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When the Grammys introduced the Best African Music Performance category, it felt like a breakthrough moment. African music, long influential but often sidelined was finally being acknowledged on the industry’s biggest stage. Afrobeats had gone global, Amapiano had reshaped dance floors, and African artists were no longer knocking at the door; they were already inside.
Yet almost immediately, celebration turned into a debate. Not simply because Afrobeats and Amapiano were competing in the same category, but because the category itself seemed to flatten an entire continent’s musical identity into a single lane.
To understand whether fans are misreading the award or whether the Grammys are struggling to stand by their own rules, the category must first be clearly defined, and then tested against Africa’s actual musical reality.
Best African Music Performance is, by design, a performance-based award. It is not intended to reward commercial success, viral impact, or regional dominance. Instead, the Grammys evaluate:
The quality of vocal or instrumental performance
Artistic execution and arrangement
Overall sonic excellence of a recorded track
Clear African musical influence or origin
In principle, this allows a wide range of African sounds to compete equally. A song rooted in Nigerian Afrobeats, South African Amapiano, Tanzanian Bongo Flava, Congolese Soukous, Ghanaian Highlife, South African Gqom, or even Afro-house or Fuji could all qualify, so long as the performance itself is deemed exceptional.
On paper, this breadth is inclusive. In practice, it exposes the category’s central tension.
African music is built on regional logic, not continental uniformity. Each genre carries its own rules for what “good performance” means.
Soukous thrives on guitar virtuosity, rhythmic continuity, and extended danceable grooves
Bongo Flava prioritizes lyrical clarity, storytelling, and emotional directness
Highlife balances melody, live instrumentation, and social commentary
Gqom values rawness, minimalism, and physical impact over polish
Amapiano centers groove, atmosphere, and communal movement
Afrobeats often highlights vocal charisma, hooks, and pop accessibility
Judging all of these by a single performance standard assumes that excellence is neutral and transferable. But in African music, excellence is contextual. What makes a Soukous record exceptional is not what makes a Gqom track powerful. This is where the category begins to contradict its own intent.
The Grammys’ approach to Latin music shows that the Academy understands this principle. Latin music is split into multiple categories because reggaeton, salsa, regional Mexican, and Latin pop are not judged by the same musical or cultural standards.
African music, despite being just as diverse, is compressed into one category. The issue is not simply representation, it is evaluation. Without genre-specific framing, judges are forced to compare music that was never meant to be compared on the same axis.
African genres are inseparable from language, dance, and environment. Lyrics in Bongo Flava, Afrobeats, or Fuji rely heavily on slang, metaphor, and local references. Soukous and Highlife performances often depend on live-instrument dynamics that don’t translate cleanly through Western production expectations.
If judges lack deep exposure to these contexts, performance risks being assessed through surface-level markers:
Clean mixing over rhythmic intent
Familiar structures over genre tradition
Western-aligned polish over cultural purpose
The Grammys may still be following their rules, but applying them through a framework that subtly reshapes what African excellence looks like.
Because of this gap, global visibility often fills in for understanding. Genres with strong international pipelines, particularly Afrobeats and Amapiano naturally dominate nominations, while equally influential genres like Soukous or Bongo Flava remain underrepresented.
This reinforces the idea that “African music” is whatever travels best, not what matters most within African communities.
Partially. Many fans expect the award to reflect cultural impact, scene leadership, and authenticity, while the Grammys define it as a technical performance award.
But the Academy also bears responsibility. By creating a category broad enough to include the entire continent without building the judging infrastructure to support that breadth, the Grammys invite the very confusion they now face.
The Best African Music Performance category is an important beginning. But until African music is approached with the same structural nuance granted to other global regions, recognition will continue to feel symbolic rather than accurate.
African music does not need to be simplified to be celebrated.
It needs to be listened to on its own terms—in all its regional, linguistic, and cultural complexity.
And that is the challenge the Grammys have yet to fully meet.
Written by: Adedoyin Adedara
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