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music and dance ghanaian flag
Ghanaian dancer

Ghana can be described as a land of festivals, music, and traditional dances. There is hardly any community, clan, or tribe which lacks an occasion to celebrate annually. There are many traditional musical styles around the country. In the South, music is usually drum-based, and in the far North, fiddles and other string instruments are more common.
Listen to some traditional Ghanaian music.

The most popular, and well-known, music to come out of Ghana is 'highlife’, a mix of different homegrown styles which fuses traditional percussion rhythms with various European, American, and even Caribbean influences. Highlife developed in the 1920s and reached a peak of popularity between 1950 - 1970. You can still get classic highlife music from the 1950s, now available on CD. E T Mensah, is a name to look out for. Another all-time classic, first released in 1978, is Eric Agyeman’s Highlife Safari. The title track, Matatu Mirika, has a reputation for setting Ghanaian parties alight.

Printable version


Photos for Oxfam GB by Penny Tweedie