
Treat Vini well, he will give his best - Mbappe to Madrid fans after jeers
4 mins read
5th May 2025 8:20:14 AM
2 mins readBy: The Independent Ghana
Entertainment pundit MC Yaa Yeboah has raised concerns about what she describes as selective support within the gospel music advocacy group, Table of Men.
Speaking on United Showbiz on May 3, 2025, she stated that the group, which was originally formed to support all gospel musicians in Ghana, appears to now prioritise artistes they personally favour, leaving others sidelined.
“The Table of Men initiative was set up to push and promote gospel music in the country as well as advocate for funding and support. So, we needed certain people to do that advocacy,” she acknowledged. “But recently, it has gotten to a point where they were supporting their own people and ignoring others.”
Citing a specific example, Yaa Yeboah pointed to how the group failed to support Nacee’s 2024 gospel hit, Aseda, despite its massive popularity.
“Nacee was a victim in 2024. We needed Table of Men to push and promote Nacee, but we never heard anything even though ‘Aseda’ was one of the biggest gospel songs of the year,” she lamented.
She contrasted this silence with the group’s past visible efforts in promoting other artistes like Piesie Esther, suggesting that the group had developed a pattern of favouritism.
“If they wanted gospel musicians to come to them first before they offer their support, they should have made it a clause. But it became like a selfish thing where Table of Men only promoted people they liked and ignored others,” she stressed.
MC Yaa Yeboah also touched on wider issues facing the gospel music industry, including a lack of love and unity among gospel artistes themselves.
“It seems there is no love in the gospel music industry. Some of the artistes within the industry do not see others as gospel artistes. Someone even said that gospel music and secular music collaborations are ‘noise,’” she revealed.
She expressed hope that the Table of Men will return from their current hiatus with a renewed and fair approach that embraces all gospel musicians equally.
“If they come back and do it well, without any bias or favouritism, it will go far,” she concluded.
The Table of Men, which includes influential media and music executives, was instrumental in pushing gospel acts like Joe Mettle and Diana Hamilton to top industry recognition. However, recent updates suggest the group is on recess, with a focus on realigning its mission.
4 mins read
5 mins read
4 mins read
5 mins read
5 mins read
3 mins read
3 mins read
2 mins read
4 mins read