Tyla’s Push 2 Start Wins Best African Music Grammy

South African singer Tyla secured her second consecutive Grammy Award for Best African Music Performance at the 67th Annual Grammy Awards in Los Angeles, winning with her track “Push 2 Start.” The 24-year-old artist triumphed over a competitive field that included Nigeria’s Burna Boy, Davido, and Ayra Starr, as well as Uganda’s Eddy Kenzo.

This victory follows her inaugural win in the category in 2024 for the global hit “Water,” a breakthrough that established her as a leading figure in the new wave of African pop. The Best African Music Performance category was introduced at the 2024 ceremony, making Tyla the first artist to win it twice. Her success underscores the rapid commercial and critical ascent of ampiano and Afro-fusion sounds from Southern Africa onto the international stage.

Following her award presentation, Tyla expressed gratitude and described representing the continent as a surreal honour. She noted the increasing global visibility of African musicians, expressing hope for broader international recognition of artists from across the region. Her comments highlighted a ongoing shift in the global music industry’s centre of gravity.

The win generated significant reactions across social media platforms. Celebrations were particularly pronounced among fans in South Africa, who praised her role in amplifying the country’s musical exports. Some Nigerian music followers expressed disappointment that their preferred candidates did not win, though many conceded Tyla’s influence and the merit of her achievement, illustrating the passionate yet fractured nature of pan-African musical fandom.

In a separate segment honouring historical contributions, the Recording Academy posthumously awarded a Lifetime Achievement Award to Nigerian pioneer Fela Kuti. Widely recognised as the creator of Afrobeat, Kuti’s legacy was cited as foundational to the contemporary sounds now dominating global charts. The tribute served as a explicit link between the genre’s origins and its current commercial momentum.

The ceremony’s focus on African talent, both through competitive categories and special honours, reflected the continent’s expanding footprint within the mainstream international music industry. Artists from Africa are no longer niche contenders but central figures in conversations about chart performance, streaming numbers, and award recognition. Tyla’s back-to-back Grammy wins signal a consolidation of that influence, suggesting that African-derived genres are transitioning from trend to established pillar of the global music economy. The night pointed toward a future where representation from the continent becomes a standard expectation rather than an exception at major awards shows.

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