Adane Best: Through my music, I popularized the Ga language

Adane Best, a seasoned highlife musician who goes by Joseph Amoah, feels that he has held down the fort in producing excellent Ga music for the past three decades and deserves to be recognized for his effort.

Adane Best: Through my music, I popularized the Ga language

 The "Ayitey" hitmaker believes that when the music group Wolumei became dormant, he was crucial, and his songs are still relevant today.

Adane Best claims that it takes a gifted musician to have this much of an impact, and the Gas don't make jokes about him because of the part he has played.

"I can declare with pride that I popularized the Ga language through my music. The majority of my songs are in Ga, and everyone like it. There isn't a significant Ga event that I haven't been scheduled to perform at. In fact, the Gas treat me like gold, and I don't take that for granted," he recently said in an interview with the Graphic Showbiz.

Adane Best stated he grew up with his grandfather, who was residing in Adedenkpo near Palladium in Accra, despite the fact that his parents are not Gas and many believe he should be singing Twi songs. He claimed that because he had to learn Ga because he had lived with his grandfather for the majority of his life.

Even though Adane Best claims that the Gas value him highly, he feels that as a solo musician who has been doing this for 30 years and is still active, it is insufficient.

"I've been playing performances all around the world for the past few years, keeping me busy. Nigerians consistently outperform us because they value and respect their senior musicians.

The nation as a whole as well as their fellow musicians hold The 2 Face, The P- Squares in the highest regard. In Ghana, it's all about who has the most popular song right now, and if you don't have that song, no one will take you seriously. They are quick to overlook the contribution your songs have made in the past, he remarked.