Tuesday 31 January 2017

Shatta Wale Angered, reveals what he will do to haters and people who talk about him anyhow

Shatta Wale warns his haters, Shatta Mitchy is a lesbian Ara B

According to Charles Nii Armah Mensah popularly known as Shatta Wale, he has paid school fees, rented houses, bought cars, travelled, paid for boys marriage ceremonies but all he got in return was/is hatred so he is not playing 'Mr Nice Guy' with the haters and people who talk about him anyhow. You talk about him and you will feel his 'rapture'.

The dancehall musician posted the below statement on Facebook  some minutes ago and it reads "i have paid school fees,rented houses,bought cars,travelled and even paid for marriage ceremony for boys who came into my life from 2013-2017 but all i got was hate..infact anyboy who dosent know BANDANA-SHATTA WALE and fucken talk about me anyhow and i catch you or you meet me a say shit..i swear you will feel the
#RAPTURE..i am a different being..DONT GO THERE..BE AT YOUR THERE.."

This is what many believe caused Shatta Wale to issue the above statement

According to his former friend and fellow dancehall artiste, Ara B (Facebook name Rashad Sfarijlani) who is enraged after allegedly been betrayed by him (Shatta Wale) and got provoked by his wife Shatta Michy took to Facebook to reveal that Shatta Michy is a lesbian in real life among other closed secrets. Check the screenshots below.
Shatta Wale wife Shatta Michy is a lesbian Ara B
Shatta Wale wife Shatta Michy is a lesbian Ara B
Shatta Wale and her wife Shatta Michy got Ara B arrested and locked him up in police cells today.
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Wednesday 11 January 2017

Read Blakk Rasta's interview on BBC Focus on Africa plus his views on Barack Obama and Donald Trump

Blakk Rasta interwied on BBC Focus on Africa, talks about Obama and Trump

Check out the full unedited text of Ghanaian reggae musician, Blakk Rasta's interview on BBC Focus on Africa a moment ago with Audrey Brown(interviewer) as he talked about Barack Obama as the first black man president in America, why he likes him, and Donald J. Trump plus why he doesn't like him and more.

Source: sasughana

These were the raggae artiste's first words on Barack Obama (outgoing American president) for the start.

"Well, I am so proud of him for the fact that a black man has bee been able to go in there and he got a second nod for a second term...for me I think that it is great achievement...I mean he has been able to show everybody---every tom dick and harry that yes I mean a black man is able to do what people thought originally that he couldn't do. So for me has done well..."

These were the reggae musician's views on Barack Obama, his government and his foreign policy achievements with regards to Africa. 

"Yes! There was a lot of hype because that was the first time a black man was coming in there. Some people thought  that God was coming to take over. Some peoole had a lot of expectations---beyond human expectations. No, not at all. I have never rated any human being beyond his human capabilities. So for me, he has done very well. I mean there was a lot of mess when he came...terrorism all over the place, bombs were flying, people were being cut into pieces.

"Well, yes. I mean bombs flew. I am talking in terms of comparing him to some other people. He was a more peaceful president.

"We had dinner together in 2009. It was a wonderful meeting. For me I couldn't just believe it that he decided to come to Ghana as his first stop on his African tour. And he gave us some very inspiring speeches here and there. It was marvellous, it was wonderful."

And these were Blakk Rasta's views on and reasons why he doesn't like the American president-elect, Donald Trump.

"For real. No, I don't, I don't, at all. Well I mean Donald Trump before he became president, I neher thought for once that he would ever we be president. Donald Trump has said a lot of terrible things against Muslims, He said a lot of things against black people and he has also said a lot of things against General immigration. They did! and a few days after he won the elections those things vanished from his website. He started going back on some of the things that he said I mean during the campaign period. For me, he is not a courageous leader. For me, he is not a leader at all."

Lastly, according to Blakk Rasta, he thinks Donald Trump is dumb.

"I think he is. I think he is. I mean I will always change my mind when people decide to turn a better leaf. I don't think that he stands for anything. Not at all. He is changing almost everything. Certainly, I am looking forward to that. And I will be the first person to sing a song for him."

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Monday 9 January 2017

On BBC Africa: Manifest Interviews Grandfather, Prof. J.H. Kwabena Nketia

Manifest interviews Professor JH Kwabena Nketia, Grandfather on BBC Africa
Below is the full unedited text of Ghanaian musician, Manifest interviewing his Grandfather and emeritus professor of music at the University of Ghana, Legon, Accra, Professor J.H. Kwabena Nketia, 95, on BBC Focus on Africa.

Source: sasughana
Manifest interviews Grandfather Prof. J.H. Kwabena Nketia BBC Focus on Africa
Introduction by the interviewer (rapper Manifest)
We are sitting in front of the old African Institute building. And I am here with my 95 year old grandfather, Professor J.H. Kwabena Nketia. As a young person who often wonders about days past and about how life as a Ghanaian was in the 60s 50s before colonial times. I am fortunate enough to have a prime resource to go to my grandfather who is 95 and still sharp as a tack.

Mr. Grandpa, I think my first biggest question was. What do you see as the biggest difference between Ghana back then and Ghana back now?

"Well, first the independence period as an exciting period because we were beginning  really to accept ourselves as Africans and so forth and so on---trying to be on our own when we became conscious of the fact that we were colonial. For me it was an interesting period because we had a few revolutionary people like the musician Amu who suddenly discovered his culture and wanted to wear African clothing and teach African kind of music and so forth." - Grandpa

For people who don't know I guess we can explain Ephraim Amu as a pioneer in the study of African music and Ghanaian music.

"Yes, he was a pioneer...he was a musician who wanted to follow his own culture and wanted to perform African music, teach African music and so forth. He was the first to become conscious of the fact that colonial era was making us despise our own culture.

"Certainly, many cultures borrow. There was a scientist who said that "all cultures borrow." What is important is how you use what you borrow." - Grandpa

Judging from what I here from you, there were conscious efforts made very early in the beginnings of Ghana by... yourself to find a careful balance between the things that we learn from the western world and being able to create new traditons and combining the two and it is a difficult thing to do nowadays in Ghana---We are very exposed but I think I have greater resolve to maybe seek more from tradition and to seek more from an authentic Ghanaian way of being.

"Anytime you move out of your culture to another culture and to other cultures you a're collecting all kinds of ideas that you are able to bring into your own composition. The foundation is in your culture. That is what supports you." - Grandpa

Okay Grandpa, one final question. Do you like my music?

"Yes, yes, yes. Well, I am learning something from your way of...you know the kind of emphasis you bring into your thing. "Creativity is not just a one shot thing you know. It is a continuous thing and life's experience will shape whatever you are doing in terms of a creative result emerging from it." - Grandpa

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