There have been several calls to encourage Ghanaian artistes, especially the new generation to perform live bands.
The new crop of artistes seem glued to miming over a record with the aid of a Disc Jockey (DJ) compared to the 80s where live band was the thing.
DJs have virtually dominated the entertainment arena to the extent that live band shows sometimes have DJs on standby.
If ‘live band’ music was the toast of Ghanaians in the 80s, what must have contributed to its decline?
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On Saturday, Joy FM’s entertainment analysis program, Showbiz A-Z hosted by Naa Ashorkor, tried to find out why Ghanaian music has lost its supremacy to Nigerian music.
Legendary highlife musician, Gyedu-Blay Ambolley, explained how Disc Jockeys took over the music scene during former President Jerry John Rawlings’ regime, leading to the virtual collapse of live band music in Ghana.
“When JJ came back for the second time, that was when curfew became really strong. I think the curfew was on for a little over two years constantly so a lot of musicians traveled outside Ghana.
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“We work throughout the night and if by six o’clock we had to be indoors then it means no food on the table so many of them [the musicians] started travelling to Nigeria, Ivory Coast and Europe”, Gyedu Blay Ambolley revealed.
“That was when the spinners [DJs] came in. When the curfew was lifted, no bands were home….Ghanaians started loving [Disc Jockeying]; they were playing music that had already been mixed.
“The sound was good and strong. The bands started coming back but didn’t have good instruments to be able to sound like the spinners”, he added.
Renowned music producer, Mark Okraku-Mantey, corroborated the views of Gyedu Blay Ambolley.
“Live band was dominant but because of the coup, most of our good performers were out of Ghana…Gyedu Blay was not in Ghana…Dr. Paa Bobo was in Nigeria; Nana Kwame Ampadu was in Nigeria for some time and Amakye Dede was in Nigeria”, Mark Okraku-Mantey said.
Clearly, the curfew resulting from the 1981 coup in Ghana by Flt. Lieutenant J. J. Rawlings drastically affected musicians in Ghana.
The long silence of musicians who performed Live Band music led to the rapid rise of Disc Jockeying in Ghana.




1 COMMENT

  1. Well, this doesn’t look like changing anytime soon. With the recent increase in crime that is especially perpetuated by foreigners, it looks like the curfew regime will have to be implemented again, or at the least, something similar to it.
    The very fabric of Ghanaian culture and tradition faces imminent erosion, at the risk of the development of our children, not to mention economic and social development.

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