Veteran Ghanaian rapper Okyeame Kwame has recounted a difficult stretch of his life, describing how a downturn in his music career pushed him into a struggle for survival abroad, far from the fame he once enjoyed at home.
In an interview on Okay FM with Nana Romeo, he traced the turning point back to the fallout from his third album, which failed to connect with listeners as expected. At the same time, the rise of Lord Kenya began to shift audience attention away from him, leaving his confidence shaken.
He recalled standing backstage at an event, preparing to perform, only to hear the host poll the audience on who they wanted next. The response was overwhelmingly in favour of Lord Kenya, a moment that deflated him and forced him to confront the changing tide. That experience made his decision to leave for the United States feel like the only viable option when the opportunity came.
Life in America was a stark contrast. He took on night shifts at a hospital and lived in a basement with his longtime associate Okyeame Quophi. Daily routines were dictated by survival rather than creativity, and even getting to work became a source of tension.
He explained that he relied on a relative for rides to his job, but one evening he overheard a conversation that changed his approach. The woman who usually drove him had returned home exhausted, and her husband questioned why he could not take the bus instead. Hearing that, he chose to stop asking for help and make his own way.
What followed was one of the bleakest moments he has ever experienced. After waiting in the cold for more than twenty minutes without seeing a bus, he set off on foot through the snow. Along the way, the emotional weight of his situation overwhelmed him. He later realised that the tears running down his face had frozen in the bitter conditions, a detail that underscored just how low he had fallen.
At that point, he turned inward and questioned why he was going through such hardship. In that moment of reflection, he felt a clear conviction that he was neglecting his true calling. The thought struck him that he already possessed a gift and recognition in music, yet had abandoned it to struggle in a foreign land.
That realisation marked a shift. He decided to return to Ghana, where he gradually rebuilt his career and re-established himself as one of the country’s most respected artists.
Reflecting, he described the experience as a lesson rather than a defeat. He stressed that everyone carries a unique ability, whether in music, communication, acting, or writing, and warned against ignoring it.
Watch his statement below.
Source:
www.zionfelix.net


