Popular Disc Jockey and entertainment personality, DJ Mensah, has sparked fresh conversations about record deals and artiste ownership after sharing a series of posts detailing the hidden realities of record contracts.
In a series of tweets posted on X, DJ Mensah explained how artistes, desperate for a breakthrough, often rush to sign contracts without proper legal counsel, only to develop doubts once they achieve success.
“Nobody prepares you for what happens after the fame comes faster than the contract… All you want is a chance… Then the song hits.
“Now you feel… powerful like Jesus Christ. And suddenly the contract you begged for starts feeling like a cage,” he wrote.
DJ Mensah pointed out that many artistes only later realise that labels often own their masters, control releases, and pay out percentages that are not always as favourable as expected.
“Welcome to the fine print. You start hearing whispers: “Bro, you’re bigger than that label now.” “You don’t need them again.” “Just leave.” Easy advice. Hard reality.
“Want to leave early? Cool. Pay back the advance. Buy back the masters. Settle the marketing spend. Clear the options. Millions, not emotions,” he added.
DJ Mensah also acknowledged the label’s perspective, stating that labels take financial risks by investing in artistes long before they become stars.
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He concluded by urging upcoming artistes to prioritise understanding ownership and exit clauses before signing deals.
“Before you chase fame, understand ownership. Before you sign dreams away, read the exit door,” he wrote.
He then advised record labels to focus on partnerships rather than control by creating fair systems that grow careers instead of “cages.”
“Before you chase control, understand partnership. Before you lock talent in, build systems that grow careers not cages and fair exit doors that still benefit you, the label,” he said.
Although DJ Mensah clarified that his posts were not targeted at anybody, they come amid a viral post by Ghanaian artiste Kwesi Arthur accusing his former record label ‘Ground Up’ of being excessively controlling over his brand despite leaving the label.
See the post below:
Want to leave early?
Cool.
Pay back the advance.
Buy back the masters.
Settle the marketing spend.
Clear the options.Millions, not emotions.
— DJ MENSAH (@DJMENSAH1) January 22, 2026
ID/EB
