Is Afrobeats a threat to other African music genre ? | The Chat

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  • čas přidán 23. 04. 2022
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Komentáře • 381

  • @hillcrestprofessionalservi3502

    Ghanaians please make music and call it whatever.. It took Nigerians over 10 years to build up the afrobeats genre and take it to the level that it is today... Nigerians have invested heavily in their music and produce a minimum of 10 new afrobeats superstars every year.. Now the world is paying attention and opening doors for other African sounds..
    The billboard afrobeats charts and the UK afrobeats chart didn't happen over night nor did it happen because of political pressure.. If you want the world to recognize a hiplife charts or a highlife charts, put in the amount of work and investment Nigerians have put in and perhaps you will get the same recognition..In the meantime, be happy if you are even recognized under the afrobeats genre because before now you weren't even recognized..

  • @joyisaac223
    @joyisaac223 Před 2 lety +106

    First it was ban Nigerian music, now Afrobeats is a threat to your music, very soon it will be a threat to your existence. Awon Werey!

    • @hrhi2874
      @hrhi2874 Před 2 lety +21

      They know that this topic is stupid, they just need views. How do you get views in Africa? Get a lot of people to view. How do you get people to view? Look for where you have a lot of people, and make them watch…. How do you make them watch? Talk about them in a underhanded way. Good business plan actually.

    • @joyisaac223
      @joyisaac223 Před 2 lety

      @@hrhi2874 They're very stupid.The lazy fools might get views for the few coins they make out of it but not the dedicated subscribers they would have gotten, if they were making wholesome contents.

    • @exiblack9370
      @exiblack9370 Před 2 lety +7

      Lol hahaha 😆 🤣

    • @hrhi2874
      @hrhi2874 Před 2 lety +6

      @@exiblack9370 is it not true lol lol just saying. 😂

    • @LHARYTECH
      @LHARYTECH Před 2 lety +7

      Omo Werey 😂

  • @NymaMargaret
    @NymaMargaret Před 2 lety +59

    Afrobeat/Afrobeats is Nigerian and Nigerians individually pushed for everything they have including the billboards recognition, y'all should be grateful for getting recognised in the music scene, go create something for yourselves and leave Nigerians in peace.

    • @nmg1909
      @nmg1909 Před 2 lety

      😂😂😂😂😂

    • @naijabelle4961
      @naijabelle4961 Před 2 lety

      😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @0k859
      @0k859 Před 2 lety

      They will never listen to you. Ghanaians get by off copying people and clinging to other cultures for clout. This is why they always try to link themselves to Nigeria 🇳🇬 and Jamaica 🇯🇲

    • @ominiekwe7241
      @ominiekwe7241 Před 2 lety +3

      Abi oooo, he tire me for dem

    • @yusufbola356
      @yusufbola356 Před 2 lety

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @richlyt2238
    @richlyt2238 Před 2 lety +50

    You guys should know that the word afrobeats is coined to give other African genres an opportunity to be heard. 99.9% of record breaking and viral songs out of Africa is Nigerian

    • @vamoneygroup
      @vamoneygroup Před 2 lety +2

      Afrobeats is mostly Reggaeton with dancehall poured on top. It's not a bad thing, but it's definitely not ORIGINAL or AUTHENTIC.

    • @denatora7142
      @denatora7142 Před 2 lety +8

      @@vamoneygroup LMAO. if you understand JUJU music or Fuji music from Nigeria or traditional folk music from Nigeria, you wont open your mouth waah and term Afrobeat such. You hear talking drums for your reggaeton & Dancehall. Afrobeat in its purest form is FELA AND THE KUTI family music. Go and listen and come back. The mainstream form of it is a collection of everything with AFRO origin from makossa, ndombolo, fuji, amapiano, juju, eastern nigerian music to hausa music and lots more.

    • @TdainegonkeeU
      @TdainegonkeeU Před 2 lety +2

      @@denatora7142 u too get sense and time to dey follow this wan talk. Naija to the world 🌎

    • @NativeNomads10
      @NativeNomads10 Před rokem

      @@denatora7142 But even the original Afrobeat was influenced by Reggae, and is nothing compared to modern Afrobeats, which has high influenced of Dancehall, Hip Hop, etc

  • @mrzagamaje9434
    @mrzagamaje9434 Před 2 lety +23

    Afrobeats is Nigerian. Nigeria is Ghana's biggest problem.

  • @GpS1host
    @GpS1host Před 2 lety +28

    Ghana has a blatant hatred for Nigeria's success. The only reason why Ghana has issues with Afrobeats is bcos Nigeria created and took it global. Stoneboy was even hating on TikTok bcos Nigerians use it to shine their music. They had an opportunity in France before a live T.V to be proud of Africa's musical success courtesy of Afrobeats but went on a criticizing rampage.... what a shame!!!

  • @user-ht2bz9oi8i
    @user-ht2bz9oi8i Před 2 lety +120

    Ghanaians are cool with their top artist singing like other countries like Jamaican, sarkodie singing hip-hop rap in America, The only problem Ghanaians have with Afrobeats is the fact that it is linked to Nigeria. If Afrobeats was linked to another country they will boldly front it. But they are not comfortable with the country it is associated with

    • @Mkym365
      @Mkym365 Před 2 lety +21

      How Sad for the Ghanaians..SMH Nonsense

    • @sylviasworld9397
      @sylviasworld9397 Před 2 lety +11

      TRUTH for many !!!!!

    • @Southernview3k
      @Southernview3k Před 2 lety +18

      Excuses and excuses.
      Same Ghanaian artist are now collaborating with Nigeria artist to be famous.

    • @leonardorjioffor6683
      @leonardorjioffor6683 Před 2 lety +21

      So true bro but do we Nigerians fuckin care about if they front it or not, all we know is that Nigerian artists are already gone and and they can't meet us either

    • @swaggst
      @swaggst Před 2 lety +1

      @@Southernview3k it’s your time enjoy it. Gone are he days Nigerian artist chase Ghanaian artists for collabs. When they pay gh artists to perform in naija. When they were doing highlife music. Days of tony tetuila, danfo Driver’s and so on. Music is time. Nigerians are doing well with afrobeat and we hail that.

  • @ufedoemmanuelatabo7485
    @ufedoemmanuelatabo7485 Před 2 lety +19

    Don't hate on Nigeria, that's what they call Nigerian soft power... If u don't like it don't hate... But be creative... I come in peace. Highlight is dead and gone now...

  • @solomonobihan9465
    @solomonobihan9465 Před 2 lety +24

    These ghanians really want to be us so bad.

    • @tolu_jay
      @tolu_jay Před 2 lety +7

      Its too obvious..... But u can never be great if you don't acknowledge the greatness of others around you.

    • @HeroesofHeaven.
      @HeroesofHeaven. Před 2 lety

      Facts

    • @joyuyoke4999
      @joyuyoke4999 Před 2 lety +3

      @@HeroesofHeaven. they have even started shouting Ghana no dey Carry last. The can steal and copy us Nigerians

    • @joyuyoke4999
      @joyuyoke4999 Před 2 lety

      @@tolu_jay they have even started shouting Ghana no dey Carry last. They can steal and copy us Nigerians

    • @joyuyoke4999
      @joyuyoke4999 Před 2 lety +1

      They have even started shouting Ghana no dey Carry last they can steal and copy us Nigerians

  • @Wavecurve
    @Wavecurve Před 2 lety +27

    There are more Nigerian talents on the way: Nigeria has 220 million people.
    Nigeria's massive population comes with 280 Tribes or cultural groups, and each tribe have their own distinct language, food, attire, music and rhythm, farming methods, burial ritual, marriage ceremony, different method of paying respect to the elders, etc.
    The diversity of Nigeria actually helps our Afrobeat because, sometimes, musicians like to introduce elements of their tribal music. In some cases, you can actually distinguish between Afrobeat of artist from Eastern Nigeria and Western Nigeria. This is why Afrobeat music of non Nigerian artists sounds unoriginal, stiff and mechanical. They lack Nigeria's tribal texture.

    • @solomonjoseph7683
      @solomonjoseph7683 Před 2 lety

      They never see anything.😜

    • @bantuhebrew2439
      @bantuhebrew2439 Před rokem

      All nice but Nigerian Music succes started in 2008. Yet go watch the history of Rumba. Go listen to the Rumba back in 60s up until the 2020s. This country 🇨🇩 influenced the sounds of different countries that you hear today whether it is in Africa or Americas

    • @charleshart8641
      @charleshart8641 Před rokem

      @@bantuhebrew2439 is this country you are talking about not descendants from Africa?

  • @jonathanogbone9925
    @jonathanogbone9925 Před 2 lety +20

    i think all africans should appreciate nigerians for creating a genre for whereby all african artist can be recognized, afrobeat, afrobeats is naija

  • @isidorajohnson9273
    @isidorajohnson9273 Před 2 lety +42

    Afrobeat/s is NIGERIA and Nigeria is AFROBEAT/S, period!!

  • @michaeludeze8470
    @michaeludeze8470 Před 2 lety +7

    *Ghana's obsession with Nigeria is like an ANT crawling on a mighty ELEPHANT. The elephant doesn't even notice the ant.*

  • @sanstv4970
    @sanstv4970 Před 2 lety +20

    😂😂 afrobeat without the s this guys want to become Nigeria so bad 😆😆

    • @joyuyoke4999
      @joyuyoke4999 Před 2 lety +2

      They even stole our naija phrase.. Some Ghanaians be saying Ghana no dey carry last. Ghanaians can steal and copy us Nigerians. They can never be original

    • @ngoziikemefuna500
      @ngoziikemefuna500 Před rokem

      @@joyuyoke4999 one even say Igbo is from ghana

    • @joyuyoke4999
      @joyuyoke4999 Před rokem +1

      @@ngoziikemefuna500 Ghana people are w..eird normally. They are jealous of us and want to be us so bad

    • @ngoziikemefuna500
      @ngoziikemefuna500 Před rokem +1

      @@joyuyoke4999 don't mind those ode later dey will say is Nigeria that started it

  • @aframaco9491
    @aframaco9491 Před 2 lety +24

    Did Stonebwoy just say “Yeah mon “ to the white female interviewer????
    Kpangolo Jamaican!!!

    • @OgooMbogu
      @OgooMbogu Před 2 lety +10

      It's b'cos they have lost focus, imagine a pure African wanting to behave like the Jamaicans

    • @aframaco9491
      @aframaco9491 Před 2 lety +9

      @@OgooMbogu That’s right, they are taking this Dancehall thing to heart!

    • @salttybarber5233
      @salttybarber5233 Před 2 lety +5

      People that will be doing "ehn ehn" to a real Jamaica, always forming Jamaicans..

    • @wasiuisaac3689
      @wasiuisaac3689 Před 2 lety +1

      Lol yeah man

    • @ominiekwe7241
      @ominiekwe7241 Před 2 lety

      Yes oooo
      A Ghanaian jumping from Bristol speaking English to 🇯🇲 Jamaica yea man English, mmmmm

  • @ochiegodfrey6428
    @ochiegodfrey6428 Před 2 lety +55

    Afrobeats originated in Nigeria 🇳🇬 that is why Afrobeats is not Organic in Ghana 🇬🇭, as it's in Nigeria 🇳🇬. Afrobeats is Organic in Nigeria 🇳🇬 because that's where Afrobeats originated from.

    • @0k859
      @0k859 Před 2 lety

      Dw done a documentary on afrobeat and even they said it started in Nigeria 🇳🇬 and highly influenced the Ghanaians lool you need a white man to be impartial because he will tell the truth, they even did another documentary on fela kuti and said the same thing. It’s only Ghanaians and other Africans who are jealous who claim Afrobeats was made by them lol Ghanaians are really trying pathetic

    • @ominiekwe7241
      @ominiekwe7241 Před 2 lety +3

      They will come for you my dear
      My other brothers Ghanaians

  • @luckychukwuma3822
    @luckychukwuma3822 Před 2 lety +56

    I don’t think Afrobeats have any highlife in it. It’s more of a combination of Nigeria Fuji music,fela afrobeat, Nigeria juju music,and more importantly switching lyrics from Queens English to Nigerian Pidgin English. It’s when the new generation Nigerian artist started writing all kinds of songs in pidgin English that they renamed fela’s afrobeat as afrobeats. The genre was not rename by any DJ in the UK. Yes afrobeats is a genre created by naija modern day musicians incorporating much of fela afrobeat sounds but with songs written in Nigerian Pidgin English. It’s not a lump up thing.

    • @oluwasogoabbey4269
      @oluwasogoabbey4269 Před 2 lety +4

      Afrobeat contains highlife,it’s a fusion of different genres.

    • @osaobomhenefoghe8967
      @osaobomhenefoghe8967 Před 2 lety +4

      Lol...Fela also wrote songs in pidgin na...
      You tend to be capitalising on the fact that afrobeats singers write in pidgin as the distinguishing factor

    • @swaggst
      @swaggst Před 2 lety

      And fela didn’t do highlife? Lol. When he was rediscovering his musical journey after from London it was in Ghana he came to learn about highlife and went back to Nigeria and started doing highlife. Brought a few Ghanaian highlife artists to naija to learn a lot from. So at a point he incorporated highlife into his sound and make it wholly.

    • @MajorrBison
      @MajorrBison Před 2 lety +3

      @@swaggst And so what he came to Ghana to learn, does that mean that was all he did? Is ojuelegba by wizkid under Ghana highlife? Is YE by Burns boy highlife? Is Esence high life?

    • @swaggst
      @swaggst Před 2 lety +1

      @@MajorrBison a healthy conversation doesn’t have a response to ‘ and so what? Go learn the elements of music and come back and speak. 2face had said it. Perruzi producing davidos earlier tracks confirmed the infusion of highlife into the Afro beats. Just do research

  • @james56660
    @james56660 Před 2 lety +72

    Highlife isn’t a Ghanaian genre but a Liberian 🇱🇷 and Sierra Leonian 🇸🇱 genre. It’s called palmwine music 🎵 in both countries. Ghanaians cannot lay claim to that genre.☝️

    • @iyamugeorge5835
      @iyamugeorge5835 Před 2 lety +12

      It's a west African thing. We call it tombo (palm wine) music back in the days. Y'all ranting over highlife like music never existed in other country.

    • @anywherebelleface1934
      @anywherebelleface1934 Před 2 lety +16

      Is better you people always come out and defend your thing, if not this r!tual!!St country ghana are ready to hijacked what is not their own

    • @mrzagamaje9434
      @mrzagamaje9434 Před 2 lety +22

      Ghanaians love to take credit for doing nothing.

    • @danielchukwu4212
      @danielchukwu4212 Před 2 lety +18

      Mr James, you are absolutely write about the origin of the West African Highlife Music, which Ghanaians always falsely claim ownership. The West African highlife got its origins from the Caribbean calypso and other genres that were heavily on guitars and instruments which found its way into West Africa through the Liberian corridor. In colonial era the Americo-Liberian population in and around Monrovia with their acquired Euro-American tastes embellished and popularized this genre of music called the West African Highlife and other brass-band music similar to what was in vogue in New Orleans and other places in America which the Americo-Liberians were exposed to. Of course with the passage of time other West African countries adopted this form of music while incorporating their various local or traditional music content which accounts for the uniqueness and diversity in the Highlife played across the West African sub-Region. So sometimes I find it very difficult to understand why Ghanaians debate over things they barely know about. Most of the people who make bogus claims about highlife originating in Ghana simply don't know any history. For those old enough to remember, urban life in Accra and most of the coastal Ghana were heavily influenced by the returnee freed African slaves from Brazil, Sierra Leone, Liberia and the Caribbean most of whom were of Yoruba extraction. Any knowledgeable Ghanaian will recall that both in precolonial and postcolonial Ghana, there use to be suburban areas called Lagos town, or Anago town as well as Kru town or Liberian town and several others. Their influence was felt in every aspects of the Ghanaian urban life. Even after independence in 1957, the descendants of these returnees and later migrants from Nigeria, Liberia and Sierra Leone continued to exert great influence on the Ghanaian urban life especially in and around Accra or the Greater Accra region, and there is no denying that this was why in 1971 the regime of Busia, passed the Alien Repatriation or Deportation decree, resulting in the violent expulsion of predominantly people of Nigerian extraction were many had their legitimate businesses and properties looted and confiscated by Ghanaians. Many Ghanaians today don't know about these things because they were born decades after and the few who were alive and witnessed these events don't talk about them. It's just unfortunate that today the Internet has given so many idiots and illiterates the platform to parade their lunacy and twisted views

    • @Mkym365
      @Mkym365 Před 2 lety +4

      @@danielchukwu4212 Thank yoU for the Education! We need more like this on varied subjects ✌️

  • @antnam4406
    @antnam4406 Před 2 lety +12

    Afrobeats = Nigerian

  • @realebonyqueen7485
    @realebonyqueen7485 Před 2 lety +16

    Ghanaians should try and create their own genre of music/sound and stop trying to differentiate between Afrobeat and Afrobeats. South Africa created Amapiano, Cameroon created Makossa, Congo/Tanzania are adopted Makossa too. Ghana copying dancehall which is Jamaican's genre isn't good.

    • @onweobinna2644
      @onweobinna2644 Před 2 lety

      Ghanaians created highlife but I don't know why they are sleeping on that genre

    • @NativeNomads10
      @NativeNomads10 Před rokem

      Ghana didnt copy Jamaican genre, and Afrobeats is a modified version of the same Jamaican Genre you're talking about

    • @realebonyqueen7485
      @realebonyqueen7485 Před rokem +1

      @@NativeNomads10 Afrobeat isn't a modified version of Jamaica genre , reggae. They don't even come close. So, please stop deceiving yourself.

  • @nmg1909
    @nmg1909 Před 2 lety +15

    I laugh at you GH. Did you guys see how Nigeria is fine turning Amapiano with different beats ( Afrobeat)? These are creative and nobody bothered at pointing out fingers in Nigeria.

    • @tomiiide
      @tomiiide Před 2 lety +3

      This, Nigerians don’t bother with all these shalaye, or talk, we just create great music, adjust when we need to, take inspiration from anything and move.

  • @franciscaonyema5713
    @franciscaonyema5713 Před 2 lety +12

    Ghanaians with inferiority complex..abeg let dance to my afrobeat jare... 💃💃💃💃👏👏

  • @viclovely7706
    @viclovely7706 Před 2 lety +34

    The so called highlife was stolen from Sierra Leon called palm wine music

    • @easygeemusic9467
      @easygeemusic9467 Před 2 lety +5

      Steal it back

    • @kevo7ful
      @kevo7ful Před 2 lety +3

      What do you mean stolen? The palm
      Wine music is the same thing we call it in Nigeria back in the days. It’s called Tombo music and Tombo means palm wine in Nigeria pidgin English. So what are you talking about?

    • @godsanointed3397
      @godsanointed3397 Před 2 lety +8

      @VIC lovely you know Ghanians like to claim anything good from Africa.

    • @princejonas6960
      @princejonas6960 Před 2 lety +3

      @@kevo7ful leave Sierra Leon they are Nigerians

    • @swaggst
      @swaggst Před 2 lety

      @@godsanointed3397 that’s exactly what Nigerians know how to do best. Claiming everything good from the west based on say they’re the giant. A giant in clay sands .

  • @aframaco9491
    @aframaco9491 Před 2 lety +17

    Where do you people get these dubious stories from?
    Fela Kuti’s original band was formed in London and it was called Koola Lobitos!
    Ghanaians need to know that while highlife music originated in Ghana, there were fully fledged highlife bands in Nigeria who nigerianised their own sound, and threw up serious musicians who held their own to the fullest!
    Victor Olaiya, Roy Chicago, Zeal Onyia, Inyang Henshaw, Rex Lawson, Celestine Ukwu, Bobby Benson and many more!
    Fela Kuti did “marry” elements of highlife with Jazz, Funk, and traditional Yoruba music to create Afrobeat!!
    And one of the pundits was right!
    Music evolves!

    • @user-wg6rl9tv8n
      @user-wg6rl9tv8n Před 2 lety

      He was mentored by Ghanaian called Evo Taylor who was doing the type of music in ghana where fela lived and studied

    • @user-wg6rl9tv8n
      @user-wg6rl9tv8n Před 2 lety +1

      czcams.com/video/19SLUVaOfCs/video.html this was already in existence way back in the 50's. When feka was based in ghana studying and living

    • @aframaco9491
      @aframaco9491 Před 2 lety +6

      @@user-wg6rl9tv8n Behave!!!
      Ebo Taylor met Fela in London and they had jamming sessions!
      Fela had studied music at the Trinity College of music in London and was already burning up London with Koola Lobitos band!

    • @user-wg6rl9tv8n
      @user-wg6rl9tv8n Před 2 lety +1

      @@aframaco9491 czcams.com/video/SVKXweeVdo4/video.html
      Not true. They met in Ghana. You know fela lived in Ghana for so many years before our independence. Thus highlife songs have been in existence way long even in colonial times

    • @user-wg6rl9tv8n
      @user-wg6rl9tv8n Před 2 lety +1

      @@aframaco9491 czcams.com/video/7J2obPoM2SA/video.html
      Watch him perform

  • @hillcrestprofessionalservi3502

    First off, highlife is simply west african rythms fused with guiter and other European istruments.. It is all about evolution.. African music has been evolving from the days of folk songs.. If Ghanaians decide to stop the evolution of their music at highlife, then it is fine too as long as they are able to get the world to rock along with them..
    Secondly, the most important thing is that we are able to get our music and culture across to the rest of the world.. The success of Nigerian music has brought an incredible level of pride and respect to Africans globally.

  • @CodingExpress
    @CodingExpress Před 2 lety +5

    Afrobeats is Nigerian and Nigerian alone. It has it's way of sound

  • @mrvibe1570
    @mrvibe1570 Před 2 lety +25

    afrobeat or afrobeats oo..all Nigeria. u guys can try to sound like the Nigerians but still the different is there. Nigeria has no competitors in Africa music. my fellow Nigerians please leave this Ghanaians to continue making noise . They are used to that. Them making noise and we making money .

    • @mrzagamaje9434
      @mrzagamaje9434 Před 2 lety +2

      Nigeria is Ghana's biggest problem

    • @Mkym365
      @Mkym365 Před 2 lety +4

      Ghana will continue to take medicine while Nigerians continue to Soar higher✌️

  • @kelvinking9484
    @kelvinking9484 Před 2 lety +10

    The Dj did not start any afrobeats movement and Beyoncé tapped in African music because her movie
    Afrobeat is a music genre that involves the combination of elements of West African musical styles such as fuji music and highlife with American jazz and later soul and funk influences
    You people should stop this only highlife thing
    No be highlife

    • @papap1186
      @papap1186 Před 2 lety +3

      That DJ Abrantie was promoting Azonto in UK for Ghanaian music industry and he has nothing to do with Afrobeats in UK.
      The Nigerian media in the UK were the ones promoted Afrobeats and pushing it till today.
      DJ Abrantie was promoting Ghanaian music in the UK the time Azonto became popular.

  • @sanstv4970
    @sanstv4970 Před 2 lety +24

    Afrobeat is Nigeria 🇳🇬 Nigeria is afrobeats

  • @ominiekwe7241
    @ominiekwe7241 Před 2 lety +8

    Nigerians are giving some people sleepless 🌙 Night.up Nigeria. Everybody wants to belong when Nigeria is winning. You can't be Nigerian when you are not one of us ,Everybody has his country

    • @ngoziikemefuna500
      @ngoziikemefuna500 Před rokem

      That is how one ghana person claim that Igbo is from Ghana

  • @mummysweet8422
    @mummysweet8422 Před 2 lety +11

    I don't understand all this arguments African unity is power separation is division whatever the music is named doesn't matter at all non African call it just like that ,since it comes from African all black race all over the world are proud of this development . Sometime I get shame of myself how we argue or discuss unnecessary issues.

  • @brightchukwusa570
    @brightchukwusa570 Před 2 lety +3

    Ghana want to chill with the big boys.. hahahaha!!!
    Time wey una go take go work una dey there dey talk about Nigeria wey don leave una... Una go soon craze

  • @mxhiphopper
    @mxhiphopper Před 2 lety

    Is it my eyes? Is it just the camera moving or the platform itself is moving?

  • @udobele3989
    @udobele3989 Před 2 lety +14

    Bros! Take it easy you're too emotional as a Ghanian. This is why a lot of Nigerians thinks Ghanians are jealous. First, you made a mistake that Afrobeat by Fela has Fuji in it. Again, you said Fela is smart to tap from hi-life. Hmmm!!! Please go and listen to Fela songs. Purely jazz mixed and local beats. A lot of misinformation here aebg ooo! Biafra! How did it affect this conversation. In Nigeria, we have a lot sounds like Fuji, Traditional hi-life from the eastern and southern parts in Nigeria. So, Afrobeat is an inspiration of both Fela sounds and complementary sounds in Nigeria. With respect, African music has there own genres. Indeed, the world wants to know which genre of Africa music will be accepted in the world. For me I won't blame the whites for this. Look at Flavour songs is often an Eastern traditional music. So, let's get it right. Promote your own and celebrate what's good.

    • @user-wg6rl9tv8n
      @user-wg6rl9tv8n Před 2 lety

      czcams.com/video/19SLUVaOfCs/video.html
      He studied in Ghana and lived in Ghana for so many years. When we tell you lot something humble yourself and take it in. Fela learnt from Ebo Taylor in ghana. Research his music

    • @o.t9358
      @o.t9358 Před 2 lety +1

      Afrobeat does have Fuji, JuJu, highlife, jazz in it

  • @governmentnwankwo9906
    @governmentnwankwo9906 Před 2 lety +5

    They didn't answer the question, they're just beating round the bush.

  • @Mkym365
    @Mkym365 Před 2 lety +14

    Afrobeats Originated in Nigeria while Hi-Life Originated in Liberia/Sierra Leone (Known as palm wine music)

  • @mrvibe1570
    @mrvibe1570 Před 2 lety +9

    I watched sakodie show yesterday I was smh. the guy is mainly for Ghanaians alone . Noting else

  • @michaeludeze8470
    @michaeludeze8470 Před 2 lety +2

    Ghana talks about Nigeria to get attention. When Ghana is not claiming Nigeria's achievement, they are blaming Nigeria.

  • @exiblack9370
    @exiblack9370 Před 2 lety +8

    I don't have much to say, but you guy's a big problem, I mean some of Ghanaians

  • @Wavecurve
    @Wavecurve Před 2 lety +2

    Ghana is busy claiming to be the originator of Nigeria's Afrobeat, instead of actually learning how to produce Afrobeat. God_ah_beg_oh!

  • @michaelbrew9743
    @michaelbrew9743 Před rokem +1

    As Ghanaians we very critical of ourselves and sometimes so much so that we play down on what we have and then switch focus to develop something new cus we have the luxury in creativity

  • @obohphilips5371
    @obohphilips5371 Před 2 lety +3

    Nigerians should stop sustaining Ghanaians. Ghana is one country in Africa who has benefited so much from Nigeria and Unfortunately, one of the most ungrateful people in Africa despite what Nigeria has done for them.
    You help a Ghanaian now he will turn around begin to high shoulder with you as if you and him are mate.
    First of all, Nigeria and Ghana are not mate in anything. That county is just too small, less powerful to compete with Nigeria in anything.
    So Ghanaians need to be humble and respect and learn from Nigeria. Because y'all don't have what it takes to match Nigeria now or in the future

  • @drock5440
    @drock5440 Před 2 lety +17

    You guys are just confusing yourselves the more, Afrobeats with s' or not is inconsequential, there was never a genre for African songs in the international market before now that is globally excepted. We have pushed Afrobeats globally, you guys should just be creative and use the platform to announce other African genre and not these things you are wasting your time on.

    • @o.t9358
      @o.t9358 Před 2 lety +6

      Exactly, it's more about amplifying different sounds from Africa

  • @cossy6678
    @cossy6678 Před 2 lety +5

    Ghanians is, was and will always be treathened by Nigerians.

  • @easygeemusic9467
    @easygeemusic9467 Před 2 lety +7

    You want to educate the world and you don't have any awards to do it. 🤣😃. You guys like talking too much.

  • @shalomasaju5690
    @shalomasaju5690 Před 2 lety +3

    This is what's happening,award academy like BET, Grammy etc don't want to accept all African music genres but considering marketing, streaming numbers, Afrobeats is on top cuz so far,it is the most exported African music to the western world

  • @bensonjackson3082
    @bensonjackson3082 Před 2 lety +10

    Ghanaian created everything fela never did any high life song hahahaha

    • @godsanointed3397
      @godsanointed3397 Před 2 lety +4

      Very funny 😝😝🤪🤪😛😜😄😊😋😆

  • @naijabelle4961
    @naijabelle4961 Před 2 lety +3

    Nigerians shey una dey see why these Ghanaians chest bad belly for una. Na mad people dem be walahi. Anywhere una see Ghanaians, Beware of them. Make una no dey call them brothers o. If you see them take salt join.

    • @ngoziikemefuna500
      @ngoziikemefuna500 Před rokem

      I swear e dey pain when some Nigerians go dey call dem brothers na there eyes done dey clear small small

    • @emmybizzz-hb9ud
      @emmybizzz-hb9ud Před 11 měsíci

      @@ngoziikemefuna500 ñâ people wéy ñô know dêy ćäll Dem brother.

  • @justhuman1722
    @justhuman1722 Před 2 lety +5

    I think, when these clumped up genre get bigger... They'll be distinguished

  • @carolc3725
    @carolc3725 Před 2 lety +12

    Your 3 biggest artists in Ghana Shatta is doing dancehall, stoneboy is rap , sarkodie is rap some of your artists sound like reggae artists what is Ghanas sound of music, is it rap or dancehall your artists go outside your country and they are doing Dancehall or rap , rap is American music , dancehall is Jamaican sound what is stopping Ghanaians from taking their music to the world you keep talking about Nigeria music

  • @gentlesoul9046
    @gentlesoul9046 Před rokem +1

    This is embarrassing we fighting among us ,let's make beautiful music and share with the world from every corner of Africa.

  • @emmaagbor9724
    @emmaagbor9724 Před 2 lety +7

    See stress u are all going through to describe a music genre... Afrobeat and afrobeats... We do not own the world music chats and the world doesn't owe us a music chat... The Europeans lump everything from the Caribbean as reggae, everything from Africa as afrobeat... It's for ease of grading... Only an African chat can distinguish between all our different African Genres... You all need to stop spending energy trying to differentiate music tastes....
    Afrobeats is an opportunity for Africans to own their craft, but you all try so hard to show a disunited front... Sarkodie would remind everyone that he is a hip hop artist... Hip hop is owned by the Americans... U would always be an outsider as long as you aren't an American... In the end, your problem is Nigeria... You just wait till we get our country working... Una all go get heart attack

  • @ubedet
    @ubedet Před 2 lety +6

    Alright listening to this conversation have brought something to my mind and something to my attention wish I do believe that each and every one of us need to be pay attention to. The issue is with the African music in general of music is that we have not validate ourselves. And this will give you all this validation do not understand then they do not know what we are all about is it okay for example colonisation when the white man came to Africa they didn't know they were different tribe that we speak we spoke different languages for example what happened between in Nigeria and Cameroon sudden people from the Nigeria were now pushing to Cameroon and that's it create a chaos in that country up till today Nigeria wasn't supposed to be a country they were different diverse kinds of human being we spoke different kinds of languages but they were now group into a nation and that create an issue So it's high time we Africans tell our own stories. Marcosa was there all the other genres of music were there before this but this people didn't do much with it Now Nigerian came up with afrobeat and they are doing something with it and now they're getting the validation that they want to get based on their hard work they put into their music so the other people now playing the other genres of music from other parts of Africa need to also put in the equal work to get the validation and recognition on the world standard So for us to have this conversation is best list somehow Nigerians put in the work so the other people doing their stuff need to put in the work for the recognition on the world stage. If is makosa get the same recognition as afrobeat I don't believe they will be put in all those chats and all that everybody want to make money why people won't don't want to do stuff that they know they can't benefit from me they only do stuff with with people already with individuals of the African descent when they know that they can benefit something from it simple as that So let's stop this bias conversation all the time. Is the same conversation that the dancehall artist from Jamaica are having now they put in the work and after a while the day became laid back and now afrobeat can pick and take over the whole place and you know Nigerians they're not going to be apologetic for anything.

  • @papap1186
    @papap1186 Před 2 lety +5

    You ladies known nothing about music, Flavour do Igbo Highlife not Afrobeats.
    Afrobeat or Afrobeats is a sound/genre but right now many Africa countries are copy Nigerian sound and style just to be recognized except South Africans.
    Did you guys ever heard someone is calling Amapiano Afrobeats? No... because South African artists has their own sound and they're not trying to sound like Nigerians or trying to copy Nigerian style.
    Most of the new generation Ghanaian musicians are not doing highlife music, they're doing Afrobeats music and sounding like Nigerians because they want their music to be known in Nigeria that's why people calling their music Afrobeats.
    Afrobeat and Afrobeats originated in Lagos.
    Flavour is from Eastern part of Nigeria and in the music history of Eastern part of Nigeria the Igbos, they do Highlife music and Hiplife is not a Ghanaian music. Highlife music a West African sound.
    Only few new generation Ghanaian musicians that do Highlife music eg. Bisa K'dei, Kofi Kinaata, and few others.
    Ghanaian Highlife is dead very long time ago after the time of Daddy KD, Ofori Amponsah, KK Fosu, Kofi B and Kofi Nti.
    The old generation Ghanaian highlife was a funeral music.
    So you guys need to be relax and join the Nigerian Train because is moving very fast.
    No Ghanaian artist can be recognized globally without Nigeria.
    Eg.
    Gyakie, Blacko, King Promise, Kevin Boy and that Sugar Cane guy. Even They're not recognized globally yet.

    • @blackonyx670
      @blackonyx670 Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you! Spot on! Ghanaian highlife was funeral music which is highly celebrated. I don’t get how they come up with these lies.

    • @gingerbreadmangangafarmer2251
      @gingerbreadmangangafarmer2251 Před 2 lety

      Ghanaian highlife was not a funeral music.It’s just sounds bluesy because it uses the Dominant scale and Dominant chords

    • @emmybizzz-hb9ud
      @emmybizzz-hb9ud Před 11 měsíci +1

      Spot ôñ bro..
      Thé highlife music ís à West African genre..

  • @ugoawa3171
    @ugoawa3171 Před 2 lety +5

    This was why I didn't like the Kelvyn boy - down flat song added to the pioneering Afrobeats top 50 billboards countdown list. Who ever did that has started a future war and now Ghanaians are going to be laying claim to Afrobeats like they even understand the spirit behind it. And just because Bob Marley spent a good part of his life in the USA doesn't mean reggae music is an American creation. There is still ample time to develop your highlife music, leave our Afrobeats the fck alone

  • @ejikeokei1860
    @ejikeokei1860 Před 2 lety +1

    The guy with the rough bears says Fela came to ghana to steal their style.🤣🤣🤣🤣 ghanaians are so funny.

  • @Ephraimtech531
    @Ephraimtech531 Před 2 lety +5

    Ghanian pls go create your own beat abeg you can not grow beyond your level because of hatred

  • @shawbrandon3367
    @shawbrandon3367 Před 2 lety +5

    Ghana Ghana na wa Ooh

  • @CodingExpress
    @CodingExpress Před 2 lety +1

    Pls guys don't be confused. Nigerians refer to their style of music as Afrobeats. We do it in several methods: Afro-pop, afro-highlife, afro-dancehall, afro-raggae, agro-gospel etc. Hope you get it now!

  • @gr8ofnetwork289
    @gr8ofnetwork289 Před 2 lety

    Kudos to the big man there for establishing the facts. Even the girl on pink did noble. The lady tried too. Generally it is very educative

  • @julianhansen3717
    @julianhansen3717 Před 2 lety +3

    Shame on Africans, Others are building technology and business to make their country/continent a better a place, You’re here discussing about Afrobeat and Afrobeats

  • @joydenedo8465
    @joydenedo8465 Před rokem

    I support you

  • @ayo9703
    @ayo9703 Před 2 lety +4

    This is easy guys. Is highlife the number one selling music in Ghana? If it`s not, stop wasting your time, it won`t be marketable to the world. You can`t wish behavior onto people. They like what they like for reasons best known to them. Afrobeats gives everyone exposure including those who would otherwise be invisible (Black sheriff) Embrace it and think about the economics of it before it`s politics. Nigerian producers are heavily infusing Amapiano into Afrobeats because they are more concerned about it`s economics over it`s politics. The free market determines what will be popular.

  • @Ephraimtech531
    @Ephraimtech531 Před 8 měsíci

    Let me ask u now todsy 2023 where is ghana sound now

  • @aframaco9491
    @aframaco9491 Před 2 lety +8

    What a load of needless waffling, get on with it woman!!

  • @ehiskhaleradio
    @ehiskhaleradio Před 2 lety +2

    Kwame Dandzie has a big point 🔥

  • @shawbrandon3367
    @shawbrandon3367 Před 2 lety +3

    You people better respect that name Fela.. Una nor get work yeye set of people

  • @charleshart8641
    @charleshart8641 Před rokem +1

    I really don't know what you guys are up to . afro beats is a collection of black African tunes .it includes highlife , jazz , reggae , all other African tunes etc . this is good for Africa musical image. You played highlife for over 30 years and it never went beyond respective nations . an artist could say I play afro beats , but my style of Afro beats is highlife , juju , amanpiano ,etc. Nothing is wrong with that.

  • @hentasy
    @hentasy Před 2 lety +2

    Ghana and Africa hating on Nigeria; Nigerians re so ready for una. This one thing that is working for Nigeria and y'all are having headache. Na that headache go kill y'all

  • @womimbang7654
    @womimbang7654 Před 2 lety +4

    Keep decieving yourself .we Africans are the greatest problem of ourself...the sukus and highlife where are they now.for your information non of your Ghanian artist do highlife animore,its all afrobeat...stop this envy and confusion.

  • @o.t9358
    @o.t9358 Před 2 lety +7

    These guys have a point sha, even burna and ckay acknowledged that afrobeats is an umbrella term for different African sounds afrofusion, indigenous rap, emo afrobeat...

    • @Biobele
      @Biobele Před 2 lety

      Are there enough popular songs in those categories? Like how many Emo Afrobeats musicians are out there outside CKay ? And how many of them have top music ?

    • @o.t9358
      @o.t9358 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Biobele it depends on how you interprete what afrobeat is, African beats which would encompass a whole lot of other genres or afrobeat it self as a standalone genre

  • @randymuller8728
    @randymuller8728 Před 2 lety +1

    There only one person on stage rhat has a clue. My man with matching outfit.

  • @Biobele
    @Biobele Před 2 lety +2

    Half bread is better than none.
    Everything big starts little.

  • @tomite2001
    @tomite2001 Před 2 lety

    What was Stoneboy talking about?!! He was high asf 😅😅😅😅

  • @dejayeazy2770
    @dejayeazy2770 Před rokem

    If Nigerias producers jump on highlife beat day we make it unique

  • @justinphillipsjustin8155
    @justinphillipsjustin8155 Před 2 lety +8

    Una de mumu

  • @_animemultiverse
    @_animemultiverse Před 2 lety +1

    Afrobeats comes from Nigeria, but it was later consider has a genre for other African countries since it have become known to the world. If Ghanaian don't like it. Please create your own genre of music to the world.

  • @agyeimaxwell.
    @agyeimaxwell. Před 2 lety +1

    💯💕💥

  • @discoveryonthego2539
    @discoveryonthego2539 Před 2 lety +1

    The grouping of all african songs under afro beats on the long term wont do African music good , cos at the end we will have so much hardworking African musicians in different genres that may not be recognised and in turn awarded in the BETs of this world and grammy .....we will only have few Africans winning under afro beats category, instead of having many other categories of African music that other artistes could be nominated in ...so while we take advantage of it now for projection sake it will be great to set the records straight in the nearest future .

  • @yim8000
    @yim8000 Před 2 lety +1

    Funny moments. Black and African musics were lumped under world music and was extremely difficult to hear African sounds under it except for south Africans that outshine every blacks then. Despite that many African songs lost out to the world, due to perseverance and fervent work of blacks across the world, a new platform was created for them to shine and expose their music. What do we all get, fight and fighting, pull down syndrome. Mind you Africans, all the millions of genre in our continent will not get specific global chart dedicated to them. It is all left to us to do the categorization and let us all enjoy this moment of our history in harmony. Music is business. Sound works will heart as a tonic, it doesn't discriminate to great sound, the heart will vibe to it.

  • @papap1186
    @papap1186 Před 2 lety +11

    DJ Abrantie was promoting Azonto for the Ghanaian Entertainment Industry in the UK, and he has nothing to do with the Afrobeats.
    The Nigerian Media in the UK were the ones promoted the Afrobeats in the UK and brought Nigerian artists and comedians to the UK.
    You guys have no idea what you are talking about, Nigeria has the largest black population in the UK and dominated any black communities in the UK and also dominated in Education, Politics and Sports in terms of the Black British.
    Nigerians always represent Africa.
    And Ghanaians represent Ghana not Africa so how can you say that DJ Abrantie was the one started the Afrobeats moment for Africans diaspora?
    Ghanaians represent Ghana alone not Africa.
    Nigerian media in the UK started the Afrobeats moment promoted and pushing it with a huge amount of money till today.
    Don Jazzy
    D'banj
    Tiwa Savage
    Seyi Shay
    Naira Marley
    And few others was UK Based Nigerians and moved back to Nigeria to pushed the Afrobeats moment in Nigeria.
    Banky W.
    Davido
    Emma Nyra
    And few others American Based Nigerians too moved back to Nigeria to pushed the Afrobeats moment.
    Africa means Nigeria and Nigeria means Africa.
    Nigeria always represent the whole Africa continent.

  • @Exemption88
    @Exemption88 Před 2 lety +3

    Afrobeat is a music genre that involves the combination of West African musical styles (such as traditional Yoruba music and highlife) and American funk, jazz, and soul influences,[1] with a focus on chanted vocals, complex intersecting rhythms, and percussion.[2] The style was pioneered in the 1970s by Nigerian multi-instrumentalist and bandleader Fela Kuti, who is responsible for popularizing the style both within and outside Nigeria.

  • @princejonas6960
    @princejonas6960 Před 2 lety +5

    This guy's talking high life as if they have more high life than Nigeria, yes earlier in the day I grow up listening to Ghanaian high life. Later Congolese music take over we also have high life in every tribe in Nigeria. Today you guys have to respect our icon Baba Fela, and Nigeria artists in general because they are the one putting African in the map.

  • @piangotv3126
    @piangotv3126 Před 2 lety +5

    The lady in black trouser is uninformed

  • @newsfeed9687
    @newsfeed9687 Před 2 lety +2

    The lady in white she’s so pained and bitter

  • @MajorrBison
    @MajorrBison Před 2 lety

    No one is stopping Ghanaians from making afro beats, it's a genre for a reason, Ghanaians already do dance hall right? right?

  • @fistandpen2505
    @fistandpen2505 Před 2 lety +12

    FELA literally was in Ghana for a few months in 1967 (Ghanaians: Fela learned highlife from Ghana!!!!). Of course, the reality is Highlife had been in Nigeria since the 30s and Nigerians had actually transformed it ... " *In the 1930s the popularity of highlife stretched inland and eastward along the coast, garnering an especially large following in Nigeria. There highlife experienced an important transformation: asymmetrical drum rhythms derived from traditional drumming practices of the Yoruba people were combined with syncopated (displaced-accent) guitar melodies to accompany songs sung in either Yoruba or English* "

    • @realdayvoe3075
      @realdayvoe3075 Před 2 lety +12

      Say whatever makes you feel good about your country.

    • @hillcrestprofessionalservi3502
      @hillcrestprofessionalservi3502 Před 2 lety +12

      Truth is Fela came to Ghana because of the Pan Africanist movement by Kwame Nkrumah.. His mother was friends with Nkrumah

    • @fistandpen2505
      @fistandpen2505 Před 2 lety +2

      ​@@realdayvoe3075 That's your problem. Keep in mind the people in the video - THEY - are talking about a legend, art form and vibe from "my country". Not the other way around.

    • @user-wg6rl9tv8n
      @user-wg6rl9tv8n Před 2 lety

      Fela learnt from Ebo Taylor. Ghanaian high life music star feka studied under and he was part of ebo Taylor band.
      czcams.com/video/19SLUVaOfCs/video.html

    • @sanstv4970
      @sanstv4970 Před 2 lety

      Rubbish. Keep FELA out of your mouth oga.

  • @WazirinJosnEnvirons
    @WazirinJosnEnvirons Před 2 lety

    'World Music' is still available for those who wish to delienate their sound. 🤣

  • @Ephraimtech531
    @Ephraimtech531 Před 2 lety +2

    U are for more confusion as long as u are determined to bring nigerian down what u dont know is that God is at work in nigeria

  • @tangaz5819
    @tangaz5819 Před 2 lety +2

    People listen to the stuff they like.

  • @bennethamobi
    @bennethamobi Před rokem

    HOWEVER THE POINT RIGHT HERE IS THAT THE WORLD NEVER SEE NIGERIAN AFROBEAT COMING LIKEWISE IN AFRICA ASWELL?
    #🇳🇬🇳🇬🇳🇬4LIFE

  • @oludada1927
    @oludada1927 Před 2 lety +1

    Doesn’t it just make sense to classify all as afrobeats to the world while we African know that theirs difference between us ? Why you people trying to complicate things just because its not the Ghanaians topping on world level? Make una shift abeg

  • @princejonas6960
    @princejonas6960 Před 2 lety +3

    Someone should let this Ghanaian know that we Nigerians have high life in every part of our country. Envy is one of the reasons Africa does not move forward. You guys should go back to your high life and see if Ghanaians will even listen to your music.

  • @usmansuffy8278
    @usmansuffy8278 Před rokem

    LoL which is afrobet with the s again funny people with funny ideas 😅😂😂

  • @osakweog
    @osakweog Před 2 lety

    So it's now a DJ Abro.. something that manufactured Afrobeats??? 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @erickmodesto3751
    @erickmodesto3751 Před 7 měsíci

    Interesting talk! A kenyan here and I give Nigerians their flowers for their investment in Afrobeats and support their people have shown to the genre. The ripple effect was other african countries started to pay attention in the 2010s and now worldwide. All these youre discussing is more like politics. You see, way before nigerians started to dominate musically, Congolese(lingala, South africa(kwaito) and kenyan(genge-2000s)& Tanzanian Bongo music dominated their respective regions. But what failed to sustain these industries to african and world dominance? Try find an answer for this
    Nigerians seem to want it more, however I believe their media played a big part eg playing 90% local music hence a vibrant Music scene.

    • @erickmodesto3751
      @erickmodesto3751 Před 7 měsíci

      Ghanians, Kenyans and Tanzanians should find a way to make their sound stand out if they haven't already. The next obvious step is more music + more marketing. Nigeria and South Africa seem to have crack the code

    • @erickmodesto3751
      @erickmodesto3751 Před 7 měsíci

      To be honest, Sony, Werner and big music giants boost Top Nigerian artists because their industry is already Vibrant. That's wassup

  • @mrandre561
    @mrandre561 Před rokem

    I always like that Kadzie guy ...he is real..he just explain it all ....Nigeria own AFROBEAT while the name AFROBEATS which is not a GENRE is own by a Ghanaian..
    Simple Logic ..NIGERIA own AFROBEAT sounds while Ghana own the Name Afrobeats ..

  • @randymuller8728
    @randymuller8728 Před 2 lety +2

    Who cares, create good music, try to make the music for a global audience and all will be fine. Nobody is taking advantage, seems like Afrobeats is more of a marketing tool to promote all the music.

  • @sylviasworld9397
    @sylviasworld9397 Před 2 lety

    Just like pop music is a genre which is an umbrella term.

  • @bennethamobi
    @bennethamobi Před rokem

    POINT OF CORRECTION GUYS ON THE ISSUE OF STONEBOY AND SARKODIE ANSWERS ABOUT AFROBEAT MUSIC TAKING OVER GLOBALLY...SEEMS LIKE THEY'VE THIS INTERNAL DOUBLE STANDARD ATTITUDE TOWARDS NIGERIAN ARTIST...WHICH..THEY INTEND NOT TO SAY ON THE INTERVIEW WHILE IN FRANCE...SIMPLY...MEANS..THAT..THEY DON'T WANT TO BRING SOME DRAMA OF MISUNDERSTANDING BETWEEN THEM AND THE NIGERIAN ARTIST..REGARDLESS OF OUR INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES?