Daddy Lumba

Daddy Lumba is a multiple award-winning Ghanaian musician with a career spanning three decades.[1] Lumba was born Charles Kwadwo Fosu on the 29th of September 1964 in a village called Nsuta Amangoase in the Sekyere Central District, near Mampong in Ashanti Region.

Daddy Lumba
Born
Charles Kwadwo Fosu

(1964-09-29) 29 September 1964
NationalityGhana
Other namesDL, Lumba
CitizenshipGhanaian
EducationJuabeng Senior High School
OccupationMusician, Producer, Songwriter.
Known forMusic
Parent(s)
  • Ama Saah (mother)
AwardsGhana Music Awards
Websitedaddylumbagh.com

His father, Owoahene Kwadwo Fosu, a teacher, died when Daddy Lumba was only a child. His mother, Comfort Gyamfi, popularly known as Ama Saah, was also a teacher. She died in 2001 in Kumasi. Her death was a devastating blow to Lumba as she was literally everything to him. Many of Daddy Lumba's songs, including ‘Anidasoɔ Wɔhɔ Ma Obiara’, ‘Ohia Asɛm’, Ɛmmere Pa Bɛba’, ‘Agya Bi Wua Agya Bi Tease’ were dedicated to her.[2]

He is married with ten children.

Career

Daddy Lumba's music career started at the age of 16. He was the leader of Juaben Senior High School choir from 1983 to 1984 academic year where Christabel was the music teacher and he completed in 1985. In Juaben SHS, Lumba formed the Lumba Brothers group with his friends Yaw and Kwabena and girlfriend, Theresa Abebrese.

After school, with the help of his girlfriend Theresa, Lumba traveled to Germany to seek greener pastures.

In Germany, he met Ernest Nana Acheampong. Nana had already formed a group called talking dreams with a white man. The only thing Lumba knew at the time was gospel music, and he has credited Nana Acheampong for introducing him to highlife music.

They formed another group called Lumba Brothers, the same name as his first group when he was in Juaben SHS.

The pair planned releasing an album in 1986 but due to financial constrains, the album was released in 1989 with the help of Lumba's wife, Akosua Serwaa, who produced the album. The title of the album is Yɛɛyɛ Aka Akwantuo Mu.

Daddy Lumba, in all, has released 33 albums.[2] The albums include critically acclaimed ones like Aben Wɔha, Awosuɔ, Obi Ate Me So Buɔ, Sika Asɛm and Ebi Se Ɛyɛ Aduro.

He is currently gearing up for his 34th album, titled ‘Nnipa Fon Na Ɛka Nsɛm Fon’.[3]

He has been consistent with the release of multiple-hit albums since then and has established himself as one of Ghana's most popular singers of the Highlife genre.

He introduced a future love song master, Ofori Amponsah, through his blockbuster hit album Woho Kyere (1999). Daddy Lumba's pairing in 1999 with the rising star produced five hits and shot Ofori Amponsah into the limelight. Altogether he has sprung the careers of 13 different Ghanaian musicians.

In 1999, he won three awards including Best Album, Artist of the Year and the Most popular Song of the Year at the Ghana Music Awards. Before the year 2002, Daddy Lumba came out every year with a hit album.[4]

His solo career has not been devoid of controversy; one moment he would release a gospel album and the next he would shock people with his provocative lyrics and music videos. He has also faced accusations of skin bleaching.[5] He has however denied bleaching his skin.[6]

He owns his own studio where he does all his work and also owns machines for mastering, cassette duplication, loading, printing and shrink wrapping exclusively for his works. His music has evolved over the years to reflect the changes in taste and demands for music; he can currently be described as a contemporary highlife artist. Daddy Lumba has won several Ghana Music Awards and other excellence awards and continue to appeal to the young and old.

Selected discography

  • Sesee Wo Se (1997)
  • Woho kyere (1999)
  • Poison (2001)
  • Ahenfo Kyinye (2004)
  • Sika (2008)
  • Awoso (2014)
  • Ye Nea Woho Beto Wo (2014)
  • Enko den (2016)
  • Daasebre Dwamena (2017)

Awards

On August 18th 2018, he was acknowledged with an 'Icon/Legend of Entertainment' award at the Exclusive Men of the Year Africa Awards (EMY Award). [7]

  • 2000 Ghana Music Awards - Artist of the Year, Best Album of the Year, Most Popular Song of the Year
  • 2003 Ghana Music Awards - Contemporary Highlife Artist, Contemporary Highlife Song, Contemporary Highlife Album
gollark: You would say "turning the planet into paperclips" and it would say "it's bad" and such.
gollark: There was actually one AI research organisation recently which made a language model try to capture human common sense ethics.
gollark: You train a neural network on samples of good things, and it outputs new good things for you to do.
gollark: That, and also by many metrics things are generally improving.
gollark: That doesn't really work at scale or for resource allocation decisions.

See also

References

  1. "Daddy Lumba - New Songs, Playlists & Latest News - BBC Music". BBC. Retrieved 10 September 2019.
  2. "Daddy Lumba Full Biography: His Wife, Children, Albums, Songs". GhanaSlayers.Com. 27 July 2018. Retrieved 9 August 2018.
  3. Donkoh, Ebenezer. "Kumasi Readies For Daddy Lumba Live In Concert - NYDJ Live". www.nydjlive.com. Retrieved 9 August 2018.
  4. "Daddy Lumba Storms Berekum" Archived 6 April 2018 at the Wayback Machine, LeakxGH, 17 December 2009.
  5. Dokosi, Michael Eli. "Daddy Lumba: We Love You And Your Music, But This Bleaching Must Stop". Modern Ghana. Retrieved 9 August 2018.
  6. "Daddy Lumba not happy with Bukom Banku over bleaching comment". www.ghanaweb.com. Retrieved 9 August 2018.
  7. "2018 EMY Awards: Daddy Lumba adjudged Icon/Legend of Entertainment". www.ghanaweb.com. Retrieved 9 October 2019.
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