Audio By Carbonatix
Entertainment journalist, Arnold Asamoh Baidoo has disagreed with Dancehall artiste, Shatta Wale’s claims that lack of a unique genre is a major setback for the Ghana music industry.
Speaking on United Showbiz Saturday, he stated that the fact that artistes like Shatta Wale have grown their brands, earned money and gained many opportunities while making music in Ghana, indicates that the industry's setback is not the absence of a unigue genre.
“Not having one genre is not our setback. Do you know what our set backs are? Lack of publishing, lack of distribution, lack of labels, poor royalty system, piracy, funding, these are our setbacks,” he said
Mr Baidoo was responding to a statement made by Shatta Wale when he delivered a 'state of the Industry' address on Wednesday, June 2. The Freedom singer said in the address that, “One of the things I find to be a major setback in the Ghana music industry is a unique genre that can be solely attributed to us as a people.
I was in business meetings with different foreign stakeholders, and investors in the US and one question they all seemed to ask was, ‘what kind of music do Ghanaians do?’.”
The Dancehall act therefore recommended that Ghanaian artistes should focus on producing more highlife music.
However, Mr Baidoo stated that the call for one genre in the industry is a fallacy, citing Nigeria and South African music industries as having many genres yet filled with global artistes.
“Go to nigeria, they do not have one genre of music. Sunny Ade took juju music to the Grammys, Femi Kuti, another Grammy nominated artiste took Afrobeat, Burna Boy who recently won a Grammy took Afrobeats.”
Having one unique genre is the least of the problems in Ghana's music industry, the entertainment critic said.
Mr Baidoo stated that it would be beneficial for the industry to solve the many issues it has, which will in turn help to facilitate the growth of the industry.
Latest Stories
-
UK social media campaigners among five denied US visas
4 hours -
BP sells stake in motor oil arm Castrol for $6bn
5 hours -
GPL 2025/26: Asante Kotoko beat Eleven Wonders to go third
7 hours -
Algerian law declares France’s colonisation a crime
7 hours -
Soldiers remove rival Mamprusi Chief Seidu Abagre from Bawku following Otumfuo mediation
7 hours -
Analysis: How GoldBod’s operations led to a $214 million loss at the BoG
8 hours -
Why Extending Ghana’s Presidential Term from Four to Five Years Is Not in the Interest of Ghanaians
8 hours -
Young sanitation diplomat urges children to lead cleanliness drive
8 hours -
Energy sector shortfall persists; to balloon to US$1.10bn in 2026 – IMF
8 hours -
Gov’t secures $30m Chinese grant for new university of science and technology in Damongo
8 hours -
Education Minister commends St. Peter’s SHS for exiting double-track, pledges infrastructure support
8 hours -
ECG to be privatised – IMF reveals in Staff Report
8 hours -
Accra Unbuntu Lions Club impacts 500,000 Ghanaians in 5 years of social service
8 hours -
VALCO Board holds maiden strategic meeting with management
9 hours -
African Festival: Nollywood star Tony Umez joins Nkrumah musical in Accra
9 hours
