Contributed by Amina Addy
Two elder Ga drummers of repute have made their homes in America
for many years,
Yacub
Addy on the East Coast and
Obo
Addy on the West Coast. Both are members of the Addy family of
drummers, dancers and singers from the village of Avenor, Accra, Ghana. Yacub is
the second born and Obo is the fourth born from the same father and mother.
Their father, Okonfo Akoto, had 10 wives over the course of his life (1860-70's?
to 1960), so there were 10 mothers and over 50 children born over a very long
period of time. Mustapha Tettey Addy is their younger stepbrother from the last
marriage of their father. Adja Addy, now deceased, was their nephew.
Basically, their father, a renowned medicine person, got tired of the politics
of dealing with drummers, who were essential to his practice, so he had his
eldest sons trained as drummers. They taught the middle generation (Yacub and
Obo's generation) and the Addy's became a famous family in Ga drumming. The
best of these elder brothers were Mankatta
Addy (Adja's father, who played the leading obrenten drum) and Tettey Aku Addy
(who played the difficult supporting pretia drum). Both are long deceased. I
had the pleasure of witnessing Tettey Aku Addy playing obrenten in a family
gathering in 1990, a few years before his death, and his tone and technique, as
well as the subtlety and complexity of
his rhythm was superb.
Yacub and Obo's mother, Akua Hagan, was during her marriage to their father, his
lead singer, and each of her four musical sons inherited her ability, although
different voices. Tettey Addy (ak.k.a. E.T.), the eldest, passed in 2000,
having been a member of Yacub's group Odadaa! for 15 years. The youngest, Okoe
Thompson, from their mother's second marriage, was a member of Odadaa! for 8
years and now works from time to time with both Yacub and Obo's groups. He's a
gifted and creative artist.
Today Yacub is the oldest practicing traditional drummer in the family at 73.
He was the first, both in the family and in Ghana, to stage traditional drumming
and dance. Yacub is known for his traditional integrity as an artist, organizer
and as a person, for the excellence of his performance ensembles, and for the
clarity of his hand technique.
Obo started out as a pop artist with very fast hands and his
mother's voice, and later returned to learn more about the traditional culture
of other tribes at the Arts Council of Ghana. Obo's creative music is based in
the best of his jazz/pop experience and his traditional experience. It is quite
uniquely different than typical Ghanaian highlife, to me far superior because of
the inclusion of more tradition than usual, the sophistication of the
arrangements and the standard of Addy artistry of his generation.
Yacub concentrated on and sacrificed much to maintain and create tradition,
again with the high artistic standard of Addy artistry of his generation. At the
time highlife began, there was prejudice against traditional music. Yacub spent
much of his life fighting this mentality, so it is natural that his creative
music is more directly traditionally based. His work has been aptly termed
"classic." His performance ensembles have maintained a standard for traditional
artistry. Over the last 22 years of its life in America, Odadaa! has included in
its personnel some of the greats among Ga drummers and dancers of this period.
Yacub also has a lifelong love of jazz and is currently working on projects
combining traditional music with jazz, as
usual trying to keep traditionalism strong in the process.
World Music Central
http://www.worldmusiccentral.org/article.php/20041223172826502