Music of Saturday, 26 May 2018

Source: kasapafmonline.com

Kaywa is confusing classic with a hit song – Hammer

Sound engineer Hammer Sound engineer Hammer

Conversation surrounding what makes a song a hit song seems unending as renowned producer, Edward Nana Poku Osei, known in showbiz as Hammer has added his voice.

He said simplicity helps a song go all out and there are no rules to get a hit song.

Reacting to Kaywa’s claim that longevity of a song makes it a hit, the Founder and CEO of The Last Two Music Group said, “Kaywa is confusing classic with a hit song.”

Speaking on Hitz FM, Tuesday, the Music producer said the popularity of the song makes it a hit song. He said a hit song is relative.

Hammer also noted that for an artiste to churn out hit songs isn’t dependent on having extensive knowledge.

“Classic is the song that survives the test of time and not a hit song… a hit song is a hit song. What makes up a hit song is basically simplicity. Simplicity helps a song go all out. You do not need to have very great idea to come out with a hit song, a hit song is relative. A song like ‘Gamgam style’ has no content but it was just about the dance. You don’t need have too much knowledge to come out with a hit song.

“But a classic is a classic so in Kaywa’s submission, what he meant was a classic not a hit song. In my submission the popularity of the song rather makes it a hit. Once majority of the people love it, it becomes a hit song.

“There are great songs which don’t make the news but gradually grows in your heart and over time becomes a good song but they don’t enjoy the attention hit songs get. They become hit songs eventually but ultimately they become classics. A hit song is song that burst out and get all the attention.

“You don’t go to the studio to make a hit song but you go to the studio to make it a great song. The people eventually determines which song is a hit song. One of the things that makes a song a hit is great promotion. Good vocals and a bad beat can hurt a song but a great beat and bad vocals can turn out to be a hit. That means over 70% constitute the beat so it’s the beat that get the attention before the lyrics.” He said on Hitz FM.

READ WHAT SARKODIE SAID ABOUT GETTING A HIT SONG

Rapper Sarkodie has hinted that recording a hit song is an easy thing to do but it is not a sure guarantee that a successful musician will retire from music industry and live a comfortable life.

According to him, there is more to maintaining a reigning artiste’s status than just recording hit songs. He explained such an artiste also needs to build a large following, record timeless songs and build a lovable brand that will win the hearts of the die-hard fans any day.

He made the comment while speaking at the launch of the fifth All Africa Music Awards (AFRIMA) at the Movenpick Hotel in Accra on Monday evening.

Speaking at the event, the rapper said, “As an artiste, my advice for the young ones is that they should focus on building the brand which is the hardest way but the easiest that allows you to relax and … it lets you make money anytime you want… We say we need hit songs which is very easy. People don’t know but hit songs are very easy. You can say something and it hits tomorrow but that doesn’t mean you have a stand in the industry. If hit song is about to save certain people then we have thousands of hits by one person but the person still doesn’t have stand. So it means the focus should be on building that deep love for your brand from the people. How you do it is individual strategies.”

Sarkodie also used the careers of celebrated musicians like Amakye Dede, Daddy Lumba and Kojo Antwi as examples of musicians who have stood the test of time because of their hard work to build the numbers and their brand in Africa.

“They had time to make the music grow on the people and fade into their hearts and focus on the people. Daddy Lumba had a conversation with me in the studio and said we the young ones have one dream which is going to international which is good. But before that what do we do? …We are waiting to be recognised out there to call it a success but we are still losing out on the numbers we have here, which is way more than the numbers of the so-called artistes out there that we want to be like,” he added.

He revealed that the last time he checked, Nigerian artistes like Davido and Wizkid had more following than American artiste Miguel.

However, Africans are made to think they need to be heard out before they could be called successful “because it is a mind game the rest of the world is doing. They are trying to control what we have term as the highest key.”

AFRIMA is a platform designed to promote the distinct rich African music worldwide, engaging millions of fans by propelling its music to glorious pinnacles beyond the borders of Africa. This year’s ceremony will be the fifth edition and it was launched in Ghana.