The singer revealed that his time with the record label was marked by both difficulty and eventual triumph when discussing his path to fame in an interview with Giovanni Caleb and AJ Sarpong on 3FM.
Things "under the record label were on and off," he claimed. Although it wasn't typical, it was controllable. That should give you a good indication of how awful things were at the time since I clearly remember Papa Kaywa arriving to talk and telling us that I had once even tried to sell my car. That was before the arrival of the popular tunes; after that, things improved, but the phenomenon persisted. It was controllable.
The 'Dwe' hitmaker, who goes by Andrew Nii Commey Otoo in private, said that leaving Kaywa's record label was a mutual decision that was made with respect and understanding. He went on to say that contrary to what some Ghanaians believed, he did not depart because of a misunderstanding.
"My contract ended so I managed to not leave just like that," he said in support of his claim. I was able to break my contract. Everyone moved forward after both parties had understood.