Audio By Carbonatix
Veteran highlife musician, Gyedu-Blay Ambolley, has accused the media of killing highlife music in Ghana.
According to him, the media, particularly radio stations, have neglected Ghana’s indigenous highlife music to play more dancehall.
“Radio stations have been part and parcel of our music not being played that much. Because for some few years now, most of the radio stations have been pumping every time, dancehall,” he told Naa Ashorkor on Showbiz A-Z on Joy FM on Saturday.
Indigenous highlife music became identified with Ghanaians in the 20th century onwards.
This locally brewed music at a stage was referred to as 'Palm Wine' music because of its prevalence within the palm wine sipping folks in Gold Coast, now Ghana, as a form of recreation.
Burger highlife was also regarded as a distinctive form of highlife believed to have been created by Ghanaian immigrants to Germany.
Highlife in any form has been greatly associated with the Ghanaian culture and an invention of the West African country.
The dominance of the genre of music has taken a nosedive in recent times compared to the 1970s.
Gyedu-Blay Ambolley in an interview on Showbiz A-Z, tried offering an explanation for the decline.
According to him, long curfews following the 1981 coup staged by Former President J.J Rawlings, had a huge toll on the indigenous music.
However, considering the current trend contributing to the fall of highlife music, the veteran musician mentioned the proliferation of radio stations and their love for dancehall music which obviously does not originate from Ghana as a key factor.
“That also has helped in killing what we call highlife, that is our heritage,” he stressed.
The veteran musician stressed that dancehall music does not originate from Ghana and it will be erroneous to project that genre of music to the rest of the world as ours.
Gyedu-Blay Ambolley called for the passage of a law that will ensure that 80% of music played by the media is locally produced with priority being given to highlife music.
Latest Stories
-
Why not clean energy: Cost or access?
45 seconds -
Minority sounds alarm over fuel shortages crippling Ghana’s fishing communities
2 minutes -
Minority calls for urgent action to shield farmers from rising production challenges
5 minutes -
AGRA Ghana salutes Farmers as nation marks Farmers’ Day
20 minutes -
Bawumia’s favourability rises, widens lead in new Global Info analytics survey
22 minutes -
Minority accuses gov’t of neglect after GH¢5bn rice left to waste
28 minutes -
Why Tsatsu Tsikata’s legacy is Ghana’s future
32 minutes -
Farmers need support all year, not just awards’ — Prof. Boadi
41 minutes -
Spotify ranks ‘Konnected Minds’ Ghana’s No. 1 Podcast for 2025
44 minutes -
Minority caucus push for modern AI-driven agricultural and fisheries revolution
45 minutes -
Mahama reaffirms Ghana’s commitment to ending HIV/AIDS by 2030
45 minutes -
Martin Kpebu poised to defend claims against Special Prosecutor – Counsel
50 minutes -
Kareweh criticises govts for policies that look good but achieve little in agriculture
52 minutes -
Galamsey is killing our cocoa, our water, our future – Minority warns of food security meltdown
55 minutes -
Keta is drowning, not fishing – Minority demands urgent fix to premix fuel breakdown
1 hour
