DR. KING SMADE • JOURNAL
The Journal
Notes from the Afrobeats era and the systems behind the culture.
An archive of reflections, interviews, and field notes from the work of building culture at scale. Less hype, more infrastructure. Less headlines, more legacy.
Archive
Context over clout
Field Notes
Festivals • policy • partnerships
Authority
Built from lived work
Journal, not a blog.
A record of the rooms, the work, and what it takes to make culture last.
Why Spaces Like Jambo Matter for Accra’s Creative Economy
Ahead of the Diaspora Roundtables, I visited Jambo Spaces in Accra to understand what sustainable creative infrastructure looks like in practice. Built and owned by Africans for African creatives, Jambo offers a clear example of how access, permanence, and local control allow creative economies to move beyond moments into systems.
The first time I saw D'Banj perform live, he opened with a sentence that stayed with me.
“You don’t know me… but by the end, you gon know me.”
At the time, I was a broke student with a BlackBerry, walking into barbershops and African stores collecting numbers and selling tickets. I wasn’t chasing recognition. I was learning the game.
In 2009, I co-promoted the D’Banj Koko Concert at the Indigo2 in London. That night showed me Afrobeats could become more than events. It could become history.
In the years that followed, the culture began to grow through festivals, tours and club shows. Artists like Dr Sid and Ice Prince helped carry the sound through diaspora communities before the arenas and global recognition.
Looking back now, one question remains.
What happens to the legends?