Audio By Carbonatix
In December 2021, the British Council launched its maiden music industry project, Creative Enterprise Support Program (CESP) delivered by Culture Forward, Impact Hub Accra and the University of The Arts London.
The creative industries in Ghana are rapidly growing and increasingly recognised as a pathway for sustainable livelihoods for young people across art forms such as music, fashion, film etc. However, challenges abound for young people trying to break into the industry.
In direct response to these challenges, the Programme was designed with the aim of stimulating links between the UK and Ghanaian Music creative economy by delivering training, mentoring, networking, and business development services for young, emerging music professionals in Ghana in partnership with their peers in the UK.
Following an open call for all interested applicants, an original cohort of candidates joined the program to undergo an intense 2-week learning boot camp with sessions led by key industry players from around the world. Notable facilitators and guest speakers during the boot camp include London-based producer, Juls, Benewaah Boateng of Spotify, Liza Ntiamoah of Boomplay, Sadiq Abdulai of 3Music, Musician/Songwriter Mensa and celebrated poet Nyirah Waheed.
Participants received extensive training and industry insight to help shape their careers in music and adjacent industries. 30 candidates then proceeded to the next stage to receive rigorous mentoring from six industry experts. Eventually, 10 creatives made it to the final stage where they will be receiving grants to support their career and chosen projects.
The maiden cohort of the CESP, dubbed NextGen ‘22 are Edwin Quartey, Brakutz, Sosawavegod, Toyboi, Atswei Franalo, Essilfie, Daddo Gyan, Elodie Dee, Yung Tuff and Akan. The chosen creatives will be presented at an industry event at the British Council this Friday, April 22, 2022.
This CESP music industry project is targeted at music entrepreneurs including performing artists, songwriters, producers, DJs, sound engineers, music video producers, marketers, promoters, managers, agents, A&R, tech and those in other music-related businesses.
Latest Stories
-
‘I’ll be staying out of the way’ – Southgate on World Cup punditry
3 hours -
Oil prices slide after Pakistan announces deal between US and Iran
3 hours -
Real Madrid agree £51.8m deal for Chelsea’s Cucurella
3 hours -
Starmer set to ban under-16s from major social media platforms
3 hours -
Author Chimamanda Adichie accuses hospital of stalling review into son’s death
4 hours -
FIFA to pay Somali referee Artan full World Cup fee
4 hours -
11 skydivers and pilot killed in plane crash in the US state of Missouri
4 hours -
Hamilton wins first grand prix for Ferrari
4 hours -
A tragic betrayal – WHO Chief condemns deadly xenophobic attacks in South Africa
4 hours -
World Cup: Japan twice comefrom behind to draw 2-2 with Netherlands
5 hours -
UK and Japan agree £18bn investment deal
5 hours -
Swiss voters reject 10 million population cap
5 hours -
Critics of Mbappe have gone ‘too far’, says Dembele
5 hours -
‘Boyfriend duties call,’ Trudeau says after skipping Canada match to watch Perry
5 hours -
Germany put 7 past World Cup debutants Curacao
5 hours