Asake has officially become the highest charting African artist in Spotify’s global Top Artists chart history. The milestone dropped on May 3, 2026. Music analytics account @chartdata confirmed it on X, and the music world sat up fast.
The @chartdata post kept it simple: “Asake is now the highest charting African artist in global Spotify Top Artists chart history.” That one sentence pulled in over 16,500 likes and more than 2,600 retweets. Total engagement across the announcement crossed 67,000.
The Nigerian singer has been on a serious upward run for a few years now. Born Ahmed Ololade, he built his early reputation in Lagos before signing with YBNL Nation. He later partnered with Empire Records for global distribution. His 2022 debut album “Mr. Money with the Vibe” changed things fast. Songs like “Organise” and “Terminator” spread well outside Nigeria, pulling in listeners from the UK, the US, and across Europe.
He followed that debut with “Work of Art” in 2023. That album deepened his Spotify streaming presence and landed him on playlists in markets that were still discovering his sound. The numbers kept climbing after that. Now they’ve reached a peak no African artist has ever hit on the platform.
The names he’s now surpassed in this record are serious. Burna Boy, Wizkid, Tems, Davido – these are the artists who built the global Afrobeats pipeline over the past decade. Each one of them cracked open new doors for African music. Asake walked through and kept going.
It hits different knowing what those names mean. They set the standard. Asake just reset it.
His sound is a big reason this record is his to own. He fuses Yoruba-language lyrics with Amapiano rhythms and Afrobeats energy. The result is specific to his roots but widely accessible at the same time. Even a first-time listener in London or São Paulo gets pulled in by the groove. Asake makes that connection look smooth and easy.
Spotify’s global Top Artists chart is not easy territory. It tracks live streaming performance across the platform’s entire user base worldwide. African artists have been making inroads on that chart for years. Reaching the very top of all historical records, though, is a different kind of win.
The music community on social media ran hard with the @chartdata announcement. Celebrations were loud. A lot of conversations turned to what this means for the next generation of African artists watching these numbers in real time.
Some pointed to a broader pattern. African artists have been cracking global streaming milestones at a faster rate since around 2021. Tems made history. Burna Boy made history. Davido made history. Asake just added his name to that list – at the very top.
He hasn’t posted publicly about the milestone yet. That’s pretty on-brand. Asake tends to stay low and let the music do the talking.
But the music has talked loudly enough. After years of global touring, big collabs, and streaming numbers that kept climbing, Asake now sits at the highest peak any African artist has ever reached on the world’s biggest music streaming platform.
The wave has been building for a long time. Asake just surfed it higher than anyone from the continent ever has.
This story originally appeared on Celebrityinsider
