Kumasi Trio
50 top tracks
Kumasi Trio
50 top tracks
Albums

Living Is Hard: West African Music In Britain, 1927 - 1929
Kumasi Trio

Living Is Hard: West African Music In Britain, 1927-1929
Kumasi Trio

African Folk Music Of The 1920s
Kumasi Trio

Living Is Hard - West African Music In Britain 1927-1929
Kumasi Trio

Kumasi Trio 1928
Kumasi Trio

Living Is Hard (West African Music in Britain 1927-1929) LP
Kumasi Trio

1928
Kumasi Trio

If You Want to Make a Lover: Palm Wine, Akan Blues & Early Guitar Highlife, Pt. I
Kumasi Trio

Around The World In 80 Songs
Kumasi Trio

Living Is Hard
Kumasi Trio

Living Is Hard: West African Music in Britain 1927-1929
Kumasi Trio

Kwanzaa
Kumasi Trio
Biography
On July, 21, 1928, the West Africa magazine published a photograph with a caption that read, “The Kumasi Trio came to London to record 36 double-sided records, mostly in Fanti, for Tarquah.” The Tarquah Trading Company's position as a general retail in key Gold Coast cities was not matched by competitors. By 1928, it had become the main agents for Gramophone Company....Read more on Last.fm
Read more
On July, 21, 1928, the West Africa magazine published a photograph with a caption that read, “The Kumasi Trio came to London to record 36 double-sided records, mostly in Fanti, for Tarquah.” The Tarquah Trading Company's position as a general retail in key Gold Coast cities was not matched by competitors. By 1928, it had become the main agents for Gramophone Company.
Kumasi Trio was made up of three main performers: Kwame Asare (Guitar); H. E. Biney (Guitar); and Kwah Kanta (Drums). The legendary guitarist Kwame Asare, was compelled to record under the name Jacob Sam. Kwame Asare and his friends hailed from Saltpond, in the Central Region of present day Ghana, where the Fanti people live. It is no coincidence that the songs were sung in the Fanti language. The town of Kumasi is about 100 miles north of Saltpond, and is the central hub for the Asante people who speak Twi. The name "Kumasi Trio" could have been for a commercial purpose, and not a representation of their hometown.
In a paper titled, “Ghanaian Highlife,” John Collins wrote that after World War I, “dozens of guitarists came to prominence in Ghana; they included Kweku Bibi, Kwesi Manu, Kwese Peprah, and most of all, Kwame Asare, the first to record highlifes.”
The recordings heard here are the earliest-known by Kwame Asare and his group. They were recorded in June 1928 for Zonophone. The landmark and standard highlife song, “Yaa Amponsah” is featured here. According to John Collins, “some years ago, R. Sprigge offered a musical analysis of the melody of the very early highlife “Yaa Amponsah,” which he considers to be a product of West African gong rhythms, the West African two-fingered style of guitar playing, and hymn music, which is manifested especially in the suspended thirds and hymn harmonies and progressions.” <a href="https://www.last.fm/music/Kumasi+Trio">Read more on Last.fm</a>. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
