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KING AYISOBA - Pure Confusion

Pioneering Ghanaian musician King Ayisoba returns September 4, 2026 with his forthcoming seventh album Pure Confusion, recorded and produced by On-U-Sound’s Adrian Sherwood.

Photo: Jonas Adukor

Ayisoba is one of Ghana’s most distinctive musical voices. The world’s foremost player of the kologo - a homemade two-string lute fashioned from a calabash and covered in goatskin - he delivers fiercely political and socially observant songs using three different voices, including the voice of his grandfather that possessed him as a child. Sherwood meanwhile is the pioneering British producer and founder of On-U Sound whose hugely influential career has connected dub, post-punk, industrial, hip hop and experimental music through collaborations with artists including Lee “Scratch” PerryMark StewartHorace AndySinéad O’ConnorNine Inch Nails and Depeche Mode.

Pure Confusion also includes the bonus track “No Tradition, No Africa” featuring Grammy-nominated Ghanaian artist Rocky Dawuni, produced by Panji Anoff.King Aiysoba - kologo, lead voices on all tracksAyuune Sule - percussion, backing vocals on all tracks except B4Tracks 1-8 recorded and produced by Adrian Sherwood, 9 by Panji Anoff

On Pure Confusion, Ayisoba documents the anxieties, contradictions and changing social realities of contemporary Ghana. “Land is a problem for everyone,” says Ayisoba of the opening track “Property”. “If you don’t build on your land they will take it away. Plenty corruption in Ghana, plenty confusion. They sell the land to two, three, four people and then everybody fights.”

Elsewhere Ayisoba explores illness, spirituality and social stigma on “Bemba”, warning against hiding sickness out of shame or fear of “bad juju”: “People hide their sickness and the sickness kills them.” “Tewigiloge” reflects on cultural difference and open-mindedness encountered through world travel: “We will tour the whole world and we will see many things we may not like or understand… your eyes will see, but don’t talk - you have to be open-minded.

”Spirituality runs deeply throughout the album. Ayisoba’s grandfather was a respected spiritual healer whose presence the musician says still guides him today. “The grandparents’ spirits are the ones you can contact,” he explains of the spiritual chant “Nkaase”. “This song talks about the forefathers.” The closing track “Leeda-Mampanga (It’s Not My Strength)” acts as a statement of humility and gratitude: “You have to be humble, even if you have talent. God gives you the power.”

Reviewed by: DJ The Owl (CΔB≡ZΔ D≡ L≡CHVZΔ)
Recommended tracks: 1, 3, 9
FCC restrictions: No
RIYL: Osayomore Joseph, Amadou & Mariam, Pat Thomas, Joe Gibbs

For information you can check:
maisumdiscos.com
ayisoba.bandcamp.com/album/pure-confusion

Thanks to dense pr for the submission