Gnl zamba biography of abraham
•
Gravity Omutujju: I invented danceable hip hop in Uganda
Singer Gravity Omutujju has claimed that he invented the danceable hip hop that critics have for a long time argued has nothing to do with the genre. He said he does not qualify to be called a hip hop artiste.
Gravity told Urban Television he drifted from the standard sonic configuration that earlier hip hop artistes embraced and became the force behind a danceable local sub-genre through which he has inspired a number of artistes.
“I invented this danceable hip hop, not the oldskool the Navios and the Zambas (GNL) used to do. This one with a danceable beat. I invented it and to every artiste doing the same, I am the inspiration. That puts me ahead of them. I have filled up Lugogo (Cricket Oval) five times,” he said.
In 2023, rapper Recho Rey responded to critics that have for years taunted her and Fik Fameica to stop calling themselves rappers because their style of music carry nothing with hip hop in comm
•
Hip hop, which started as a music and a culture in New York in the 1970s, was a product of inner city life and has historically been the röst of the Black inner city ungdom. But it has deep Jamaican and African roots, which can be seen in the rawness of its beats and the rhythm of its lyrics.
Some of the first pioneers of hip hop were from the Caribbean and brought with them the same rhythms and style that were to give birth to reggae in Jamaica. Looking back into hip hop’s history, one inevitably bumps into Africa. Hip hop, like all African American music styles, borrows from African traditions. In the case of hip hop, this fryst vatten particularly true of its lyrics and their delivery.
Rapping in African music and culture fryst vatten a tradition that was carried to the new world in the 1400s. History has come full circle, and rap music and hip hop culture are now being re-created by African youth all over the continent, who have taken rap’s current day manifestations and added a new A
•
"I Made a Billion Shillings From My Spear Album"- GNL Zamba Takes Ugandans For a Fool on a Bumpy Ride
Hip hop star GNL Zamba, born Ernest Nsimbi has come out to brag about how he became a billionaire just lockdown from a music album that did not play on Radio or TV. He claims he sold it and made billions of shillings.
The singer says he pocketed 100,000 paid downloads on an independent platform he owns and controls, (not spotify, not YouTube or Apple) but gnlzamba courtesy of his Spear music Album.
Whereas several musicians in the creative arts industry are still decrying the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic to their pockets and daily earnings, the Kawempe kid is forever grateful of his own sweat and through his socials, the "Koyi Koyi' singer has shared his inspirational experience to the world.
"How I made a billion shillings during Lockdown on an album that didn’t play on radio & without a show !!!
100,000 Paid downloads. On an independent platfor