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I am very very sorry, I never meant to disrespect you – Amerado tells Patapaa

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Amerado, Patapaa
I am very very sorry, I never meant to disrespect you – Amerado tells Patapaa

Ghanaian rapper, Derrick Sarfo Kantanka , popularly known as Amerado in the Ghanaian music circles has sent his sincere apologies to the “One Corner” hit maker, Patapaa for making reference to him in his diss song ‘The Throne’.

Speaking on Entertainment Review on Peace FM on Saturday, August 21, monitored by GhanaPlus.com, he said he never meant to disrespect him or his craft in any way adding it was only a lyricism cut in the midst of the heat of the beef between him and his colleague Obibini.

He noted Patapaa, otherwise known as Patapaa Amisty was his big brother and would never set out intentionally to disrespect him and plead for his forgiveness if he was offended by the reference made about him in his song.

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“Will say a big shut out to Patapaa. I don’t have a bitter blood towards him, I don’t have any bad feeling towards him and I will never sit down and say am going to disrespect my big brother. I will never do that, its lyricism, sometimes when you get into emotion, you get out of controls a little bit and you make references that you will not think it will hurt the feelings of someone in a way”.

“……All I can say is that if I said something that he was not happy about, I am very very sorry for what I did to him, it wasn’t intentional,” he added.

Amerado drags Patapaa in ‘The Throne’

Amerado in “The Throne”, a diss tract responding to Obibini’s ‘Deceased’ said ‘For the hype, wo b3 twa mu s3 Patapaa nnwom’.

To wit, “For hype, you will fade out like Patapaa songs” .

Patapaa

Patapaa replies Amerado

The punch line however did not go down well with the artiste who took to social media to warn the rapper to stay in his lane and focus on climbing his own ladder because it would take him a decade to get a popular song like the one corner he made reference to.

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Making reference was a spur of the moment

But speaking on the Entertainment Review programme, Amerado said his reference to the celebrated musician in his diss song had no ill intent.

According to him, it was all in the spur of the moment and begged for his forgiveness.

Source: GhanaPlus.com

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