Ghanaian international Gospel musician Sonnie Badu has predicted that considering Black Sherif’s momentum and astronomical rise in the music industry, it won’t be long before he grabs a Grammy Award which has eluded a Ghanaian historically.

Sonnie Badu made this comment in furtherance of the euphoria that has greeted Black Sherif’s, ‘Kwaku The Traveller’ song which has even penetrated Nigeria and topped charts in their domain.

In a recent post on Instagram, Sonnie Badu emphasized;

“Breaking through the borders of Nigeria with music is not a joke. I’ve been here for over 10 years and Nigeria is home for me when it comes to music.

“I am very proud of you @blacksherif_ your music is a breath of fresh air. Remain humble and focused, come up with more bars, and stay clean. Hopefully, you can win a Grammy for Ghana music sometime in the future. #DrBadu,” he stated in his post on Instagram.

Meanwhile, days after he became the first Ghanaian to top Nigeria’s Apple Music Top 100 Songs, the high-flying Black Sherif has hit ano ther milestone by becoming the only Ghanaian in Audiomack’s top 5 most-streamed Hiphop artiste of the week.

However, there’s a little drama that came with the good news as Audiomack listed the young chap as a Nigerian instead of Ghanaian when it shared the statistics on its official social media page.

The issue has generated intriguing debating online premised on a recent joke passed by some Nigerians online that want to steal Sherif because his talent is very remarkable.

That theory was expanded by Nigerian freestyle King, Dandizzy who stated in a tweet that if Ghanaians cannot handle and nurture Black Sherif’s amazing talent, they (Nigerians) are ready to swoop on him and make him their own.

Audiomack is a completely free platform for content creators to share their music without limitations or restrictions.

It focuses exclusively on new, independent, and up-and-coming artists. They are not a full-catalog streaming service like Spotify and Apple Music, and do not plan to ever become one.

Audiomack pays royalties to master recording rightsholders as well as to songwriters and their publishers (Google).

SOURCE: www.Ghgossip.com

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