Audio By Carbonatix
There have been several criticisms following the 25th Telecel Ghana Music Awards (TGMA), especially about the performances of billed artists at the event.
One particular musician’s performance that has captured vast attention on social media is King Promise. Most netizens have backlashed the artist heavily, underrating his vocal performance.
However, others variedly think that there was poor sound quality at the event, which affected King Promise’s act.
Amidst the debate, artist manager, Nana Poku Ashis is the latest to add his voice. He thinks King Promise should not be blamed entirely for the error, adding that there were equally challenges with sound.
He suggested a solution to solving and avoiding such occurrences in the subsequent editions.
Speaking in a conversation on Joy Prime’s Prime Morning show while reviewing the various developments concerning the event, the artist manager opined that the awards require more sound engineers.
According to him, the organisers, Charter House require more personnel to provide support in varied ways. He said they would have to incorporate additional sound experts to help improve the quality.
“I would like to urge you to probably invite different hands to come on board next year to help us with sound because the key thing we’re playing with is sound,” he said.
He recounted a sound comparison between Samini and Tarrus Riley's performances at Blitz on the Hills in Kwahu years ago, even though Samini’s performed well.
“I was actually the one manning the stage. Now right after Samini was Tarrus Riley, and Samini jammed; everybody loved it, and the sound was good until Tarrus Riley’s engineer came on. I was asking if the same speaker Samini performed in, or if they brought microphones. What did they do? It took them 15 to 30 minutes to tweak the sound while people were there.
They came late and couldn’t do a sound check before the show began, but they requested the time to do something. When they let go of the sound, everybody was like, What is happening here?” he narrated on the show.
Contrary to what the public claim, he emphasised that King Promise was not singing off key but was flatting the key notes due to the sound he was kistening to.
Latest Stories
-
IMF seeks 3-month extension of Ghana’s Programme
7 minutes -
Government secures $200m World Bank support to end double-track system – Haruna Iddrisu
11 minutes -
GJA raises alarm over court order restraining investigative reporting
26 minutes -
Ghana Embassy delegation visits Ghanaian detainees at ICE facility in Pennsylvania
53 minutes -
The Licensure Fallacy: A misplaced narrative on WASSCE performance
1 hour -
Front-runner to be Bangladesh PM returns after 17 years in exile
2 hours -
NICKSETH recognised as Best Building & Civil Engineering Company of the Year 2024/2025 by GhCCI
2 hours -
MISA Energy rebrands in Kumasi, pledges better service and sustainability
2 hours -
Kenyasi assault case: Woman handed 15-month jail term for injuring child
4 hours -
Mahama’s trust well placed, I remain focused on fixing education – Haruna Iddrisu
4 hours -
IGP Yohuno promotes 13 senior officers in recognition of exemplary service
4 hours -
Miss Health Organisation unveils new Miss Health Africa and Ghana queens
5 hours -
Andy Dosty set to headline inaugural Ghana Independence Day celebrations in Europe
5 hours -
GoldBod rejects IMF claims of $214m losses under gold-for-reserves programme
5 hours -
Some MMDCEs reject uniform 24-Hour Economy Market model, seek flexible options
5 hours
