• Home
  • About
  • New Music Calendar
  • 2025 Artists to Watch
  • Get Involved
  • Pitching Us
  • Contact
  • Bio Services
Atwood Magazine - For the Love of Music For the Love of Music
  • New Music Releases
  • Recent
  • Features
  • Interviews
  • Editor’s Picks
  • Reviews
    • Our Take
    • Debuts
    • Videos
    • Live
  • Columns
    • Premieres
    • Today’s Song
    • Weekly Roundup
    • Music You Should Know
    • Nostalgia Tracks
Columns, Music, Today's SongOctober 26, 2020<October 26, 2020

Today’s Song: Alostmen Reimagine Traditional Ghanian Music on Party Anthem “Kologo”

by Oliver Crook
Alostmen © 2020
Alostmen © 2020
Ghanaian band Alostmen’s new song “Kologo” is a masterful reinvention: This modern take on an ancient instrument creates a party atmosphere that celebrates the past while harkening to a bright musical future.
 follow our Today’s Song(s) playlist

Atwood Magazine Today's Songs logo

Stream: “Kologo” – Alostmen




Traditions are what grounds our communities. They remind us where we come from and what’s important. They can also be reinvented and used to explore our world in a whole new way. Alostmen’s new single, “Kologo” does exactly this.

Kologo - Alostmen
Kologo – Alostmen

Named after the traditional, two-stringed lute common amongst the nomadic herdsmen and healers of the Frafra people, the song is an ode to Ghana’s musical roots and a reimagination of what the ancient instrument can do. “The kologo is traditionally played a certain way but Stevo [Atambire] is unique. He will play it at the shortest end of bridge, he accentuates, almost playing it Hendrix style,” says producer and fellow star Wanlov the Kubolor. “He has evolved the kologo more than any other artist in Ghana, in my view.”

Opening with the entrancing kologo riff, “Kologo” repeats with an urgency that demands—and deserves—your full attention. “Put on your dancing shoes,” he urges, but the beat is so infectious you’re already lacing them up. Gang vocals reverberate throughout the track, creating the sense of a community inherent in old traditions. 

The chorus captures the kologo’s enduring and continuous legacy. With its two strings vibrating in the background, Atambire recites the entangled history of music and his nation. 

Kologo dey before the banjo
Kologo dey before the oud
Kologo dey before the guitar
Kologo dey before the lute
Kologo dey before Ghana
Kologo dey before my youth
Kologo dey before my mother
Kologo music be the root
Alostmen © 2020
Alostmen © 2020



This modern take on an ancient instrument creates a party atmosphere that celebrates the past and harkens to a bright musical future.

The second verse sees Wanlov the Kubolor’s hip-hop musings about Ghana’s musical past, while footage of Atambire in traditional dress dancing around his village cements the powerful influence of their homeland in the music. “I’m a yout’man and into different kinds of music: commercial, rap music, reggae music, Malian sounds. If you see me play, you might not sense that but my instrument is where I come from and I add to my music in different ways,” says Atambire.

A four-piece band, Alostmen is led by Stevo Atambire alongside “Jo Ajusiwine, a brilliant goje (two-string fiddle) player and singer, talking drummer Aminu who has played in Ambolley’s highlife band, and Sowah who plays heavy Ga rhythms on the gome box, djembe and conga” (per Atambire).

Ghanian music has always been vibrant and intrinsically connected to culture. Alostmen’s “Kologo” celebrates this history, while modernizing it and presenting it to a new audience. 

— —

Stream: “Kologo” – Alostmen




— — — —

Kologo - Alostmen

Connect to Alostmen on Facebook
Discover new music on Atwood Magazine
? © 2020

:: Today’s Song(s) ::

 follow our daily playlist on Spotify



:: Stream Alostmen ::


Oliver Crook
Written By
Oliver Crook
More from Oliver Crook
Review: Pilkington’s Long-Awaited Debut Captures the Beauty & Pain of Growing Up
Pilkington’s self-titled debut album is a summer’s afternoon dipped in a barrel...
Read More

You may also like

mary in the junkyard © Herbie Bone
April 7, 2025
mary in the junkyard’s Hauntingly Raw “bear walk” Reckons with Love, Loss, & Longing
Eternal Atake - Lil Uzi Vert
April 14, 2020
Our Take: Fans of Hip-Hop & Sci-Fi Will Enjoy the Expansive Thrills of Lil Uzi Vert’s Two-Part Release, ‘Eternal Atake’
A Good Night in the Ghetto - Kamaiyah
April 6, 2017
Music You Should Know: Reflecting on the Importance of Youth in Kamaiyah’s ‘A Good Night in the Ghetto’
NGAIIRE © Dan Segal
October 5, 2021
“Never Ending Story”: Inside NGAIIRE’s Intimate, Wondrous & Soulful Album, ‘3’
Night Flight © 2020
April 27, 2020
Feature: London’s Night Flight Soar with Majestic Energy in ‘White Noise’ EP
Atwood Magazine's Weekly Roundup 04-06-2018
April 6, 2018
Atwood Magazine’s Weekly Roundup: April 06, 2018
Previous articleAtwood Magazine’s Weekly Roundup: October 23, 2020
Next articleInterview: Takuya Kuroda is Conquering the World’s Biggest Cities by Way of the Trumpet

Brand New

  • “All That I Wanted Was You”: Adrian Lyles Sets Love’s Wreckage Ablaze in an Achingly Intimate Reckoning with Heartbreak & Helplessness
  • “Mixed Sentiments Surrounding June as Designated Month of Celebration”: An Essay by Terri Lyne Carrington
  • Editor’s Picks 158: Games We Play, Weird Nightmare, Nora Kelly Band, Erotic Secrets of Pompeii, Tooth, & Riley!
  • Break On Through: Examining the Content, Comportment, and Quantum Entanglement of The Doors
  • Vansire Invite You to Take Solace: A Conversation on Love, Creativity, & Connection
  • Fresh Northern Rockers Florentenes Are Impassioned and Authentic on “Undiscovered Colours”
  • ‘WASTED POTENTIAL’: Skylar Grey on Her Nostalgic “Bubble Grunge” Album and Living the “Most Realized Version” of Her Life

:: discover something new ::

More Stories
Kenneth Whalum © A Brilliant Dummy
Features, Music, Reviews, Track-by-Track
“Heavy, Meaningful, & Haunting”: Kenneth Whalum’s Smoldering, Stirring Sophomore LP ‘Broken Land 2’

Recent Posts

  • “All That I Wanted Was You”: Adrian Lyles Sets Love’s Wreckage Ablaze in an Achingly Intimate Reckoning with Heartbreak & Helplessness June 19, 2026
  • “Mixed Sentiments Surrounding June as Designated Month of Celebration”: An Essay by Terri Lyne Carrington June 19, 2026
  • Editor’s Picks 158: Games We Play, Weird Nightmare, Nora Kelly Band, Erotic Secrets of Pompeii, Tooth, & Riley! June 18, 2026
  • Break On Through: Examining the Content, Comportment, and Quantum Entanglement of The Doors June 18, 2026
  • Vansire Invite You to Take Solace: A Conversation on Love, Creativity, & Connection June 18, 2026
  • Fresh Northern Rockers Florentenes Are Impassioned and Authentic on “Undiscovered Colours” June 18, 2026
  • ‘WASTED POTENTIAL’: Skylar Grey on Her Nostalgic “Bubble Grunge” Album and Living the “Most Realized Version” of Her Life June 17, 2026
  • “A Coming-of-Age Anthem in Corporate Drag”: Nymphlord Blooms Through the Messy Magic of Becoming on “Garden” & Debut Album ‘Shedding Velvet’ June 17, 2026
  • “This Is an Ode to Eternity”: Fruit Bats Find Holy Visions in the Wreckage on ‘The Landfill’ June 16, 2026
  • Roundtable Discussion: A Review of Robyn’s ‘Sexistential’ June 16, 2026
ABOUT US
PITCHING US
Privacy policy
GET INVOLVED!

Disclaimer: Atwood Magazine is a publication dedicated to celebrating fresh voices in music, culture, and the arts. The views and opinions expressed in our articles, reviews, and interviews are those of the individual writers and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Atwood Magazine as a whole.

© Atwood Magazine 2024 For the Love of Music
Back to top
  • New Music Releases
  • Recent
  • Features
  • Interviews
  • Editor’s Picks
  • Reviews
    • Our Take
    • Debuts
    • Videos
    • Live
  • Columns
    • Premieres
    • Today’s Song
    • Weekly Roundup
    • Music You Should Know
    • Nostalgia Tracks
  • Home
  • About
  • New Music Calendar
  • 2025 Artists to Watch
  • Get Involved
  • Pitching Us
  • Contact
  • Bio Services