Fresh off his international success, Ghanaian superstar Black Sherif is spotlighting a critical bottleneck in the Ghana’s burgeoning music industry, the severe lack of large, dedicated performance venues.
In a recent interview, the BET winner advocated for the construction of at least 10,000 to 15,000-seat indoor auditoriums, arguing that the current infrastructure is insufficient to support the industry’s explosive growth and global ambitions.
Black Sherif emphasized that this demand is not just for the benefit of headline artists but for the entire ecosystem of the creative economy.
“10k-15k capacity is necessary for the space and we actually need to have stuff like that. Live music wouldn’t just feed the artists or the performers. There are so many talented people who work behind the scenes. Talk of stage design and craft, lighting, sound and all of that to have a music event, even vendors. These things will feed people as well.”
Black Sherif
His comments echo long-standing calls from event organizers for larger, purpose-built facilities to move major shows away from less suitable open-air stadiums and smaller conference centres.
The artist’s timely appeal is underscored by the recent loss of the country’s largest indoor event space. The Fantasy Dome in Accra, which offered a 15,000-person capacity and hosted numerous major concerts, was controversially demolished in 2023.
This destruction highlighted the vulnerability of existing temporary venues and the urgent need for permanent, state-of-the-art facilities.
Black Sherif Reveals Amakye Dede Inspired ‘Iron Boy’, says the Legend is Family

Ghanaian musician Black Sherif disclosed that his latest album ‘Iron Boy’ was inspired by legendary highlife artiste Amakye Dede, whom he later discovered to be a long-time family friend.
The award-winning artiste said the song was born out of a visit to Amakye Dede’s home, where he paid homage to the music icon.
He recounted that the meeting revealed a surprising family connection that stretched back generations.
“There were layers to the decisions making Iron Boy. I went to Nana Amakye Dede’s house and I realised he was my grandfather, the real iron boy. It wasn’t intentional. I went to pay homage and realised he was a family friend from generations ago. That was the first layer; homage.”
Black Sherif
Black Sherif, also known as Blacko, added that although Amakye Dede does not feature on the Iron Boyrecord, he had considered including him. “To be honest I did think about putting the Amakye Dede on the song but it just didn’t manifest in bringing the thing up,” he explained.
Iron Boy, released in April 3, 2025, has quickly become one of the most streamed Ghanaian songs of the year.
On Spotify, the album debuted at number 6 on the UK Top Debuted Albums chart and achieved the highest first-day streaming record for a Ghanaian album, amassing 2 million streams. It is also the most streamed Ghanaian album of 2025, racking up over 103.3 million streams.
On Apple Music, Iron Boy spent 158 days as the number one album on the Apple Music Ghana Top Albums chart. Five tracks from the album have reached the top spot on the Apple Music Ghana Top 100 in 2025. Sacrifice dominated the Apple Music Top 100 Chart for 23 consecutive weeks.
On Audiomack, Black Sherif crossed 1 billion career streams, cementing his position as the most streamed Ghanaian artiste on the platform.
The success of Iron Boy follows Black Sherif’s consistent rise as one of Ghana’s most influential young artistes, known for blending storytelling, street poetry, and deeply personal experiences in his music.
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