By Daniel Bampoe
In a music industry often shaped as much by rivalry as by creativity, the story of Bice Osei Kuffour (Obour) stands as a powerful example of how leadership, reform, and innovation can be misunderstood in the moment, yet validated by time.
Once one of the most celebrated award-winning musicians, Obour rose to national prominence not only through music but through institutional leadership when he served two consecutive terms as President of Musicians Union of Ghana (MUSIGA).
Under his leadership, the union became more visible, active, and nationally relevant than it had been in years, with a renewed focus on welfare, advocacy, and institutional credibility.
One of Obour’s defining legacies at MUSIGA was his deliberate focus on aged and vulnerable musicians.
Through the Amwef Initiative, he championed structured support for veteran artistes, mobilising corporate sponsors, philanthropists, and political leaders to contribute to the welfare of elderly musicians who had been forgotten by the system.
His annual grand balls became major national events, drawing sitting presidents, ministers, and business leaders, with funds and donations consistently channelled into social support programmes for musicians in need. For many in the industry, this period marked one of the most socially impactful eras in MUSIGA’s history.
In 2012, MUSIGA, under Obour’s leadership, submitted a formal proposal to government seeking funding for comprehensive research into the music industry.
The state approved the request and released GH¢2 million for the project. The funds were used to execute the initiatives outlined in the proposal, and an official audit later accounted for the full government subvention to the Ministry of Finance.
Despite this, sections of the creative arts community accused MUSIGA of mismanaging the funds, arguing that the money should have been distributed directly among musicians and industry organisations.
Even after independent audits cleared Obour and MUSIGA of wrongdoing, the allegations persisted, turning public opinion in parts of the industry sharply against him.
What followed was a period of sustained vilification. Obour became the symbolic target for broader frustrations within the music industry, with critics attributing systemic industry failures to his leadership.
The hostility eventually outlived his tenure, continuing even after he left office and after Bessa Simons succeeded him following a contested election that went through prolonged legal processes before being resolved by the courts.
Rather than fading, the resentment followed Obour into politics, where he later contested parliamentary elections. His defeat was met with open celebration by some industry figures who were not even connected to his constituency, highlighting how personal the animosity had become.
Yet, outside the creative arts space, Obour’s competence and leadership found new recognition. He was appointed Managing Director of Ghana Post, where he led a major institutional transformation.
Under his stewardship, Ghana Post moved from being widely perceived as a dormant and outdated public institution to a revitalised, modernised organisation, driven by digital reforms, restructuring, and renewed public relevance.
The contrast was striking: while sections of the music industry rejected him, the political and administrative establishment embraced his managerial capacity and strategic thinking.
Today, the same industry that once benefitted from Obour’s influence and connections struggles with limited resources and weakened institutional power.
Critics point to moments such as MUSIGA’s recent GH¢500 contribution at the one-week celebration of veteran gospel musician Yaw Sarpong, which even required public explanation that it was a “water contribution” rather than a formal donation. For many observers, such moments symbolise the decline of the union’s influence compared to the era when Obour could mobilise major sponsors and national figures with ease.
Ironically, MUSIGA’s own constitution recognises past presidents as patrons of the union, a structure meant to preserve institutional memory and access influence.
Yet figures such as Sidiku Buari and Obour himself remain distant from the industry, driven away by years of internal hostility and political infighting. This disconnect, critics argue, has deprived the industry of strategic mentorship, access to power, and high-level advocacy.
As the Ghanaian creative arts industry continues to struggle with structural challenges, funding gaps, and weak institutional coordination, many now see Obour’s story as a cautionary tale. The problems he was blamed for never left after his exit, and the divisions that defined his era still persist. In retrospect, his leadership is increasingly viewed not as the source of the industry’s failures, but as one of its missed opportunities.
Time, as many now acknowledge, has vindicated Obour—not only as a successful musician and union leader, but as a reformer whose vision outpaced the readiness of the system he sought to change. His journey from celebrated artiste, to contested union president, to vilified industry figure, and finally to respected public sector reformer reflects the deeper challenges of the creative economy: a culture that often resists excellence, distrusts reform, and punishes innovation.
Today, Obour walks the corridors of national influence, largely detached from the noise of the industry he once served.
For a new generation of creatives—Gen Z and Alpha—the lesson is clear: without unity, institutional memory, and respect for visionary leadership, the industry risks repeating the same cycles of division and decline. In the end, Obour did not leave the industry’s problems behind—but history has shown that the industry may have left behind one of its most capable leaders.
