
Audio By Carbonatix
If collaborating with secular artistes was the only means to win souls to the Kingdom of God then Gospel act, Mavis Asante would fail that mission.
This is because she has strong reservations about such collabos, insisting they are fundamentally wrong and amount to nothing but "noise."
Speaking exclusively to Graphic Showbiz on Monday, April 28, Mavis Asante, who recently made a comeback with a single, Victory, was clear about her stance. She stressed that gospel musicians had a divine calling that should not be mixed with secular pursuits.
"First and foremost, what is the purpose and reason behind such a collaboration? Is it for fame? To win souls? For the hype and recognition or what?" she questioned.
"Honestly, every one of us has their calling and purpose, so I believe we’re two different people doing two different things. Just as a lawyer can’t be called to perform surgery, no matter how intelligent or famous he might be and vice versa, a surgeon cannot defend anyone in the dock, so is my thought and belief," she explained.
Meanwhile, Ghana’s music scene has seen collaborations between Gospel and secular artistes that have produced some memorable hits over the years.
Songs such as Bebree by Herty Borngreat featuring Sarkodie, The Lord’s Prayer by Joyce Blessing featuring AB Crentsil, Ahobrase by Yaw Sarpong and the Asomafo featuring Sarkodie, Odo Yi Wo Hen by Lady Prempeh featuring Richie and Asem and Boys Boys by Nacee and Guru have given music lovers something to jam to, but Mavis insists such partnerships are inappropriate.
She emphasised that the mission of secular artistes did not align with that of gospel musicians, whose primary purpose was to sing about God, salvation and spiritual matters.
According to her, collaborations between the two only created confusion and diluted the gospel message.
"I believe it does nothing to the gospel message. I’ll term it as 'noise' in Mass Communication," she said.
She further advised gospel artistes seeking to reach a broader audience to collaborate within the gospel fraternity instead of looking outside.
"I think there are so many gospel artistes available for this purpose. I believe that before any collaboration, a gospel artiste must pray, fast and discern very seriously. Sometimes, saying no to certain desires like the urge to have a secular artiste on your song honours God more than any big-name collaboration could ever do," she added.
Latest Stories
-
Catholic Bishops call for national dialogue on LGBTQ debate
3 minutes -
Softcare FM Manufacturing Ltd backs Consumer Health Week, pushes science-driven care agenda
4 minutes -
The Eyes of Ghana to premiere in April, spotlighting rare Nkrumah-era footage
7 minutes -
$31bn transferred without matching imports in five years — GRA boss
21 minutes -
JoyNews Impact Maker, Williams Akongbabre, presents award to people of Bawku West
21 minutes -
Kenya backs Morocco’s autonomy plan for Western Sahara, signals push for implementation
28 minutes -
Hip-hop pioneer, Afrika Bambaataa, dies aged 68
36 minutes -
Let OSP defend itself in Supreme Court case — Prof Prempeh
45 minutes -
Emmanuel Kweenu Haizel aka Simpa Panyin
46 minutes -
Police foil planned highway robbery in Ashanti Region, one suspect shot dead
53 minutes -
Sunyani Technical University dismisses 3 students over examination malpractice
2 hours -
NPRA prosecutes 11 employers, recovers GH¢27m in 2025
2 hours -
NAIMOS cracks down on illegal mining activities along River Tano
2 hours -
2026 World Cup: Officials selected are the world’s very best – FIFA defends referees list
2 hours -
NAIMOS taskforce embarks on major anti-galamsey operations at GREL plantation and along Ankobra River
2 hours