Azonto

Azonto

This article is about the music genre and dance. For the songs, see Azonto (Fuse ODG song) and Azonto (Wizkid song).



Azonto is a dance and music genre from Ghana. The dance is known to have originated from a traditional dance called Kpanlogo associated with the coastal towns in the country such as ChorkorJames Town, La, TeshieNungua and Tema, in the Greater Accra Region.[1]

As a music genre songs identified as those with Azonto beats are usually ones dedicated to the dance. However one can dance Azonto with other music genres.

The dance involves a set of hand movements that either mimic everyday activities or are meant to amuse an audience. It begun with one or two step movements but has been advanced to more complex and almost acrobatic movements. Just like most African dances, Azonto involves knee bending and hip movements. The dance has effectively evolved from a few basic moves to miming actions such as ironing of clothes, washing, driving, boxing, praying, swimming, and others.[2]

Contents

HistoryEdit

The term "Azonto" was originally a rude reference to wayward girls, it stems from the word "Abontoa", which means an ugly girl, but it has since lost its sting. The dance "azonto" is a communicative dance believed to originate from "Apam" which literally means to work. Apam was used to show the profession of an individual. The azonto dance has since grown further to relay coded messages. The dance later got into the minds of most Ghanaians. In the same year (2013), most Ghanaian music videos were full of Azonto dance and later spread to most African countries and other parts of the world.[3]


Popular music researcher Jesse Weaver Shipley claims that like hiplife, the popularity of Azonto is a direct result of its interactions in diaspora. "Azonto, in content and form, is the embodiment of circulation, though the meanings attributed to its mobility vary [clarification needed]. Azonto is identified with Ghanaian indigeneity by those abroad and with cosmopolitanism by those at home[dubious ]."[4]

International popularityEdit

Azonto was popularized on social media by the music videos that portrayed the dance form with fast-pace tempos, home-made dance instructional videos uploaded on YouTube with no commercial intent, and group choreographers done by mostly Ghanaians and other African nationals living in UK, Germany and U.S.[5]

Ghanaian footballer Asamoah Gyan and Togolese football star Emmanuel Adebayor and James Anaman have performed the dance as part of their goal celebrations,[6] and John Carew uploaded a video of himself and his son dancing to Fuse ODG's "Antenna".[7]

Following the worldwide interest in the Ghana's Azonto dance, and the name of Azonto itself being used for a varieties of entertaining activities, such as Azonto Petroleum,[8] the Azonto Ghana Commission was created organise the Ghana's most populous arts and entertainment (Azonto) and also use the Commission as a department to support groups or individuals using the Azonto dance and other form to promote Ghana, peace and unity among people from all walks of life.

TracksEdit

The Most Popular Azonto Tracks of 2012[9][10]
Track TitleArtisteAlbum Title
"You Go Kill Me"Sarkodie (featuring E.L)
"Dangerous"Sarkodie
"Zooze"Koo Maanu (featuring No-Tyme)
"Move To The Gyal Dem"Donae'o (featuring Sarkodie)
"Lapaz Toyota"Guru
"Aboodatoi"Gasmilla
"Chop Kenkey"Joey B
"Twame Lala"Stay Jay
"Obuu Mo"E.L
"Kaluu"E.L
"Yenko Nkoaa"Eduwodzi (featuring Stay J)
"Azonto"Fuse ODG (featuring Itz Tiffany)
"Kolom"Buk Bak
"Sokode"Keche
"Body Lotion"Keche
"Azonto Ghost"Bisa Kdei
"Aluguntugui"Keche
"Moko Ni"4x4
"Antenna"Fuse ODG
"Seke"Dr Slim (featuring Double)
"Ayi"Criss Waddle (featuring Bisa Kdei)
"Azonto"Wizkid

GalleryEdit

A Ghanaian performing the Azonto.

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

  1. ^ "Ghana's Azonto Dance hits global entertainment stage". myjoyonline.com. 1 August 2012. Retrieved 17 June 2013.
  2. ^ Stephen Atta Owusu (4 February 2012). "Azonto - The New Music and Dance Craze in Ghana". modernghana.com. Retrieved 19 June 2013.
  3. ^ "Could Ghana's new Azonto dance craze take over the world?" BBC News, 18 June 2012.
  4. ^ Shipley, J. W. (2013), "Transnational circulation and digital fatigue in Ghana's Azonto dance craze"American Ethnologist, onlinelibrary.wiley.com, pp. 40, 363, retrieved 6 February 2015
  5. ^ Monica Mark (3 September 2012). "Ghana's Azonto craze takes over dancefloors across the world"The Guardian. Retrieved 29 August 2013.
  6. ^ Asamoah Gyan vs Adebayor Azonto Dance (watch). YouTube, uploaded on 9 February 2012.
  7. ^ Dawes, Mike (21 March 2013). "Carew shows off some Dad dance moves to New Azonto track"Mail Online. Retrieved 30 August 2014.
  8. ^ http://www.azpetro.com/about-azonto/company-overwiew[permanent dead link]
  9. ^ "Top 10: Songs That Put Azonto on the Map"Ghana Magazine. Retrieved 27 January 2013.
  10. ^ "GC Music Chart: Top 10 Songs Of The Week". GhanaCelebrities.com. Retrieved 27 January 2013.

Azonto-related videosEdit


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