Audio By Carbonatix
Highlife musician Rex Omar has said that one of the reasons highlife is losing its prominence is the lack of a collective agenda by Ghanaian music stakeholders promote the genre.
He said on Joy FM’s Twitter Spaces programme hosted by Kwame Dadzie on Wednesday, April 5, 2023 that it is difficult for people in the music industry to embark on worthy causes.
“The various musicians and producers who operate within what we call Ghanaian music industry do not think together. We have organisations like MUSIGA and GHAMRO but they are always involved in rancour, whatever, so there is no agenda.
There are no musicians who have sat down to discuss our sound and our approach. There is nothing like that. Everybody gets up, goes to the studio, produces his thing. It’s like each one for himself, God for us all,” he said.
He said it is still possible to effect the desired change but proponents of a highlife agenda should not neglect its numerous variants while pushing pursuing it.
“It’s not too late. We can still create this highlife agenda if that is what we really want to do but we should not let highlife revolve around one sound. It is dynamic,” he noted.
This comes a few days after highlife artiste Gyedu-Blay Ambolley lashed out at the Vodafone Ghana Music Awards for vitiating highlife.
He told Graphic Showbiz that the VGMA has contributed to the slow progress of the genre.
“It is unfortunate that people think when you sing in Twi or Fante over a Dancehall or Reggae beats it automatically makes it Highlife music. That is not true but it has become the norm over the years because these are the kinds of music VGMA rewards.”
“Today, if anyone wants to have an idea of what Ghana represents in terms of music, I bet the person will not count any Highlife artiste since all the perceived big acts currently are not doing Highlife.”
“We have buried our own and pursuing Dancehall music and the likes and interestingly, the VGMA has been promoting the agenda by rewarding such artistes with the topmost prizes,” he said.
Rex Omar made the statement on Joy FM’s Twitter Spaces programme on the showbiz while discussing ways of preserving and protecting the highlife genre.
In the meantime, the Cultural Forum of Ghana has proposed to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) to make highlife an intangible heritage.
Latest Stories
-
Without discipline, Ghana risks a return to IMF – CPS Director warns
11 minutes -
Minority caucus demands immediate laying of BoG accounts before Parliament
16 minutes -
Black Sherif takes victory lap to Telecel Ghana HQ after 27th TGMA sweep
21 minutes -
Build inclusion into core of workplace culture – Telecel Ghana HR Director
26 minutes -
The youth are drowning – Vivies Dance and Theatre Academy sparks national conversation on addiction
31 minutes -
Bank of Ghana revoked GN Savings & Loans licence solely on insolvency grounds, not other alleged breaches — Lawyer for GN reveals
35 minutes -
Justice for Sale: How Ghana’s laws protect the powerful and punish the poor
40 minutes -
I wish some Ghanaians in US would go to school and improve themselves – Ambassador Smith
40 minutes -
2026 World Cup: Ghana’s Ambassador to US dismisses reports that only 3 out of 150 supporters secured visa
43 minutes -
Afoko calls for research-driven strategy to rebuild NPP ahead of 2028 elections
55 minutes -
Guinness Ghana Annual Golf Championship set for May 30 at Achimota Golf Club
1 hour -
Ghana to announce World Cup squad on June 1 – Kurt Okraku
2 hours -
Livestream: Newsfile dicusses attack on free speech and return of GN Bank
2 hours -
Panic in Sunyani: Chiefs to perform rituals after mystery deaths of two successive headteachers
4 hours -
The party has lost ground – Paul Afoko breaks long silence to launch NPP comeback
4 hours