MTV Africa Music Awards explained

MTV Africa Music Awards
Current Awards:MTV Africa Music Awards 2021
Awarded For:Music and pop culture
Presenter:MTV
Country:Countries of Africa
Year:2008

The MTV Africa Music Awards (also known as the MAMAs) were established in 2008 by MTV Networks Africa (now Viacom International Media Networks Africa) to celebrate the most popular contemporary music in Africa. The 2008 and 2010 events took place in Nigeria, first in Abuja and then in Lagos. The 2009 event happened in Nairobi, the capital of Kenya each of the premiere awards were created and executive produced by Alex Okosi and Jandre Louw.

After these three initial events, the show had a three-year hiatus, returning for the 2014 and 2015 editions in Durban, South Africa. The 2016 show was in Johannesburg.[1] The 2021 event was due to be held in Kampala before it was indefinitely postponed.[2] [3]

History

The MTV Africa Music Awards was conceived and created by the SVP and MD of the MTV Networks in Africa, Alex Okosi alongside the Head of Events of MTV Networks Africa at the time Jandre Louw and Head of Production Dudu Qubu. Earlier, African artists had been included in the MTV Europe Music Award where MTV Base Africa viewers voted for Best African artist in the 2006 and 2007[4] MTV Europe Music Awards.

The first awards show was held at the Velodrome, Abuja in Nigeria on 22 November 2008 and was broadcast around the world on 29 November in conjunction with Airtel and local television channels in Africa.[5] The show was hosted by Trevor Nelson.[6] The awards were preceded by four concerts celebrating the musicians nominated for the awards. There were concerts featuring international and local nominees, which took place in Johannesburg, South Africa on 5 November, Nairobi, Kenya on 9 November, the Democratic Republic of the Congo on 13 November and Lagos, Nigeria on 15 November 2008.[7] The Award categories included Artist of the Year, Best Alternative, Best Female, Best Group, Best Hip-Hop, Best Live Performance, Best Male, Best New Act, Best R&B, Video of the Year and the MY Video Award which allows viewers to make their own version of a music video.

The 2009 event took place in Nairobi, Kenya at the Moi International Sports Centre in October 2009.[8] In 2010, the awards were again held in Nigeria, at Eko Expo Hall in Lagos. This year, some award categories were to better reflect the music of the entire continent, hence creating awards for Best Anglophone, Best Lusophone and Best Francophone artists.

After a 3-year hiatus (2011, 2012 and 2013), Viacom International Media Networks Africa announced that the MTV Africa Music Awards would return on 7 June 2014. The fifth event took place at the ICC, Durban, KwaZulu-Natal on 18 July 2015, and on 23 August 2016 it was announced that the sixth edition of the MTV Africa Music Awards would take place in Johannesburg, South Africa on 22 October 2016 at the Ticketpro Dome.[9]

In 2017 the popular award didn't hold again. Alex Okosi, Executive Vice President of Viacom International Media Network Africa said the company is working to reinvent the MAMA to create a deeper music experience for the 2018 edition of the award.[1]

Host cities

YearCountryHost cityVenueHost(s)
2008NigeriaVelodromeTrevor Nelson
2009KenyaNairobiMoi International Sports CentreWyclef Jean
2010NigeriaLagosEko Expo HallEve
2014South AfricaICC Durban ArenaMarlon Wayans
2015South AfricaDurbanICC Durban ArenaAnthony Anderson
2016South AfricaJohannesburgTicketpro DomeBonang Matheba, Yemi Alade and Nomzamo Mbatha
2021UgandaKampalaDJ Khaled

Categories

Winners

2008

See main article: MTV Africa Music Awards 2008.

2009

See main article: MTV Africa Music Awards 2009.

2010

See main article: MTV Africa Music Awards 2010.

2014

See main article: MTV Africa Music Awards 2014.

2015

See main article: MTV Africa Music Awards 2015.

2016

See main article: MTV Africa Music Awards 2016.

2021

See main article: MTV Africa Music Awards 2021. The MTV Africa Awards 2021 was postponed.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Why the MTV Africa Music Awards didn't hold in 2017 . 20 December 2017 . Joey Akan . pulse.ng . 10 March 2018.
  2. Web site: No MAMAs No Cry - MTV Africa Music Awards Called Off . 2023-02-10 . allafrica.com . en-US.
  3. Web site: Uganda to host 2021 MTV Africa Music Awards . Voyages Afriq . 1 July 2021 . 26 November 2020.
  4. Web site: MyJoyOnline.com – Ghana's most comprehensive website. Credible, fearless and independent journalism. https://web.archive.org/web/20071008064925/http://www.myjoyonline.com/tools/print/printnews.asp?contentid=8963. dead. 8 October 2007. MyJoyOnline.com.
  5. http://news.myjoyonline.com/entertainment/200810/21355.asp MTV AFRICA MUSIC AWARDS
  6. Web site: MyJoyOnline.com – Ghana's most comprehensive website. Credible, fearless and independent journalism. https://web.archive.org/web/20090111053722/http://www.myjoyonline.com/tools/print/printnews.asp?contentid=21471. dead. 11 January 2009. MyJoyOnline.com.
  7. Web site: MTV Music Awards Launches In Africa . 11 October 2008 . 9 August 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080809121905/http://www.billboard.biz/bbbiz/content_display/industry/e3i239f5c0f4907d6471367fac6116cf1bb . dead .
  8. The Standard, 16 April 2009: Kenya to host prestigious MTV Africa Awards
  9. Web site: TimesLIVE. www.timeslive.co.za. en. 13 July 2017.