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Afrolektra: The architect of Ghana’s new sound

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At 2 AM in a dimly lit Accra studio, the beat drops—and suddenly the room comes alive. Traditional Ghanaian percussion loops spiral into layers of electronic synths until it’s hard to tell where highlife ends and house music begins. This is Afrolektra’s playground: a sonic lab where ancestral rhythms are reimagined for the future.

Eyram Gbewonyo, known in music circles as Afrolektra, doesn’t just make beats—he builds worlds. In 2025, his fingerprints are everywhere. Three albums he worked on—Gyakie’s After Midnight, Black Sherif’s Iron Boy, and Omar Sterling’s VTH 2—all hit No. 1 on Apple Music Ghana. It’s the kind of dominance that raises questions: is it something in the water, or does Gbewonyo simply understand the frequency Ghana moves on?

His journey began in 2010, when a young Gbewonyo downloaded Fruity Loops and VirtualDJ out of curiosity. The software was clunky, the laptop barely functioned—but something clicked. Having grown up surrounded by sound—from marching bands to church choirs to Accra’s everyday symphony—music theory wasn’t something he studied; it was something he absorbed.

But production was different. It was architecture. It meant choosing which drum pattern carried the emotion, which synth line gave you chills, and when silence said more than noise.

By 2015, the hobby had turned into obsession. Gbewonyo began reaching out to industry professionals, testing his work against the market’s harsh realities. The bedroom producer stepped into real studios, collaborating with real artists on real projects. DJing came naturally too—not as an escape from production, but as an extension of it. For him, remixing wasn’t destruction; it was resurrection.

What makes an Afrolektra production distinct isn’t a trademark sound—it’s a guiding philosophy. He works in the space between preservation and innovation, treating African music not as relics but as living, evolving traditions. He rejects the idea that modernization must come at the cost of identity.

Listen to Black Sherif’s “Rebel Music”, and you’ll hear it: drums fit for both a village festival and a Berlin nightclub, melodies rooted in tradition yet boldly forward-looking. This is fusion that doesn’t shout. It simply is, confident and unbothered.

His DJ sets at Ghana’s biggest festivals—Afrofuture, Chale Wote, Accravaganza, Manifestivities—operate on the same principle. He’s not just spinning records; he’s orchestrating conversations between genres, continents, and generations. The dancefloor becomes a portal where past and future collapse into a single, rhythmic moment.

When you ask him about his work, Afrolektra often redirects credit to the artists. It’s not false modesty; it’s a belief that production is about excavation—amplifying what’s already there.

Take his collaboration with Gyakie, for example. He produced four songs on *After Midnight*, including “Rent Free,” “Unconditional,” and “I’m Not Taken” featuring Headie One.

“Gyakie is one of my favorite collaborators,” he says. “She’s not just a great writer—she’s a great producer too. She knows exactly what she wants to hear, and my job is to elevate those ideas.”

With Omar Sterling’s VTH 2, the learning curve was different. Producing six tracks, including “Boom Boom” (with Reggie Osei, O’Kenneth, and Jay Bahd) and “Sure Banker & Yawa” (featuring Sarkodie), Gbewonyo learned that production isn’t just about creativity—it’s also about listening.

“Omar isn’t just a rapper; he lives what he writes—from his past to his spirituality,” he says. “He’s a teacher, and I’ve learned so much from his journey, even beyond the music.”

Then there are collaborations like Camidoh’s “Brown Skin Girl” with Stonebwoy, R2Bees’ “Sure Banker & Yawa,” and Offei’s “I Like.” Each project brings a new challenge, requiring Afrolektra to step back, let go of ego, and become a vessel for someone else’s vision.

So, what drives a producer to perfect a craft that often goes uncredited? For Afrolektra, it’s about bridging gaps that never needed to exist. Why should African drums and electronic synths belong to different worlds? Why can’t a song move crowds in London clubs and Accra street festivals alike?

Whether performing at intimate venues like iMullar Sound System or larger shows like Zaama Disco and Outmosphere, Afrolektra’s mission remains the same: create spaces where musical traditions not only coexist—but conspire.

This isn’t fusion for fusion’s sake. It’s a rebellion against the false choice between tradition and modernity—a choice rooted in colonial hangovers. And he’s done choosing.

African music is having a global moment. Afrobeats dominate the charts, and international festivals are finally making space for West African rhythms. But Afrolektra isn’t following trends—he’s quietly setting them, from studios in Accra that most of the world still overlooks.

His rise is bigger than personal success. He symbolizes a generation of African producers raised with access to the entire history of sound, unafraid to blend roots with reach, tradition with experimentation. They know that the best music often happens in the margins—between genres, between cultures.

Three No. 1 albums in one year isn’t just a win. It’s a statement. Ghana’s music scene no longer needs outside approval. It’s building its own sound, infrastructure, and identity. And Afrolektra? He’s one of the architects.

In his hands, a traditional drum pattern becomes a prophecy. An electronic bassline becomes a call to ancestry. Every track becomes proof that the future of music isn’t being written in New York, London, or Los Angeles.

It’s being programmed in Accra. One beat at a time.


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