Rapper Trigmatic has lamented that most Ghanaian artistes are throwing away the native sounds and are enjoying doing so.

The artiste, born Enoch Nana Yaw Oduro-Agyei, explained that many of the artists are trying to use the Nigerian sounds or other foreign sounds, forgetting that some of them originated from Ghana.

He explained some artiste have picked Soka sound [from Trinidad], Fuji [from Nigeria] to produce their music. “How about blending the Soka with some Highlife beats? What does it take to incorporate some Ghana sounds into your song?” he quizzed.

“The truth is that out of ignorance a lot more people are joining in and that is not helping,” he told Andy Dosty on the Daybreak Hitz show on Hitz FM.

He said many people have asked him to do the kind of music others are doing just because his kind of music is different.

The songwriter said he has grown to understand and appreciate highlife. “It has become part of me and in my compositions, I try to incorporate the sound into my music.”

“Also, some people are doing what other people are doing but they are not thriving,” he added.

The host of YFM’s “MydMorning Show” stated some artistes creating unique Ghanaian sounds are thriving mainly because they are riding on the fame they created for themselves in the past years.

“When you look at the old Ampofo Agyei final and Uncle Ebo Tyler’s CDs, you’ll see Afrobeat and it was a fusion of the Highlife music, the Fuji music, and a little Western beat,” he said.

The “Sika Nti” artiste said Ghanaians are spoilt for choice when it comes to choosing a highlife beat when producing a song.

“We have a sound which is highlife and it is broken into many parts, there is the Dagomba highlife, there is the Yaa Amponsah, there is the Gome, there is so much and they can do a lot with it,” he stated.

The “My Life” rapper said Ghanaians do not practice music preservation; “our sound is dying and we’re picking everybody else’s sounds apart from ours.”

“I believe in staying true to the Ghanaian sounds,” he added.