Ga Mashie, Accra’s historic coastal core, gave rise to music deeply linked to fishing rituals, migrations, and community life. Gome rhythms, brought by fishermen from Fernando Po around the 18th century, rely on frame drums, rattles, and interlocking beats to celebrate harvests from the sea. These sounds gained prominence during Homowo, the Ga harvest festival, where ensembles like obonu drums and bintiŋ flutes process through streets, embedding proverbs—concise wisdoms like “He who fetches water breaks the pot”—into call-and-response chants.
By the mid-20th century, these traditions influenced highlife pioneers like E.T. Mensah from Ga neighborhoods, blending horn sections with polyrhythmic foundations cheaper and more communal than imported styles. Kpanlogo emerged in 1960s Bukom Square youth circles as a high-energy twist, its bell-driven grooves becoming a staple for street parties and fueling Accra’s party culture.