• Home
  • About
  • Upcoming Album Releases
  • 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
Debut, Music, Our Take, ReviewsMarch 29, 2021<March 2, 2025

Our Take: Alostmen Use Old Instruments to Create a New Sound on ‘Kologo’

by Oliver Crook
Alostmen live © Abass Ismail.
Alostmen live © Abass Ismail.

Oliver's Take

8 Music Quality
8 Production
10 Content Originality
10 Memorability
9 Sonic Diversity
8 Arranging
8.8
Ghanaian band Alostmen’s debut album ‘Kologo’ sees them honour cultural traditions in a 21st Century way.
Stream: ‘Kologo’ – Alostmen


As long as we’ve had civilization, we’ve had music. We discovered fire, the wheel, and rhythm. This is a universal connection across history and time, through our differences and the ages. It’s ingrained in us.

When looking ahead (or even around) is too much, it makes sense many of us find comfort looking backward—returning to the musical trends and instruments of our past to play. We see this in the folk revival of the mid 2000s, which ultimately resulted in us making our own cigar box guitars. This recapturing of a bygone era and returning to simpler times may be an appropriative and reductionist approach to musical history, but it’s grown out of our longing to feel connected to our long reaching musical roots.

Ghana’s Alostmen have had the same journey, with infinitely better results.

Alostmen © Abass Ismail
Alostmen © Abass Ismail

Their debut album, Kologo, sees them honour cultural traditions in a 21st Century way: Ancient instruments—such as the titular kologo, a traditional stringed lute of the semi-nomadic Frafra people—merge with hip-hop. Group chanting and rhythmic bongos round out the sound as it pours through your laptop speakers. It’s an homage and a party rolled into one.

Kologo is so much more than historical references though—it isn’t just folk songs being rehashed for the internet age. Alostmen—started by  Stevo and Wanlov the Kubolor—are hell bent on reinventing the instrument. “The kologo is traditionally played a certain way but Stevo will play it at the shortest end of the bridge and accentuate, almost Hendrix-style,” says Wanlov the Kubolor. “He plays with a pedal sometimes and can keep it an octave down with a bass sound. He has evolved the instrument in his own way.”

This is one of the few western influences on the record, however. The modern flairs are more likely to come from Malian rock or reggae rather than anything that’s found on the Top 40. Hints of Oumou Sangare come in the tender moments, while the hypnotic nature of Kologo‘s riffs is reminiscent of Mdou Moctar. Even the moments of hip-hop feel like an African take on an American idea, with the backing instruments being a goje (two-string fiddle), flutes and a percussive assortment of gome box, djembe and conga. Where Songhoy Blues took Malian rock and westernized it, Alostmen have leaned into their Ghanian heritage, forgoing Western instruments—and in particular electronic beats—to keep an authentic sound.

While solo tracks like “Bayiti” draw the Ali Farka Touré comparisions—and rightly so—the album’s brightest moments are when the whole band gets involved. “Atubga” shows this spirit in spades. With the kologo laying down the consistent rhythm, it allows the other instruments to provide layers of competing melody over the top. Stevo’s vocals provides a wall of sound, a constant flurry of Frafra— a Guruna language—which leaves you humming for days. Seemingly without a chorus, it’s a constant stream of consciousness that leaves its mark on your ears and your repeat button. Like most of the album, the pared-down instruments make the tracks sound straightforward upon first listen, but multiple spins show a complexity and depth that you can—and should—spend hours mining.

Alostmen’s daring Kologo takes the old and makes it new again, looking to the past to foster and create a sound uniquely 2021. It’s a celebration of African music by Africans—the rest of us are just lucky to listen.

— —

:: stream/purchase Alostmen here ::

ALOSTMEN REIMAGINE TRADITIONAL GHANIAN MUSIC ON PARTY ANTHEM “KOLOGO”

:: TODAY’S SONG ::

— — — —

Kologo Album Art

Connect to Alostmen on
Facebook, Instagram
Discover new music on Atwood Magazine
? © © Abass Ismail

:: Stream Alostmen ::


Oliver Crook
Written By
Oliver Crook
More from Oliver Crook
Today’s Song: DijahSB Separates Themselves From the Rest on “By Myself”
Angular and dynamic, “By Myself” is DijahSB's mission statement of excellence.
Read More

You may also like

Freedom Fry © Michelle Shiers
June 1, 2018
Past, Present, Future, and Classics: A Conversation with Freedom Fry
Call Me By Your Name
March 28, 2018
Sound Tracks: ‘Call Me By Your Name’ – When Music Becomes the Narrator
Silhouetted Vocalist with Microphone © 2025
July 22, 2025
Essay: Talking Is Music to My Ears
Greg Holden © 2018
May 18, 2018
This Just In: Greg Holden’s Repentant Return “On the Run” Is an Instant Classic
Atwood Magazine Celebrates Women's History Month Pt. III
March 15, 2021
Atwood Magazine Celebrates Women’s History Month 2021, Pt. III
Infinity Song © John N. Adams III
October 1, 2024
“I love the way it feels to be a hater”: Infinity Song Serve Up the Perfect Singalong for Your Inner Critic in “Hater’s Anthem”
Previous articleDedicated to AAPI Victims of Hate Crimes, LEADR’s “Hi, I’m Human” Is a Song of Love & Connection
Next articleInterview: Meet the Founders of Black-Owned Boutique Dossier New York

Brand New

  • “I Serve Me. I Take Care of Me. I Am My Keeper”: Medium Build on Surviving the Dream, Choosing Himself, & More Takeaways From a Career-Defining Year
  • Interview: From Malawi to Massachusetts, The Kasambwe Brothers Are Strumming Their Way to Success
  • “You Have Me Marked as Nice”: Ski Team Sits With Desire, Restraint, & the Mercy of Boundaries on “Santa”
  • Atwood Magazine’s 2025 Albums of the Year
  • “Raw, Experimental, & Definitive”: Low.bō Debuts with a Bruised, Intimate Alt-R&B Reckoning on ‘husk’
  • “Anger, Death, & Acceptance”: Adult Mom’s Stevie Knipe Gives Life’s Hardest Feelings a Voice on ‘Natural Causes’
  • “None of us are free until all of us are free”: Rick Alverson & Emilie Rex on Making ‘Passages: Artists in Solidarity with Immigrants, Refugees, and Asylum Seekers’

:: discover something new ::

More Stories
Jauz & HALIENE
Music
With “Oceans & Galaxies,” Jauz & HALIENE Are Celebrating Earth Day in High EDM Style

Recent Posts

  • “I Serve Me. I Take Care of Me. I Am My Keeper”: Medium Build on Surviving the Dream, Choosing Himself, & More Takeaways From a Career-Defining Year December 18, 2025
  • Interview: From Malawi to Massachusetts, The Kasambwe Brothers Are Strumming Their Way to Success December 18, 2025
  • “You Have Me Marked as Nice”: Ski Team Sits With Desire, Restraint, & the Mercy of Boundaries on “Santa” December 18, 2025
  • Atwood Magazine’s 2025 Albums of the Year December 18, 2025
  • “Raw, Experimental, & Definitive”: Low.bō Debuts with a Bruised, Intimate Alt-R&B Reckoning on ‘husk’ December 17, 2025
  • “Anger, Death, & Acceptance”: Adult Mom’s Stevie Knipe Gives Life’s Hardest Feelings a Voice on ‘Natural Causes’ December 17, 2025
  • “None of us are free until all of us are free”: Rick Alverson & Emilie Rex on Making ‘Passages: Artists in Solidarity with Immigrants, Refugees, and Asylum Seekers’ December 17, 2025
  • “It’s Like the Kind of Dream Where You Just Wanna Scream”: Drauve Channel Raw Emotion into Heavy, Shimmering Shoegaze on ‘Timeline’ December 17, 2025
  • Today’s Song: The Barons Channel the Strength of Authentic Human Interaction in “Way Out” December 17, 2025
  • “We Have Fun, and That’s It”: Underbrook Are on the Way Up With ‘Was Happiness Too Boring for You?’ December 16, 2025
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
  • Upcoming Album Releases
  • 2025 Artists to Watch
  • Get Involved
  • Pitching Us
  • Contact
  • Bio Services