In the early 1980s, a particular alchemy between new musical
technologies and significant social, cultural, and political
transformations in Ghana gave rise to a new style of highlife. Drum
machines and synthesisers appeared alongside lilting guitar lines and
punchy horns, and the emerging Ghanaian diaspora began incorporating US
disco and boogie, R&B, European new wave, and Caribbean zouk and
soca into their music.
This style soundtracked the birth of a new, proud Ghanaian identity and
captured the idiosyncrasies of a rapidly changing postcolonial society,
marked by increased migration and wider access to global sounds and
modern technology.
More than 20 years after the release of the heavy funk and
Afrobeat-focused Ghana Soundz compilations, and following the success of
2009’s Ghana Special: Modern Highlife, Afro Sounds & Ghanaian Blues
1968-1981, Soundway is now shining the spotlight on the multifaceted,
diasporic sounds of the ‘80s on new compilation Ghana Special - Volume
2, a collection of 18 burger highlife, electronic afrobeat, and reggae
tracks.
Though Ghanaian to its very core, burger highlife emerged mostly outside of Ghana and just as the sun was setting on
the country’s musical golden age. In the 1960s and 1970s cities such as
Accra, Tema, Takoradi, and Cape Coast were home to thriving music
scenes, and the loud horn sections of the big highlife bands, or the
simpler, socially conscious palm wine music ruled the dance halls,
locals drinkeries, and airwaves.
Back then music represented a powerful force, and an artist’s
endorsement or dissent could make or break a politician. Perhaps to curb
this power, the incoming military regime-imposed curfews and
substantial import taxes on musical instruments in the early 1980s.
These measures, coupled with a profound economic downturn and shifting
musical preferences that saw DJs replacing large live bands, served as
the final blow to Ghana's once-thriving music scene.
Musicians left Ghana in droves, scattering across West Africa, Europe,
and North America. Thanks in part to its more permissive migration
policies Germany became the heart of this scene, and the movement in
fact takes its name from “Bürger”, the German for “citizen”. Less
confined by genres than back in Ghana, artists in the diaspora were
quick to engage with the different styles, working disco, boogie, and
funk into their highlife melodies. Access to state-of-the-art studios
and modern musical technologies also gave birth to all sorts of
mutations: burger highlife in fact is less defined by one particular
sound, than by the experimental approach and global outlook of its
artists.
Tracks such as Ernest Honny’s experimental cut “New Dance” are an
example of just how far artists strayed from original highlife
arrangements. Honny, who started his career as a keyboard player with Dr
K Gyasi’s band The Noble Kings, had moved to Benin in the 1980s, where
he experimented with synthesisers and drum machines at one of Cotonou’s
top studios. Similarly, Nan Mayen’s “Mumude” is a slick, 80’s pop track
which was recorded in Germany, with only a slight echo of highlife in
its opening Fanti lyrics.
This generation of artists found inspiration in sounds that transcended
geographical boundaries: singer and guitarist Nana Budjei, who was
originally from central Ghana but had moved to the UK in the 1980s, says
that his radiant, sun-drenched 1988 track “Asobrachie” is “influenced
by reggae maestros Bob Marley and Alpha Blondy, and traditional Akan
folklore music”; on “Jigi Jigi”, the Kumasi-born, Sweden transplant
Delips Apo draws on soca, latin, and zouk influences.
Throughout the 1980s Ghanaian artists kept producing increasingly
innovative and experimental hybrids, winning over new audiences abroad.
Though back in Ghana the new sound was initially met with disapproval by
purists, it slowly became a symbol of a new, worldly and modern
Ghanaian identity. The creativity and open mindedness that characterised
burger highlife have gone on to shape the evolution of Ghanaian music
since, giving artists the freedom to explore new global sounds while
preserving a proudly Ghanaian soul. Ghana Special - Volume 2 stands as a
vibrant tribute to the lasting legacy of this groundbreaking musical
era.
Tracklist:
1. The Godfathers - Ebe Ye Yie Ni
2. Pat Thomas - Gye Wani
3. Pepper - M.C. Mambo
4. Andy Vans - Adjoa Amisa
5. George Darko - Kaakyire Nua
6. Rex Gyamfi - Obiara Bewu
7. Starlite - Anoma Koro
8. Abdul Raheem - Alaiye
9. Jon K - Asafo
10. Kwasi Afari Minta - Barima Nsu
11. Marijata, Ata Kak - Otanhunu
12. Gyedu Blay Ambolley - Apple
13. Dadadi - Jigi Jigi
14. Charles Amoah - Fre Me (Call Me)
15. Ernest Honny - New Dance
16. Bessa Simons - Sii Nana
17. Nan Mayen - Mumude
18. Nana Budjei - Asobrachie