Arts and GH Heritage
The Unbroken Rhythm: Agbadza and the Story of the Ewe People
If you have ever stood on the shores of the Volta Region during the Hogbetsotso festival and felt the ground tremble beneath your feet, you have likely encountered Agbadza.
To the untrained eye, it is a vibrant, energetic dance. But to the Ewe people, every single stomp and flutter of the arm is a page from a history book written in sweat and rhythm.
Agbadza did not begin on a festival ground. It began on a battlefield.
Centuries ago, before the Ewe found home in present-day Ghana, they lived under the tyrannical rule of King Agokoli in the walled city of Notsie (in modern-day Togo).
Oral tradition tells us his reign was brutal. To escape, the people didn’t storm the gates—they outsmarted him. Legend holds that they poured water on the mud walls to weaken them. When the wall gave way, they crept out not forwards, but backwards.
The idea was to confuse the king’s sentries into thinking the footprints were leading into the city, not out of it.
In that chaos of survival, the war dance known as Atrikpui was born. It was not just exercise; it was boot camp.
Men moved to the bell and drum to build stamina and courage, singing of heroism and conquest. As the Ewe migrated south through hostile territories—guided, it is said, by a bird that flew overhead—they integrated those movements into their spirit.
It was only when the guns fell silent and the Ewe people settled peacefully in the 1920s, that Atrikpui took off its armor and became Agbadza, the recreational dance we see today.
More Than Movement
Watch an Agbadza dancer closely. You’ll notice their arms spread wide, flapping in fluid motions. That is not mere choreography—it is the bird that led their ancestors to freedom.
@3fm927 #agbadzadance ensemble by some #ghanasmostbeautiful queens at the #MGghanamonthLaunch #3fm927📻 #3FM927 #MGghanamonth ♬ original sound – #3FM927
The dance is often called the “chicken dance” by outsiders, but for the initiated, it is a skyward salute to a guide who saved a nation.
Agbadza is structured like a deep conversation. It opens with Banyinyi, a prayer to the gods and ancestors.
Then comes the energy of Vutsortsor (the main dance), before the master drummer signals the story songs, or Hatsatsa. Here, the lyrics are not frivolous; they are historical archives. They speak of battle, displacement, and survival.
Unlike many sacred traditions, Agbadza belongs to everyone. It is played at funerals to honor the dead, at weddings to bless the living, and at parties simply because the spirit moves.
The instruments—the Gankogui bell that keeps the timeline, the Sogo drum that “talks,” and the Axatse rattle that shakes like the leaves in the wind—work together to create a texture thicker than the tropical air.
Today, Agbadza remains the ultimate emblem of Ewe identity. It proves that even the heaviest history can be turned into a rhythm of joy. When an Ewe man dances Agbadza, he isn’t just stepping to music. He is walking backwards out of slavery, into freedom, one beat at a time.
Arts and GH Heritage
Ghana’s Art Boom at Risk Without State Investment, Experts Warn
Calls for stronger government investment in Ghana’s arts sector took centre stage in Accra last week, as leading artists and academics warned that the country’s cultural momentum could stall without urgent support for infrastructure and preservation.
The appeal came during a conference organized by Foundation for Contemporary Art Ghana in collaboration with TRAFO Centre for Contemporary Art. The gathering brought together artists, curators, students and cultural stakeholders to assess the state of Ghana’s art industry and its future direction.
Despite Ghana’s growing international profile in contemporary art, speakers argued that progress has largely been driven by individual effort rather than coordinated state backing.
Karikacha Seidou, Dean of the Faculty of Art at Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, described the current moment as a “golden age of art,” but cautioned that the absence of sustained public investment could undermine these gains.
He pointed to the limited number of museums and galleries, alongside the neglect of public art, as key challenges facing the sector. According to him, strengthening institutional support would not only preserve Ghana’s cultural heritage but also create opportunities for emerging artists and educate younger generations.
Seidou also placed Ghana’s artistic achievements within a broader historical context, noting that many of today’s successes build on cultural foundations laid during the era of Kwame Nkrumah. He cited the global recognition of Ibrahim Mahama, who topped the ArtReview Power 100 list in 2025, as evidence of the country’s growing influence on the international art stage.
Attention also turned to the fate of Ghana’s public monuments. Adwoa Amoah, co-director of the Foundation for Contemporary Art Ghana, highlighted how several historical monuments commissioned in the early post-independence period have either disappeared or fallen into obscurity following political transitions.
She said a recent exhibition by the foundation had reignited debate over whether such monuments should be restored or replaced with new forms of public art that reflect contemporary realities. For Amoah, public art remains central to shaping national identity and fostering civic dialogue.
Participants agreed that without deliberate policies and investment, Ghana risks losing parts of its cultural memory even as its contemporary art scene gains global acclaim.
The conference underscored a growing consensus: that safeguarding the nation’s artistic legacy requires not only creative energy but also sustained institutional commitment.
Arts and GH Heritage
Steps, Stories, and Swagger: The Rise of Azonto from Ghana to the World
The beat lands first—sharp, playful, impossible to ignore. Then the body answers.
A hand flicks like it’s texting, feet shuffle with sly precision, shoulders roll in rhythm that feels both spontaneous and deeply familiar.
This is azonto, a dance that leapt from the streets of Accra to the global stage, carrying with it the humor, resilience, and imagination of a generation.
From Everyday Gestures to Dancefloor Language
Before it became a global craze, azonto lived quietly in the neighborhoods of Accra. Its earliest roots can be traced to “Apaa,” a dance style popular among young people in the early 2000s, especially in coastal communities like Jamestown.
Apaa was expressive and theatrical, built on mimicking everyday activities—washing clothes, driving, boxing—turned into exaggerated, rhythmic gestures.
Azonto took that foundation and sharpened it. Dancers began to invent moves that told micro-stories: a fisherman casting his net, a student scribbling in class, a hustler counting money. It became a kind of street language—wordless, witty, and instantly understood.
The Sound That Carried It
As the dance evolved, so did its soundtrack. The rise of Ghana’s contemporary hiplife and Afrobeats scene gave azonto its pulse.
Artists like Sarkodie, EL, and Fuse ODG created tracks that matched the dance’s energy—playful yet precise, rooted yet modern.
Fuse ODG’s global hit Azonto became a turning point. Suddenly, what started in Accra’s streets was being danced in London clubs, New York parties, and YouTube tutorials watched across continents. Social media amplified it further, turning local creativity into a worldwide conversation.
Improvisation, Identity, and Humor
What makes azonto stand out isn’t just the rhythm—it’s the storytelling. Each dancer brings personality into the movement. There’s no single “correct” version. Instead, azonto thrives on improvisation.
In Ghana, the dance became a mirror of daily life. People used it to comment on politics, celebrate small wins, or simply make each other laugh.
A dancer might mimic a tailor at work or act out a scene from a busy market. The humor is subtle but sharp, often layered with social commentary.
It also reflects a broader cultural trait: adaptability. Ghanaian youth, especially in urban centers, have long used creativity as a way to navigate change. Azonto embodies that spirit—light on its feet, quick to evolve, always responsive to the moment.
From Local Vibe to Global Movement
By the early 2010s, azonto had crossed borders with ease. Dance crews uploaded routines online, international artists borrowed its moves, and the diaspora carried it into new cultural spaces. Yet even as it spread, it never lost its Ghanaian core.
Back home, azonto continues to shift and reinvent itself. New variations emerge, blending with other dance styles while keeping that signature storytelling edge. At parties, weddings, and street jams, it remains a crowd favorite—an invitation to participate rather than just watch.
What Azonto Means Today
Today, azonto is more than a dance; it’s a symbol of Ghanaian creativity on the global stage. It represents a moment when local expression traveled far without losing its identity. For many Ghanaians, it carries pride—the knowledge that something born from everyday life could resonate worldwide.
It also reminds people of joy. In a fast-moving world, azonto insists on play, on laughter, on connection. You don’t need perfect technique to join in—just a willingness to move and tell your own story.
And that might be its greatest legacy: wherever the beat drops, azonto makes space for everyone.
Arts and GH Heritage
When Sound Becomes Memory: A Night of Ancestral Music at Togo Jazz Festival
Some performances entertain. Others feel like they remember something for you.
At the 2026 edition of the Togo Jazz Festival, Esinam Dogbatse and Sibusile Xaba stepped onto the stage and dissolved the usual boundaries between artist and audience.
What unfolded wasn’t easily contained within genre—it felt closer to a ritual, one shaped by memory, migration, and the quiet persistence of ancestral sound.
For many in West Africa, music has never been just a performance. It is communication—between generations, between the physical and the unseen.
Esinam’s layered flutes and electronic textures carried a kind of weightless clarity, while Xaba’s guitar, grounded and insistent, echoed traditions that predate modern borders. Together, they created a conversation that felt both deeply personal and widely shared.
What stood out most was their use of repetition—not as a musical crutch, but as an invocation. Cyclical rhythms and chants built slowly, drawing listeners inward rather than pushing outward.

It mirrored something familiar in Ghanaian musical traditions, from the call-and-response of highlife to the spiritual intensity of traditional drumming circles.
The difference here was the medium: synthesizers hummed alongside organic percussion, proving that heritage doesn’t resist evolution—it adapts.
In a time when African music is often packaged for global consumption, this performance moved in the opposite direction.
It asked for patience. It asked for presence. And in doing so, it reminded its audience of something easy to forget: that sound, at its most powerful, doesn’t just travel across borders—it carries history with it.
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