TikTok-propelled Afrobeats artists vie for Grammy

The award signifies Afrobeats' rising global popularity, boosted by platforms like TikTok, showcasing the continent's music to a broader audience.

New Year celebrations in New York City / Photo: Reuters
Reuters

New Year celebrations in New York City / Photo: Reuters

When the biggest names in music gather for the industry's top honours at the Grammy Awards, they will hand out a new trophy for best African music performance.

The prize, which will be handed out on Sunday, reflects the growing popularity of Afrobeats, and other music from the continent, which is gaining a global audience with help from social media platforms such as short-form video app TikTok.

Musicians in the running for the new Grammy on Sunday include Tyla, a 22-year-old South African singer. She hit the top 10 on Billboard's Hot 100 chart with the danceable "Water," an example of a genre known as amapiano, a jazz- and piano-infused sound."Water" was released in July 2023, after Tyla signed with Sony Music Entertainment's Epic Records.

By September, TikTok users were replicating Tyla's dance moves in the #WaterChallenge. To date, 1.5 million videos have been created using the song, and the #WaterChallenge hashtag has been viewed 1.8 billion times, according to TikTok.

"I think that TikTok has played the role of incubator, but also the distributor to the billion-plus global users and it's just really landed," said Ole Obermann, global head of music at TikTok.

Afrobeats originated in West Africa, primarily Ghana and Nigeria, though the term is often used as a catch-all for various music styles coming from Africa.

It features percussion rhythms mixed with various genres from rap to jazz, R&B and others.

Modern Afrobeats "has a feel-good groove to it," said Heran Mamo, R&B and hip-hop reporter at Billboard magazine, which created a US Afrobeats chart in 2022. "It's bound to reach a wider audience because it already contains a little bit of everything for everyone."Tyla's success illustrates the power of TikTok and YouTube to help artists find fan bases around the world, a role once reserved for music labels.

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Afrobeats on the rise

"The proliferation of streaming along with new social media platforms (e.g. TikTok) has accelerated artist discovery, and has provided new mediums for artists to grow their fan bases globally," Bank of America Securities analyst Jessica Reif Cohen said in a research note predicting media trends for 2024.

TikTok remains controversial in the United States because of its ownership by Chinese company ByteDance, which critics view as a security risk. The Biden administration has banned the app on U.S. government devices. TikTok officials say they have rigorous safeguards in place and they reject allegations of spying on user data.

The app also is in a dispute with Universal Music Group over how much it pays for the use of songs from Taylor Swift, Billie Eilish and others. Music from many Universal artists was unavailable on TikTok as of Friday.

For U.S. teenagers, TikTok ranks as the second-most common music discovery source behind YouTube, according to a recent MIDiA Research survey that showed 45% of 16- to 19-year-olds found new music through the platform.

Other Afrobeats artists who found audiences on TikTok include Nigerian rapper Rema. He collaborated with Selena Gomez for a remix of his song "Calm Down," which hit No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100 and won an award for best Afrobeats at MTV's Video Music Awards last September.

TikTok is helping to forge new connections between U.S. and African artists. Obermann said he played a short clip of a song called "Ojapiano" from Nigerian musician KCee for Ryan Tedder, a songwriter and lead singer for the band OneRepublic.

Tedder liked the sound so much that he immediately reached out to KCee, who jumped on a plane from Lagos to Los Angeles two days later so the pair could make a remix of the song.

Obermann hopes the soon-to-be-released remix will give new life to "Ojapiano," a combination of amapiano and a Nigerian flute called Oja, and keep fueling the Afrobeats craze. "This is going to be a big, growing genre," Obermann said.

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