Amamere Folk Music N Dance Ensemble Set For World Tour

 

Renowned performing cultural music group, Amamere Folk Music N Dance Ensemble, a traditional music and dance group, is set on world tour in an effort to promote traditional music and dance to new audiences.

The group, according to its management, will kick off the tour on 1st November with a cultural performance in Dubai. From Dubai the group will be heading to the United States in December for live event performance in Atlanta. The group will then return back to Ghana for the annual music and food bazaar held in Kumasi scheduled in January 2025. Rosina Adu and Alexander Amoah confirmed that the group will return back to the United States to finish tour.

The group’s goals is to bring important stakeholders together to support the cause of Ghanaian cultural music and dance, as well as to market and promote the genre in those nations.

With stunning and captivating performances, the group is likely to astound cultural music and dance enthusiasts in Dubai and the States.

Made up of seasoned instrumentalists like Ronald, Isaac, Philip, Samuel, Sulemana and Evans they are poised to accomplish this with their talented singers wbo perform cultural dance patterns as well.

During the tour, the group will also present a number of dance composition patterns at organized workshops to train attendees. If you have ever witnessed their group’s performance before, you’ll know that their talented dancers Dora, Karen, Sarah, Isabella and Rosina are experts of adowa, kpanlogo and borborbor dances.

Amamere Folk Music N Dance Ensemble has been practicing for their upcoming grueling tour, which will allow them to once again showcase their amazing blend of cultural dance, music, and acrobatics. The group has created a sound that is uniquely their own, utilizing a range of traditional African instruments such the talking drums, maracas, congas, shelere, and gone drums, just to mention a few.

The repertoire of the strongly culturally arranged performances iembedded in a number of Ghanaian languages, including Twi and Ga, in addition to snippets of other African languages.

In addition to playing catchy African cultural and traditional folk music, the group’s dancers are known for their complex cultural dance routines, which give their live performances extra glitz and flare.

“We think that patrons to our events in Dubai and the USA, and other part of the world would gain amazing insights into Ghanaian and African culture as a result,” the group leadership Alexander and Rosina said.