featuring Wizkid, Bra Fie by Fuse ODG featuring Damian Marley and Text Me By T'neeya . Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it's about time we let you in...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – August 10

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – August 10

DJ Pizaro: This week we have Can’t Let You Go by Sarkodie featuring King Promise, I Dun Care by the beautiful Simi, Guiltybeatz and Mr Eazi feature Joey B on Genging, Tekno features Rnb Superstar Ciara on Freak Me , afrobeats superstar Davido drops a new one called Nwa Baby, On My Way by Adina Thembi, Lova Lova by Tiwa Savage featuring Duncan Mighty and last but not the least Okay by M.anifest featuring Worlasi .

Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it’s about time we let you in on the tracks that drive us crazy!

RELATED

Lala Shishi :King Monada – Malwedhe

Lala Shishi :King Monada – Malwedhe

We chanced on an article " Collapsing "disease" hits Zim, SA ", intrigued we decided to find out what is causing this "disease" and if there is any cure . You might have seen videos from South Africa and Zimbabwe, were people listen to a song , it gets to the chorus...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – October 5

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – October 5

Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it's about time we let you in on the tracks that drive us crazy! DJ Pizaro: This week we have How Much Remix by Ghanaian hiphop sensation Medikal featuring Sarkodie & Omar Sterling , Kere Oh! by MasterKraft featuring Broda...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – November 12

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – November 12

DJ Pizaro: This week we have Everyday by Patoranking , One Ticket by Kizz Daniel featuring Davido , Supa by R2bees featuring Wizkid, Bra Fie by Fuse ODG featuring Damian Marley and Text Me By T'neeya . Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it's about time we let you in...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – August 10

DJ Pizaro: This week we have Can’t Let You Go by Sarkodie featuring King Promise, I Dun Care by the beautiful Simi, Guiltybeatz and Mr Eazi feature Joey B on Genging, Tekno features Rnb Superstar Ciara on Freak Me , afrobeats superstar Davido drops a new one called Nwa Baby, On My Way by Adina Thembi, Lova Lova by Tiwa Savage featuring Duncan Mighty and last but not the least Okay by M.anifest featuring Worlasi .

Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it’s about time we let you in on the tracks that drive us crazy!

RELATED

Lala Shishi :King Monada – Malwedhe

Lala Shishi :King Monada – Malwedhe

We chanced on an article " Collapsing "disease" hits Zim, SA ", intrigued we decided to find out what is causing this "disease" and if there is any cure . You might have seen videos from South Africa and Zimbabwe, were people listen to a song , it gets to the chorus...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – October 5

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – October 5

Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it's about time we let you in on the tracks that drive us crazy! DJ Pizaro: This week we have How Much Remix by Ghanaian hiphop sensation Medikal featuring Sarkodie & Omar Sterling , Kere Oh! by MasterKraft featuring Broda...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – November 12

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – November 12

DJ Pizaro: This week we have Everyday by Patoranking , One Ticket by Kizz Daniel featuring Davido , Supa by R2bees featuring Wizkid, Bra Fie by Fuse ODG featuring Damian Marley and Text Me By T'neeya . Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it's about time we let you in...

DJ Spotlight: DJ coco-em (Kenya)

DJ Spotlight: DJ coco-em (Kenya)

This week we shed light on DJ coco-em from Kenya. I met em last year in Nairobi, when she took part in a DJ workshop I hosted with Gafacci. She was one of the most enthusiastic participants, and her commitment to DJing has kept on shining, landing her regular gigs in Nairobi and the sub-region, and even a Boiler Room set earlier this year.

Can you tell me a bit about your musical background?

I’ve always been surrounded by music. Our home was full of my mum’s lingala [Congolese rumba] and reggae music. We also listened to a lot of South African gospel music. My uncle listened to reggae music every morning and recorded countless cassette tapes from the radio.

I started listening to hip hop music in high school after interacting with a good friend Njeri. We exchanged cassette tapes and Source magazines. I was drawn to the heavy bass, the beats, the drums and snares and the witty word play of the rappers. Hip hop is all I ever listened to until I went to University and had a rock music phase. My favorite bands were System of a down and Incubus. My sister loves 808s and synths, lots of disco and dance music from the 70s.

Later on in life I met and dated a musician who exposed me to a completely different style of music which was more digital and electronic. Being exposed to so many genres is what makes me the artist I am today. I am unable to stick to just one genre because I feel the diversity of music is what makes it very special.

 

 

How did you get involved with DJing?

I used to share a lot of music from youtube on my facebook page. I had friends who said that I had good taste in music and that I should be a DJ. I did not take it seriously initially but after more prompting I decided to buy a DJ controller for fun. I purchased the Hercules RMX2 in 2012. I was a bedroom DJ until 2015 when an open call for DJs was put out by ‘Bad Mambo Productions’. I submitted a mix and was shortlisted as one of the 10 DJs to compete in the DJ battle. I had never performed in front of anyone before and on the day of the competition my stage fright took over me. I did not make it to the top 5 that day but I was encouraged to continue playing by people who felt my music selection was very good.

 

What’s your current DJ routine? How often and where do you have gigs, how is it evolving, what types of events, what genres, what types of crowd reactions?

(will answer on crowd reactions because at the moment my DJ career is only just picking up steam after the Boiler room performance so I do not really have a solid DJ routine)

Any time I perform, the crowd always gravitates to the dancefloor. I’ve had people tell me they don’t normally dance but my selection makes them want to move. I love this and this is why I play. Whenever I’m not playing a very dance-oriented set, I love to dig deep into the archives for selections the crowd can relate to. Mostly these would be old Funk or Reggae songs that have been sampled by various artists and so the crowd gets excited to hear them played  and then mixed into the songs they are familiar with.

 

Can you explain to us what the scene you fit into is like? Whether you want to talk about Nairobi as a whole, or more specifically the circles in which you gravitate

The scene I fit into in Nairobi is the less mainstream music scene. This would be found predominantly in the Westlands area and select underground music events such as ‘Backyard Bass’ at the Alchemist. I also fit into the strictly hip hop circles and usually have to stop myself from singing along to every song because I used to memorize old school hip hop lyrics heh.

 

What have been some of your most exciting sets and times DJing?

I have two sets that stand out as my most exciting sets to date.

The first is when I played at the Kilifi New Year’s festival 2018. Performing that set felt like an out of body experience. I have no words to express the energy my set built within the crowd. I also did not miss one single beat lol.

 

My second most exciting set has to be the Boiler Room Nairobi set I performed about a month ago. Although I was extremely nervous and was operating on an hour’s sleep (I was working as DOP on a feature film around the same time) I absolutely loved the experience and the build up of energy with the crowd. The most important thing for me is that the people I play for feel and are moved by the music as much as I am and that happened during the Boiler Room set.

 

 

What is your goal as a DJ, and what are the next steps for you to get there?

My immediate goal is to play in as many music festivals around Africa and thereafter branch out to the world. I would like to collect as much music from the continent. There is so so much music here and I am so curious to find explore it all and find ways to blend it into amazing sets.

I would love to make music of my own and to collaborate with different artists. My personal challenge is to find a way to mix afro beats, percussions with hip hop. I have mentioned a million times how much I love the way DJ/Producer Sango mixes traditional Brazillian music with hip hop beats.

 

Can you tell us a bit about this mix, what it represents and means to you? Does it reflect what you sound like like.

This mix is a blend of some of my favorite tunes. When I play live I always find myself moving from afro beats to hip hop (or vice versa) and then playing some reggae or kwaito at some point. It highlights some of the things I love in music and that is traditional beats, percussions, something that gets you moving. I love to dance.

In future I would love to incorporate more music with strong messages such as the Boddhi Satva remix of Femi Kuti’s song ‘You better ask yourself’. This is also part of the reason I really like oldschool reggae dub music as well.  This mix is what I would sound like playing at a small venue somewhere in Nairobi on a relaxed Saturday or Sunday evening. It does get a bit experimental towards the end but that is my usual style.

https://soundcloud.com/platform/coco-em-african-house-mix-boiler-room-x-ballantines-true-music-kenya

https://www.mixcloud.com/worldwidefm/ww-nairobi-taio-with-abaki-simba-live-mvroe-live-ea-wave-live-dj-coco-em-16-10-2017/

 

Tracklist

1) Flying Lotus – Melt
2) Boddhi Satva (Ancestral soul mix) – Middle Passage
ft Tiwa Savage
3) Tarantulaz feat. Tiffany Lorén – I Wasn’t Kidding
(The Layabouts Future Retro Vocal Mix)
4) Ternielle Nelson – African Woman (Culoe De Song
Remix)
5) Problem Child Aka Ten83 – D.R.U.M.M.E.R.V.I.L.L.E
(Original Mix)
6) Hati Munetsi & dycejones – ceremony (Afro Flava
Mix)
7) Boddhi Satva (Ancestral Soul Mix) – Soumbouya ft
Salif Keita
8) Fela Kuti – Shakara (Ossies Bump Edit)
9) Steve Group Feat Uhuru – Celina Original Braulio
Houses Pro
10) Mpumi ft Zodwa, Ks Drums, Dj Micks – Ngifike
11) KS Drums & Afrikan Roots – Tale Of The Night
[Sharinganews]
12) G Sparks ft Dacosta – Sodat Aza Na Kati (Main Mix)
13) FRANKO – COLLER LA PETITE (DJ RIICKS AFRO REMIX)
14) Dj Patris Boy – Pemba (Original Mix)
15) Kaake – Inna Da Club
16) Sarkodie ft EL – Dangerous
17) Niniola – Maradona
18) Dj Mr. Tee mix – Deepclan session
19) Culoe de Song ft Busi Mhlongo – Webaba
20) Ten Walls – Walking with Elephants (Original Mix)
21) Frits Wentink – Shrewd (Original Mix)
22) Flashmob – Need In Me (Original Mix)
23) Boddhi Satva & Maalem Hammam – Zid Lmel

RELATED

Lala Shishi :King Monada – Malwedhe

Lala Shishi :King Monada – Malwedhe

We chanced on an article " Collapsing "disease" hits Zim, SA ", intrigued we decided to find out what is causing this "disease" and if there is any cure . You might have seen videos from South Africa and Zimbabwe, were people listen to a song , it gets to the chorus...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – October 5

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – October 5

Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it's about time we let you in on the tracks that drive us crazy! DJ Pizaro: This week we have How Much Remix by Ghanaian hiphop sensation Medikal featuring Sarkodie & Omar Sterling , Kere Oh! by MasterKraft featuring Broda...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – November 12

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – November 12

DJ Pizaro: This week we have Everyday by Patoranking , One Ticket by Kizz Daniel featuring Davido , Supa by R2bees featuring Wizkid, Bra Fie by Fuse ODG featuring Damian Marley and Text Me By T'neeya . Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it's about time we let you in...

DJ Spotlight: DJ coco-em (Kenya)

This week we shed light on DJ coco-em from Kenya. I met em last year in Nairobi, when she took part in a DJ workshop I hosted with Gafacci. She was one of the most enthusiastic participants, and her commitment to DJing has kept on shining, landing her regular gigs in Nairobi and the sub-region, and even a Boiler Room set earlier this year.

Can you tell me a bit about your musical background?

I’ve always been surrounded by music. Our home was full of my mum’s lingala [Congolese rumba] and reggae music. We also listened to a lot of South African gospel music. My uncle listened to reggae music every morning and recorded countless cassette tapes from the radio.

I started listening to hip hop music in high school after interacting with a good friend Njeri. We exchanged cassette tapes and Source magazines. I was drawn to the heavy bass, the beats, the drums and snares and the witty word play of the rappers. Hip hop is all I ever listened to until I went to University and had a rock music phase. My favorite bands were System of a down and Incubus. My sister loves 808s and synths, lots of disco and dance music from the 70s.

Later on in life I met and dated a musician who exposed me to a completely different style of music which was more digital and electronic. Being exposed to so many genres is what makes me the artist I am today. I am unable to stick to just one genre because I feel the diversity of music is what makes it very special.

 

 

How did you get involved with DJing?

I used to share a lot of music from youtube on my facebook page. I had friends who said that I had good taste in music and that I should be a DJ. I did not take it seriously initially but after more prompting I decided to buy a DJ controller for fun. I purchased the Hercules RMX2 in 2012. I was a bedroom DJ until 2015 when an open call for DJs was put out by ‘Bad Mambo Productions’. I submitted a mix and was shortlisted as one of the 10 DJs to compete in the DJ battle. I had never performed in front of anyone before and on the day of the competition my stage fright took over me. I did not make it to the top 5 that day but I was encouraged to continue playing by people who felt my music selection was very good.

 

What’s your current DJ routine? How often and where do you have gigs, how is it evolving, what types of events, what genres, what types of crowd reactions?

(will answer on crowd reactions because at the moment my DJ career is only just picking up steam after the Boiler room performance so I do not really have a solid DJ routine)

Any time I perform, the crowd always gravitates to the dancefloor. I’ve had people tell me they don’t normally dance but my selection makes them want to move. I love this and this is why I play. Whenever I’m not playing a very dance-oriented set, I love to dig deep into the archives for selections the crowd can relate to. Mostly these would be old Funk or Reggae songs that have been sampled by various artists and so the crowd gets excited to hear them played  and then mixed into the songs they are familiar with.

 

Can you explain to us what the scene you fit into is like? Whether you want to talk about Nairobi as a whole, or more specifically the circles in which you gravitate

The scene I fit into in Nairobi is the less mainstream music scene. This would be found predominantly in the Westlands area and select underground music events such as ‘Backyard Bass’ at the Alchemist. I also fit into the strictly hip hop circles and usually have to stop myself from singing along to every song because I used to memorize old school hip hop lyrics heh.

 

What have been some of your most exciting sets and times DJing?

I have two sets that stand out as my most exciting sets to date.

The first is when I played at the Kilifi New Year’s festival 2018. Performing that set felt like an out of body experience. I have no words to express the energy my set built within the crowd. I also did not miss one single beat lol.

 

My second most exciting set has to be the Boiler Room Nairobi set I performed about a month ago. Although I was extremely nervous and was operating on an hour’s sleep (I was working as DOP on a feature film around the same time) I absolutely loved the experience and the build up of energy with the crowd. The most important thing for me is that the people I play for feel and are moved by the music as much as I am and that happened during the Boiler Room set.

 

 

What is your goal as a DJ, and what are the next steps for you to get there?

My immediate goal is to play in as many music festivals around Africa and thereafter branch out to the world. I would like to collect as much music from the continent. There is so so much music here and I am so curious to find explore it all and find ways to blend it into amazing sets.

I would love to make music of my own and to collaborate with different artists. My personal challenge is to find a way to mix afro beats, percussions with hip hop. I have mentioned a million times how much I love the way DJ/Producer Sango mixes traditional Brazillian music with hip hop beats.

 

Can you tell us a bit about this mix, what it represents and means to you? Does it reflect what you sound like like.

This mix is a blend of some of my favorite tunes. When I play live I always find myself moving from afro beats to hip hop (or vice versa) and then playing some reggae or kwaito at some point. It highlights some of the things I love in music and that is traditional beats, percussions, something that gets you moving. I love to dance.

In future I would love to incorporate more music with strong messages such as the Boddhi Satva remix of Femi Kuti’s song ‘You better ask yourself’. This is also part of the reason I really like oldschool reggae dub music as well.  This mix is what I would sound like playing at a small venue somewhere in Nairobi on a relaxed Saturday or Sunday evening. It does get a bit experimental towards the end but that is my usual style.

https://soundcloud.com/platform/coco-em-african-house-mix-boiler-room-x-ballantines-true-music-kenya

https://www.mixcloud.com/worldwidefm/ww-nairobi-taio-with-abaki-simba-live-mvroe-live-ea-wave-live-dj-coco-em-16-10-2017/

 

Tracklist

1) Flying Lotus – Melt
2) Boddhi Satva (Ancestral soul mix) – Middle Passage
ft Tiwa Savage
3) Tarantulaz feat. Tiffany Lorén – I Wasn’t Kidding
(The Layabouts Future Retro Vocal Mix)
4) Ternielle Nelson – African Woman (Culoe De Song
Remix)
5) Problem Child Aka Ten83 – D.R.U.M.M.E.R.V.I.L.L.E
(Original Mix)
6) Hati Munetsi & dycejones – ceremony (Afro Flava
Mix)
7) Boddhi Satva (Ancestral Soul Mix) – Soumbouya ft
Salif Keita
8) Fela Kuti – Shakara (Ossies Bump Edit)
9) Steve Group Feat Uhuru – Celina Original Braulio
Houses Pro
10) Mpumi ft Zodwa, Ks Drums, Dj Micks – Ngifike
11) KS Drums & Afrikan Roots – Tale Of The Night
[Sharinganews]
12) G Sparks ft Dacosta – Sodat Aza Na Kati (Main Mix)
13) FRANKO – COLLER LA PETITE (DJ RIICKS AFRO REMIX)
14) Dj Patris Boy – Pemba (Original Mix)
15) Kaake – Inna Da Club
16) Sarkodie ft EL – Dangerous
17) Niniola – Maradona
18) Dj Mr. Tee mix – Deepclan session
19) Culoe de Song ft Busi Mhlongo – Webaba
20) Ten Walls – Walking with Elephants (Original Mix)
21) Frits Wentink – Shrewd (Original Mix)
22) Flashmob – Need In Me (Original Mix)
23) Boddhi Satva & Maalem Hammam – Zid Lmel

RELATED

Lala Shishi :King Monada – Malwedhe

Lala Shishi :King Monada – Malwedhe

We chanced on an article " Collapsing "disease" hits Zim, SA ", intrigued we decided to find out what is causing this "disease" and if there is any cure . You might have seen videos from South Africa and Zimbabwe, were people listen to a song , it gets to the chorus...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – October 5

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – October 5

Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it's about time we let you in on the tracks that drive us crazy! DJ Pizaro: This week we have How Much Remix by Ghanaian hiphop sensation Medikal featuring Sarkodie & Omar Sterling , Kere Oh! by MasterKraft featuring Broda...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – November 12

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – November 12

DJ Pizaro: This week we have Everyday by Patoranking , One Ticket by Kizz Daniel featuring Davido , Supa by R2bees featuring Wizkid, Bra Fie by Fuse ODG featuring Damian Marley and Text Me By T'neeya . Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it's about time we let you in...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – August 04

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – August 04

DJ Pizaro: This week we have Drummer Boy by Naija Afrobeats Star Naira Marley, Naija afrobeats legend Flavour N’abania features east africa’s afrobeats star Diamond Platnumz on Time To Party , the dancehall king from Ghana Shatta Wale with Testimony, Elele by Yemi Alade , beautiful Cina Soul Features Naa Shawele and SKY Girls on Unstoppable , Fine Boyz By CDQ, Samini Drops a new love tune called Give me Love and last but not the least Malowa by Omawumi Featuring DJ Spinall and Slimcase .

Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it’s about time we let you in on the tracks that drive us crazy!

RELATED

Lala Shishi :King Monada – Malwedhe

Lala Shishi :King Monada – Malwedhe

We chanced on an article " Collapsing "disease" hits Zim, SA ", intrigued we decided to find out what is causing this "disease" and if there is any cure . You might have seen videos from South Africa and Zimbabwe, were people listen to a song , it gets to the chorus...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – October 5

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – October 5

Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it's about time we let you in on the tracks that drive us crazy! DJ Pizaro: This week we have How Much Remix by Ghanaian hiphop sensation Medikal featuring Sarkodie & Omar Sterling , Kere Oh! by MasterKraft featuring Broda...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – November 12

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – November 12

DJ Pizaro: This week we have Everyday by Patoranking , One Ticket by Kizz Daniel featuring Davido , Supa by R2bees featuring Wizkid, Bra Fie by Fuse ODG featuring Damian Marley and Text Me By T'neeya . Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it's about time we let you in...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – August 04

DJ Pizaro: This week we have Drummer Boy by Naija Afrobeats Star Naira Marley, Naija afrobeats legend Flavour N’abania features east africa’s afrobeats star Diamond Platnumz on Time To Party , the dancehall king from Ghana Shatta Wale with Testimony, Elele by Yemi Alade , beautiful Cina Soul Features Naa Shawele and SKY Girls on Unstoppable , Fine Boyz By CDQ, Samini Drops a new love tune called Give me Love and last but not the least Malowa by Omawumi Featuring DJ Spinall and Slimcase .

Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it’s about time we let you in on the tracks that drive us crazy!

RELATED

Lala Shishi :King Monada – Malwedhe

Lala Shishi :King Monada – Malwedhe

We chanced on an article " Collapsing "disease" hits Zim, SA ", intrigued we decided to find out what is causing this "disease" and if there is any cure . You might have seen videos from South Africa and Zimbabwe, were people listen to a song , it gets to the chorus...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – October 5

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – October 5

Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it's about time we let you in on the tracks that drive us crazy! DJ Pizaro: This week we have How Much Remix by Ghanaian hiphop sensation Medikal featuring Sarkodie & Omar Sterling , Kere Oh! by MasterKraft featuring Broda...

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – November 12

Akwaaba DJs: Weekly Picks – November 12

DJ Pizaro: This week we have Everyday by Patoranking , One Ticket by Kizz Daniel featuring Davido , Supa by R2bees featuring Wizkid, Bra Fie by Fuse ODG featuring Damian Marley and Text Me By T'neeya . Every weekend, we are busy DJing, so it's about time we let you in...