African Music Gets a New TV Stage Across North Africa
AFRICA · MUSIC
Key Facts
—The show: Y’Africa, a pan-African talent series, returns for a fourth season devoted to African music.
—The backer: It is produced by the telecoms group Orange, which operates across much of Africa.
—The expansion: From July 2026, three North African channels join the broadcast lineup.
—The channels: They are 2M in Morocco and national broadcasters in Tunisia and Egypt.
—The aim: The season celebrates the diversity and energy of African music scenes.
—The trend: It rides a global surge of interest in music from the continent.
African music is winning a bigger stage, as a pan-African television series devoted to the continent’s sounds expands into North Africa, knitting together audiences from Rabat to Cairo.

What Y’Africa is
Y’Africa is a television talent series that showcases artists from across the continent.
Produced by the telecoms group Orange, its fourth season is given over entirely to African music.
The programme travels between scenes, spotlighting both established stars and rising names.
Its guiding idea is simple: to treat African creativity as a single, connected story.
Each episode blends performance with the stories behind the artists.
The format has helped introduce local acts to audiences in other countries.
It positions music as a bridge between very different corners of the continent.
The North African push
The big change this season is geographic.
From July 2026, three North African channels join the lineup: 2M in Morocco, and national broadcasters in Tunisia and Egypt.
That extends the show’s reach across the Maghreb and into Egypt.
It brings tens of millions of new potential viewers into the fold.
2M is one of Morocco’s most-watched channels, giving the series real reach in the Maghreb.
Egypt and Tunisia add two of the region’s largest television audiences.
Why North Africa matters
North Africa’s music scenes are often treated as separate from those south of the Sahara.
Language, history and geography have long kept the conversations apart.
By pulling them together, the series argues that African music is one broad family.
That framing is as much cultural statement as scheduling decision.
North African pop, rai and hip-hop have their own devoted followings.
Bringing them into the same show invites new collaborations across the Sahara.
Shared platforms make it easier for a hit to travel across the region.
A telecom’s cultural play
There is business logic here as well as artistry.
Orange sells phone and data services to millions of music-hungry young Africans.
Backing a hit music show builds its brand and deepens its bond with those customers.
Across the continent, telecoms firms have become unlikely patrons of culture.
Music and mobile data feed each other, as fans stream, share and download.
A popular show keeps subscribers engaged and loyal.
Rivalry among carriers has pushed several of them into original content.
African music rides the Afrobeats wave
The timing is no accident. African music is enjoying a golden run on the world stage.
Genres such as Afrobeats and Amapiano have carried the continent’s sound to global charts.
Television at home helps surface the next generation of talent.
It also strengthens the pipeline that feeds those international breakthroughs.
Nigerian and South African artists now sell out arenas far from home.
Streaming has erased the old barriers that once kept African music local.
The bigger picture
Media platforms are increasingly eager to showcase African creativity.
That attention brings recognition, sponsorship and a wider audience for artists.
It also raises familiar questions about who ultimately profits from the boom.
For now, the momentum is firmly with the musicians and their growing fan bases.
Broadcasters, streamers and brands are all competing for a share of the boom.
That interest is reshaping how African music is funded and distributed.
Live shows and festivals feed off the same rising demand.
Why it matters
The expansion is a small but telling sign that African music is being taken seriously.
It is being celebrated not as a niche, but as a mainstream cultural force.
And it is the continent, increasingly, telling its own story in sound.
For listeners from Lagos to Cairo, that is a stage worth watching.
Every new platform widens the path for the next breakout star.
The road ahead
The season’s success will be measured in more than viewing figures.
It will be judged by the new artists it helps to discover.
And by whether North African and sub-Saharan scenes truly begin to mix.
If it works, the model is likely to spread to other platforms.
Sponsors and streaming services are watching the results closely.
African music has rarely had so many stages to fill.
The challenge now is to keep the quality as high as the ambition.
Frequently asked questions
What is Y’Africa?
It is a pan-African television talent series produced by the telecoms group Orange; its fourth season is devoted entirely to African music.
What is changing in 2026?
From July 2026, three North African channels — 2M in Morocco and national broadcasters in Tunisia and Egypt — join the show’s lineup.
Why is the North African expansion significant?
It links North Africa’s music scenes to the wider continent, treating African music as one shared conversation.
Why does African music matter globally?
Genres such as Afrobeats and Amapiano have driven a global surge of interest, and television helps amplify homegrown talent.
Connected Coverage
It is part of African music’s broad ascent, from Morocco’s Timitar festival to Afrobeats becoming a major Nigerian export.
Part of our ongoing coverage
Africa: The New Scramble — the great-power contest over the continent.
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