
Accra, Ghana — August 2025 — In a landmark strategic meeting dubbed “Sharing Music Identifiers,” three leading institutions in Ghana’s music ecosystem—GHAMRO, GAPI, and Apprise Music—gathered to formalize metadata alignment, identifier sharing, and long-term governance reform. The session brought together Michael Bamfo, CEO of Apprise Music; Jackson Brefo, CEO of GHAMRO; and Richmond Adu‑Poku, General Secretary of GAPI, uniting distribution, rights administration, and catalog preservation under a common mission: equitable, transparent, data‑driven music governance.
As General Secretary of GAPI and CEO of Ghana Music Live, Richmond Adu‑Poku provides thought leadership on industry digitization and policy reform. He regularly critiques unequal structures threatening Ghana’s creative economy, especially how digitization often marginalizes artists through piracy, poor monetization, and inadequate infrastructure alignment. Adu‑Poku also supports strategic initiatives like the Unsung Artist Incubation programme, partnering with Ghana Music Awards and Apprise Music to amplify emerging talent).
Data Cleansing & Synchronization: A reconciliation initiative to correct legacy metadata and align active records across systems, reducing royalty leakages and disputes.
Pilot Integration Project: A live metadata syncing trial with a selection of artists to validate identifier sharing mechanisms and guide scale-up.
Roles:
- GHAMRO validates rights claims and oversees registered works.
- Apprise provides ISRCs and enriched digital metadata.
- GAPI coordinates legacy catalog support and member compliance.
Governance: A tri-partite liaison committee to monitor progress and resolve disputes.
Term: An initial two-year pilot, renewable by mutual agreement.
This model represents a breakthrough in Ghana’s collective industry infrastructure, prioritizing both data integrity and institutional coordination.
This strategic collaboration marks a pivotal moment in Ghana’s music industry—where data transparency, rights management, and cross-organizational synergy offer a template for other African markets. Under the leadership of Michael Bamfo, Jackson Brefo, and Richmond Adu‑Poku, Ghana is advancing toward a future where artists’ creativity is matched by systems that protect, value, and empower.