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Female Highlife Performers in Ghana
Expression, Resistance, and Advocacy
Female Highlife Performers in Ghana
Expression, Resistance, and Advocacy
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Description
This book offers a detailed analysis of the history of female musicians in the Highlife music tradition of the Republic of Ghana, particularly the challenges and constraints these women faced and overcame. Highlife – a form of West African music infusing Ghana’s traditional Akan dance rhythms and melodies with European instruments and harmonies – grew in popularity throughout the 20th century and hit its peak in the 1970s and 1980s. Although women played significant roles in the evolution and survival of the genre, few of their contributions have been thoroughly explored or documented. Despite being disregarded and ignored in many spheres, female Highlife musicians thrived and became trailblazers in the Ghanaian music industry, making particularly vibrant contributions to Highlife music in the 1970s. This book presents the voices of female Highlife artists and documents the ideological transformations expressed through their musical works, exploring the challenges they confronted throughout their musical careers and their contributions to music and culture in Ghana.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Inception of My Ideology, Formations: Research Method & Preamble
Chapter 1: Evolution and Transformation of Highlife Musical Tradition of Ghana
Chapter 2: “Her-Storical” Legacy: Female Highlife Musicians in Ghana
Chapter 3: Resistance and Survival: The Trailblazing Stories
Chapter 4: Female Musical Compositions: She Advocates & I Analyze!
Chapter 5: The New Deal: New Era of Contemporary Ghanaian Music: From Globalization to Modernization
Chapter 6: Epilogue: Future Research & Theoretical Queries & Underpinnings
Appendix 1: Ghana Travel Map
Appendix 2: Ghanaian Currency
Appendix 3: Highlife Tree
Appendix 4: Interview with Professor Kwabena Nketia
Appendix 5: Interview Photos
Appendix 6: Song Lyrics
Glossary
Bibliography
Product details
Published | 27 Jul 2018 |
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Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 192 |
ISBN | 9781498564670 |
Imprint | Lexington Books |
Illustrations | 15 BW Illustrations |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Female Highlife Performers in Ghana is a significant contribution to the scholarly study of female agency, resistance, empowerment, and liberation. Focusing on brave and remarkable women who blazed the trail from the 1960s to the current crop of female artists in the challenging landscape of the male-dominated music industry, Nana Amoah-Ramey weaves a tapestry of biographical narratives, song texts, and ethnographic descriptions onto the fabric of Ghana’s socio-economic and political aspirations and nationhood. It is a must-read text that will animate discussions among students and scholars of African music as well as the general public.
Kwasi Ampene, University of Michigan, author of Female Song Tradition and the Akan of Ghana: The Creative Process in Nnwonkoro
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Dr. Amoah-Ramey’s multi-disciplinary research has unraveled the enormous contributions of female Ghanaian Highlife music performers. Not only does the book give the historical and cultural overview of women’s contribution to Ghanaian Highlife music performers, it also gives up-to-date insights of the new music genres they perform in Ghana today.
Habib Iddrisu, Assistant Professor of Ethnomusicology and Dance, University of Oregon