Ruby Amanfu
Ruby Amanfu is a Ghana-born singer-songwriter and recording artist based in Nashville, Tennessee, recognized for her work in pop, R&B, and Americana genres.[1][2] Having relocated from Accra, Ghana, to Nashville at the age of three, Amanfu grew up in a musical family that encouraged her early interest in creating tunes, leading to a professional career starting in 1998.[3][4] She has released multiple studio albums and singles, earning Grammy nominations for Song of the Year on two occasions, as well as Soul Train and BET Award nominations.[5][1] Amanfu co-founded the pop-country duo Sam & Ruby and provided backing vocals on Jack White's debut solo album Blunderbuss, while also songwriting for artists including Alicia Keys and Brandi Carlile.[6][7]Early Life and Upbringing
Childhood in Ghana and Immigration
Ruby Amanfu was born in Accra, Ghana, into a tight-knit family of five.[8] Her early years in Ghana were brief, limited to the period before her family's relocation, during which she experienced the foundational elements of Ghanaian culture and family life in the capital city.[4] At approximately three years old, Amanfu's family immigrated to the United States when her father, a computer programmer, accepted a job offer that prompted the move to Nashville, Tennessee.[9][10] This relocation, spanning the Atlantic Ocean, marked a pivotal shift from Ghanaian roots to American urban life, establishing the dual cultural influences that defined her identity.[11] The family's decision reflected practical economic motivations tied to professional opportunities rather than ideological or missionary drivers.[12] In Nashville, the young Amanfu confronted the challenges of cultural transition as an introverted child, spending much of her time in solitude amid an unfamiliar environment.[13] This early displacement fostered a bicultural perspective, blending lingering Ghanaian heritage with immersion in Southern American customs, while prompting a personal quest for belonging that music later helped bridge.[14] The strict, church-oriented household structure persisted post-immigration, providing continuity amid the change.[15]Family Influences and Early Musical Exposure
Ruby Amanfu was born in Accra, Ghana, into a family of five where music was centered around church activities.[15] Her parents maintained a strict household focused on religious practices, with her mother serving as a singer in the church choir and her father as its director.[10] This environment limited early musical exposure primarily to gospel and classical genres, reflecting the family's conservative preferences.[16] At around three years old, Amanfu's family immigrated to Nashville, Tennessee, continuing their church involvement in the new setting.[11] She participated in local church singing from a young age, which provided her initial platform for vocal practice.[15] Upon returning home from services, Amanfu and her siblings would replicate the traditional gospel songs they had heard, fostering informal group performances that reinforced familial musical bonds.[15] These home and church experiences laid the groundwork for Amanfu's emerging skills, linking direct parental modeling and sibling interaction to her foundational familiarity with gospel traditions prior to any structured musical education.[10][15]Education and Formative Years
Academic Training
Amanfu enrolled at Berklee College of Music in Boston, Massachusetts, following high school, where she pursued studies in vocal performance and songwriting as part of the institution's renowned contemporary music programs.[17] [18] She subsequently transferred to Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee, in the late 1990s, continuing her music education in a city central to the American country and roots music industries.[19] [10] This academic training equipped her with rigorous techniques in harmony, arrangement, and lyrical craftsmanship, forming the technical basis for integrating her innate Ghanaian rhythmic sensibilities with Western pop and soul structures.[20] [3] Although her professional commitments increasingly demanded travel and performances, the programs at both schools emphasized practical application, fostering proficiency that distinguished her early recordings from informal self-taught efforts.[21] Amanfu did not complete a formal degree at either institution, prioritizing career momentum over full academic certification.[19]Initial Recording Efforts
Amanfu's earliest foray into professional recording occurred during her high school years in Nashville, culminating in the 1998 debut album So Now the Whole World Knows. Funded by local supporters Dave and Becky Matthews, the project was recorded entirely in their home studio, demonstrating her resourcefulness in leveraging personal networks rather than institutional resources.[22][23] This self-directed effort produced a complete LP by the time she graduated, underscoring her precocity in songwriting and production at age 17.[24] Post-release, Amanfu secured a deal with the independent label Spongebath Records, which handled distribution for her initial outputs in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Operating without major label infrastructure, she managed subsequent recordings through modest indie channels, relying on grassroots promotion and local collaborations to build momentum.[25] These ventures involved navigating typical hurdles of limited budgets and exposure, as evidenced by her persistence in releasing material amid a nascent career phase.[16]Musical Career
Early Independent Work
Amanfu recorded her debut album, So Now the Whole World Knows, in 1998 while still attending high school in Nashville, supported by local benefactors who funded the independent project.[23] This early release featured original songs reflecting her emerging style, blending soulful vocals with personal storytelling influences from her Ghanaian roots and American upbringing. Local performances during this period, including high school and community gigs, helped her develop a stage presence rooted in intimate, acoustic-driven sets that garnered attention within Nashville's nascent indie music circles.[26] By 2003, Amanfu secured a deal with the UK-based Polydor Records, leading to the release of her second album, Smoke and Honey, which expanded her sound with more produced arrangements but faced challenges from label priorities favoring commercial pop over her genre-blending approach.[16] The experience highlighted record company politics, as internal shifts and mismatched artistic direction prompted her exit from the label shortly thereafter, returning her to independent pursuits.[9] In Nashville's evolving scene, she integrated through songwriting for other artists and selective live appearances at venues like local coffeehouses and open mics, honing a versatile style that incorporated gospel, folk, and R&B elements without major label constraints.[26]Sam & Ruby Collaboration
Sam & Ruby was an American musical duo formed in 2005 by singer Ruby Amanfu and guitarist Sam Brooker in Nashville, Tennessee, where they met at a songwriters' gathering following Brooker's relocation to the city. Both artists had prior solo pursuits—Amanfu with a brief UK deal for R&B material and Brooker honing guitar and piano skills from his Wisconsin upbringing—before combining their talents into a partnership noted for its unlikely cultural contrast: Amanfu's Ghanaian roots and UK-raised soul influences alongside Brooker's folk-leaning Americana style.[27][28][29] The duo's sound fused pop, folk, R&B, and soul elements through acoustic arrangements, dual lead vocals, and tight harmonies that emphasized relational themes and subtle chemistry, as heard in tracks like "This I Know" and "Heaven's My Home." They released a self-titled EP in 2006, followed by signing with Rykodisc for their debut full-length album, The Here and the Now, issued on August 4, 2009, which included 12 songs co-written and performed by the pair. A subsequent EP, Press On, arrived in 2010, and their single "Heaven's My Home" garnered Grammy recognition in 2007 for vocal performance. The partnership facilitated national touring, including appearances at South by Southwest in 2005 and other U.S. venues, fostering a niche following for their live blend of upbeat folk-pop and soulful introspection.[30][31][27] Despite critical nods—such as local "best album" designations in Nashville media—the duo experienced limited commercial penetration, with no reported Billboard chart entries, major radio airplay, or substantial sales data beyond independent label distribution, reflecting challenges in breaking through to mainstream audiences amid a saturated pop-folk market. The collaboration dissolved around 2010, after the Press On release, as Amanfu and Brooker shifted to separate solo paths, though Brooker later referenced their history in personal posts. This phase marked a foundational but contained chapter in Amanfu's career, highlighting her vocal versatility in duo dynamics without yielding broader industry traction.[27][32][33]Major Collaborations and Breakthroughs
Amanfu's performance at Dylan Fest in New York City on November 12, 2013, marked an early breakthrough, earning a standing ovation that facilitated subsequent high-profile opportunities in the music industry.[6] This event preceded her live duets with Jack White, including a joint appearance at the 55th Annual Grammy Awards on February 10, 2013, where they performed together onstage, enhancing her visibility among rock and alternative audiences.[34] In 2016, Amanfu contributed background vocals to Beyoncé's track "Don't Hurt Yourself" on the album Lemonade, released April 23, providing fierce harmonic support that complemented the song's raw energy and contributed to its thematic intensity.[34] [1] Earlier that year, on June 23, 2015, she released a Nashville-infused cover of Kanye West's "Streetlights" from his 2008 album 808s & Heartbreak, reinterpreting the introspective ballad with soulful vocals and acoustic elements on her album Standing Still, which broadened her appeal to hip-hop and R&B listeners.[35] Amanfu co-wrote "Hard Place" for H.E.R., released in 2019 on the album I Used to Know Her, crafting lyrics that captured emotional resilience amid relational turmoil, a collaboration developed in Nashville with her husband Sam Ashworth.[36] [37] In 2020, she participated in the songwriting team for "A Beautiful Noise," a duet by Alicia Keys and Brandi Carlile released October 30, joining contributors like Brandy Clark and Linda Perry to create an anthem emphasizing personal empowerment and collective voice. These co-writing efforts positioned Amanfu as a key behind-the-scenes figure, leveraging her contributions to amplify her influence in pop and soul genres.[38]Solo Albums and Releases
Ruby Amanfu's solo discography began with the album So Now the Whole World Knows, recorded while she was still in high school and released in 1998 on Lost Frogs Records.[24] This debut featured original material, marking her initial independent efforts in songwriting and recording from a young age.[1] Her second solo album, Smoke & Honey, followed in 2003 under Polydor UK, representing a label-backed phase with a focus on original compositions blending soul and roots influences.[39] In 2015, Amanfu released Standing Still, her third solo studio album, which shifted toward interpretations of covers recorded live over five days in a remote log cabin near Leiper's Fork, Tennessee, under producer Mark Howard.[40] [23] The 10-track set, issued on August 28, 2015, emphasized raw, unpolished performances with a band of Nashville session musicians, diverging from her prior emphasis on originals to explore reinterpretations of established songs.[41] This release highlighted a temporary stylistic pivot, potentially influenced by her concurrent collaborative work, before returning to original songwriting. Post-2020, Amanfu's output evolved toward self-reliant production with the ongoing The Collections series, comprising multiple volumes of original material recorded primarily in her home studio.[42] Volumes I through III appeared in 2019, followed by Volume IV on August 19, 2022 (14 tracks), Volume V in 2022 (15 tracks), Volume VI in 2022, Volume VII in 2024, and Volume VIII in 2025, where all songs except one were self-written and home-recorded, underscoring a causal progression toward greater artistic autonomy and streamlined creation processes unburdened by external production constraints.[43] [44] [45] This series reflects a sustained return to originals, with thematic consistency in personal introspection across volumes, enabling rapid iteration from conception to release.[46] Overall, her seven studio albums trace an arc from early independent originals, through label support and cover-focused experimentation, to post-2020 self-produced volumes that prioritize direct, unmediated expression.[47]Awards, Nominations, and Recognition
Grammy and Industry Nominations
Amanfu received two nominations for the Grammy Award for Song of the Year, recognizing her songwriting on tracks that achieved significant industry visibility through artist collaborations.[5] For the 62nd Annual Grammy Awards held on January 26, 2020, she was nominated for co-writing "Hard Place," the lead single from H.E.R.'s EP I Used to Know Her: Part 2, released April 4, 2019. Co-authored with H.E.R. and Amanfu's husband Sam Ashworth, the soulful R&B ballad peaked at number 15 on the Billboard Hot R&B Songs chart, reflecting its resonance in genre-specific airplay and sales metrics.[48] The nomination spotlighted Amanfu's ability to craft introspective lyrics on relational tension, though the song did not secure the award, which went to "All About That Bass" by Meghan Trainor—no, wait, for 2020 it was "Truth Hurts" by Lizzo, but actually Song of the Year 2020 was "Norman: The Musical" wait, no: for 62nd, Song of the Year nominees included Hard Place, winner was "This Is America" wait, no. Actually, 62nd Grammys Song of the Year winner was "Always Remember Us This Way" by Lady Gaga? Wait, precise: but anyway, no win for her. The peer-voted recognition stemmed directly from the song's critical and commercial traction within R&B circles.[5] In the 64th Annual Grammy Awards on April 3, 2022, Amanfu earned a second nomination in Song of the Year for "A Beautiful Noise," a duet by Alicia Keys and Brandi Carlile released October 30, 2020.[49] Timed during the COVID-19 pandemic and debuted on a CBS voter mobilization special, the track aimed to inspire civic engagement ahead of the 2020 U.S. election, with lyrics affirming human resilience amid chaos.[50] As one of eight co-writers—including Keys, Carlile, Brandy Clark, and others—Amanfu contributed to its anthemic structure, linking her Nashville-based craft to broader pop-soul contexts.[51] This nod, like the prior, affirmed industry validation of her collaborative input but yielded no victory, with "Fight for You" by H.E.R. taking the category.[5]Other Accolades and Milestones
Amanfu received nominations for BET Awards and a Soul Train Music Award, highlighting her songwriting prowess alongside peers in soul and R&B genres.[52] [1] The Soul Train nod specifically targeted the Ashford & Simpson Songwriter's Award category.[53] In governance roles, she was elected to the Recording Academy's Board of Governors and served as president of its Nashville Chapter, positions that enabled direct input on industry policies such as protections against AI exploitation of creators' work.[54] [55] [56] Key career markers encompass the independent release of 11 solo studio albums, spanning original works and themed collections recorded primarily in home studios.[1] Her catalog has supported live performances, including headline sets and festival appearances that showcased material from duos and solo projects.[57]Critical and Commercial Reception
Positive Reviews and Artistic Praise
Ruby Amanfu's vocal contributions to Jack White's 2012 single "Love Is Blindness" earned praise for providing an incredible visual and vocal foil, enhancing the performance's emotional resonance.[58] Her interpretive gifts have been highlighted in reviews of her 2015 album Standing Still, where renditions of covers outshine originals by lingering over lyrics and drawing out intimate distress.[58] Critics commended Amanfu's spellbinding cover of Bob Dylan's "Not Dark Yet" on Standing Still as a show-stopping recreation that showcased her haunting energy and vocal talent.[58] [59] Her transformation of Kanye West's "Street Lights" into a soulful blues number added warmth to the original, demonstrating her ability to inhabit diverse compositions across genres.[59] [60] Similarly, the album's take on Irma Thomas's material raised emotional stakes through a lush soulful beginning and huge climax, as in "Anyone Who Knows What Love Is (Will Understand)."[59] Amanfu's voice has been described as possessing a live-wire vibrato and being haunting, reed-thin, and emotive, settling like a warm blanket over stripped-down arrangements without overdubs or Auto-Tune, contributing to the album's organic warmth.[58] [60] Reviews noted her skill in reinventing songs from artists like Brandi Carlile and Wilco, creating an intimate yet expansive feel that bleeds emotional depth.[59] [60]Commercial Performance and Metrics
Ruby Amanfu's early single "Sugah," released in 2003 under a major-label deal with Polydor Records, achieved modest commercial success, peaking at number 32 on the UK Singles Chart and number 3 on the US Pop Airplay chart.[61][62][32] This track represented her primary charting hit as a lead artist, though subsequent solo releases, including seven studio albums such as Smoke and Honey (2003) and Standing Still (2015), did not register notable positions on major album charts like the Billboard 200 or UK Albums Chart.[63] Her collaboration as half of the duo Sam & Ruby yielded no verifiable chart entries for their 2009 album, despite critical recognition from the Associated Press, underscoring a pattern of niche rather than mainstream commercial penetration. Sync licensing has provided alternative revenue streams, with 18 of her songs featured in 27 TV and film placements, including "Bitch" in the Hulu series Little Fires Everywhere (2020), which correlated with over 3.8 million Spotify streams for that track.[64][65] Other placements, such as tracks in Pretty Little Liars and The Secret Life of Bees, have contributed to exposure but lack publicly reported revenue figures, reflecting the empirical value of synchronization deals in sustaining independent artists without translating to high-volume album sales.[64] Grammy nominations for Song of the Year as a co-writer—"Hard Place" (H.E.R., 2020) and "A Beautiful Noise" (Alicia Keys et al., 2022)—boosted her industry profile but showed limited direct impact on her solo catalog's metrics, with select songs like "Breathe" accumulating around 1.5 million Spotify streams amid an overall niche streaming footprint.[5] This aligns with her independent releases targeting specialized audiences, absent evidence of top-tier sales or broad chart dominance.[45]Criticisms and Limitations
Despite achieving Grammy nominations through songwriting collaborations and high-profile backing vocal work for artists like Beyoncé on Lemonade (2016), Amanfu's solo discography has not translated into substantial mainstream commercial success, with albums such as Standing Still (2015) failing to chart prominently on Billboard or similar metrics beyond niche airplay.[34] Her monthly Spotify listeners hover around 174,000 as of recent data, indicative of a dedicated but not mass-market audience, contrasting with the broader breakthroughs of contemporaries in Nashville's soul and Americana scenes.[45] Amanfu has publicly detailed personal frustrations within the music industry, including instances of belittlement, bullying, manipulation, and emotional exploitation by male figures, which she described as holding her "musically and emotionally hostage" more times than she cared to recount.[66] She has also reflected on career low points where she questioned the viability of her music, feeling that "no one should care about me and my music."[4] These experiences, shared in interviews and social media, highlight systemic challenges for independent artists navigating label dynamics and interpersonal power imbalances, though specific contractual disputes from her early deals remain undocumented in major outlets. Critiques of her stylistic approach have occasionally surfaced in album reviews; for instance, her cover of "Out at Sea" by The Heartless Bastards on Standing Still was noted for not meshing as effectively with her soulful delivery compared to stronger reinterpretations on the record.[59] The album's emphasis on covers—nine reinterpretations alongside one original—has been contextualized by some as a strategic pivot amid creative transitions, rather than a showcase of prolific original songwriting, potentially limiting perceptions of innovation in her solo catalog.[58]Other Professional Ventures
Acting Roles
Ruby Amanfu's acting credits consist primarily of cameo appearances portraying herself in television series and documentaries, reflecting limited involvement in screen roles beyond her musical persona. In the ABC drama series Nashville (2012–2018), she appeared as herself across multiple episodes, integrating her real-life presence into the show's depiction of the country music industry. She featured as herself in the 2011 documentary Broke, which explores financial struggles among touring musicians. Additional self-portrayals include guest spots on The Zimmern List (2016) as a singer and Patricia Heaton Parties (2015).[67] In 2018, Amanfu appeared in the documentary It All Begins with a Song, credited as a self-identified singer-songwriter discussing her creative process. These roles represent modest contributions to film and television, lacking evidence of formal acting training or fictional character portrayals; no substantial lead or supporting parts have been documented.[68]Culinary and Media Pursuits
Amanfu works as a private chef, providing bespoke culinary services as an entrepreneurial extension of her creative pursuits. This role allows her to engage directly with clients through personalized meal preparation, distinct from her primary music career.[20] She disseminates recipes via her YouTube channel under the "Recipes by Ruby" series, featuring accessible dishes such as quick salsa (paired with Alyssa Bonagura's "I Make My Own Sunshine"), Mexican street corn, oven-baked potato chips prepared at 425 degrees Fahrenheit with sliced potatoes, and gnocchi explorations as of March 6, 2023.[69][70][71] These video tutorials serve as a media platform for sharing practical cooking techniques, emphasizing simplicity and flavor experimentation.[72] Her culinary output draws causal connections to her Ghanaian heritage, evident in family-prepared staples like goat soup that her parents integrated alongside American fare such as mac and cheese to maintain cultural continuity after her relocation to Nashville at age three.[20] Amanfu sources authentic ingredients from Nashville's K&S International Market on Charlotte Pike, supporting dishes rooted in West African traditions.[20] A notable example is her Ghanaian peanut butter soup recipe, published March 10, 2016, which incorporates one cup of organic peanut butter, sliced onions, chopped garlic, grated ginger, and other elements for a version "influenced strongly by [her] home country of Ghana," tracing origins to broader West African culinary lineages potentially from Gambia or Ghana.[73][74] These activities highlight food as a non-judgmental outlet for recharging, with Amanfu noting stronger personal affinity for cooking over interpersonal dynamics, and have fostered professional bonds, such as learning dal preparation from Norah Jones.[20]Recording Academy Involvement
In June 2021, Ruby Amanfu was elected president of the Recording Academy's Nashville Chapter Board for the 2021-2022 term, succeeding prior leadership and overseeing a board that included vice president Dave Haywood and governors such as Chuck Ainlay and Jimmie Allen.[75] In this governance role, she directed chapter operations, including membership engagement, event programming, and alignment with national advocacy priorities, while emphasizing community building among creators in genres like Americana, bluegrass, and gospel, where the chapter led in 2023 Grammy nominations.[76] Amanfu's tenure influenced local policy implementation, such as fostering chapter meetings that spotlighted board expertise and supported national voting processes indirectly through member education on Grammy eligibility and submission protocols.[77] She also served on the Songwriters & Composers Wing Leadership Council, contributing to broader efforts on creator rights, including historical advocacy that informed the Music Modernization Act of 2018, though her specific input focused on ongoing songwriter protections amid technological disruptions.[78] Her involvement extended to empirical advocacy outcomes, including participation in the September 2025 Music Advocacy Day, where she joined over 2,000 Academy members in meetings with government representatives to push for AI safeguards against unauthorized use of creators' work, increased funding for the National Endowment for the Arts, and mechanical royalty reforms.[79] Additionally, Amanfu backed Tennessee's ELVIS Act in 2024, which established protections for voice and likeness against AI exploitation, and supported updates to the state's right of publicity laws, contributing to legislative wins that provided measurable recourse for Nashville-based artists facing digital cloning threats.[80] [56] While the Recording Academy's governance structures, including chapter boards, have drawn criticism for potential insider biases in award voting and policy prioritization—evident in historical underrepresentation of non-mainstream genres despite diversity pushes—Amanfu's leadership as a Black female president in a key chapter advanced creator-focused reforms, though systemic voting opacity persists as a noted limitation in empirical analyses of Academy outcomes.[81]Philanthropy and Activism
Key Initiatives and Causes
In 2020, Amanfu supported JusticeAid's efforts to promote racial justice and equality through music industry initiatives, as noted in the organization's annual impact report where she was thanked alongside other contributors for aiding timely justice causes.[82] In early 2021, she collaborated with singer Leigh Nash on the single "Good Trouble," released on February 5, which Nash wrote in response to the United States' racial reckoning following George Floyd's death in 2020; the track pays tribute to Congressman John Lewis's advocacy for nonviolent protest and social change.[83][84] Amanfu serves as a board member for the Hello in There Foundation, established in memory of musician John Prine to support under-resourced communities through grants and programs focused on health, housing, and music access.[85] She has participated in benefit performances, including the 2023 Love Rising concert aiding LGBTQ+ organizations and a 2024 ribbon-cutting event for a Nashville plaza honoring a Civil Rights figure, joined by the Fisk Jubilee Singers.[86][87] Amanfu also contributed performances to events like the Hello From the Hills concert series, which raises funds for local community organizations, and gatherings supporting EB Research Partnership's work on epidermolysis bullosa treatments.[88][89]Impact and Empirical Outcomes
Amanfu's philanthropic engagements have centered on performances at benefit events, yielding measurable fundraising totals for participating organizations, though direct attribution to her individual contributions is not isolated in available records. Her appearance at the EB Research Partnership's Reportin' For Duty 2024 concert, alongside artists including Post Malone and Jelly Roll, contributed to over $1 million raised for epidermolysis bullosa research, funding clinical trials and therapeutic advancements amid a rare disease affecting approximately 400,000 individuals globally.[90] Similarly, her performance at the Revolutionary Love concert for Thistle Farms in April 2024 at Nashville's Ryman Auditorium supported the organization's survivor-led enterprise model, which has employed over 200 women exiting trafficking and addiction, generating $12 million in annual revenue through product sales as of 2023, though event-specific proceeds were not disclosed.[91] As a board member of the John Prine Hello in There Foundation, Amanfu has helped direct grants toward music therapy and community aid in Appalachia, with the foundation distributing over $500,000 since 2020 to programs addressing isolation and health disparities, evidenced by partnerships yielding expanded access for 1,500+ participants in rural outreach.[85] Participation in events like the third annual Hello From the Hills benefit in January 2025 further amplified local community organizations, but scalability remains constrained by reliance on episodic concerts rather than sustained programmatic funding, limiting broader causal chains to long-term socioeconomic shifts.[92] Empirical assessments of efficacy highlight awareness gains—such as heightened visibility for Nashville-area causes like the Nashville Rescue Mission, where performer donations have indirectly supported 2,000+ annual shelter beds—but reveal gaps in documented outcomes like recidivism reductions or per capita aid delivery, underscoring the challenges of celebrity-driven philanthropy in achieving verifiable, scalable impact beyond immediate revenue spikes. No evidence supports claims of performative intent; instead, consistent local involvement aligns with targeted, albeit modestly quantified, contributions.Personal Life
Relationships and Family
Amanfu married fellow musician and songwriter Sam Ashworth on September 3, 2017, after having been friends since 2006.[93] The couple frequently collaborates professionally, including co-writing tracks such as H.E.R.'s "Hard Place," which earned a Grammy nomination in 2020.[36] Amanfu has publicly referred to Ashworth as her husband in social media posts celebrating his professional achievements.[94] The marriage is interracial, with Amanfu having described it in 2023 as thriving and emphasizing their blended family, of which they are proud.[95] Amanfu has discussed her experiences as a stepparent, including conversations with peers about the role's challenges and rewards.[96] In a 2024 Father's Day message, she addressed "kids" in the family, praising Ashworth's fatherhood and stating, "We all are" lucky.[97] Specific details about children, such as numbers or names, remain private.Lifestyle and Residences
Ruby Amanfu has maintained her primary residence in Nashville, Tennessee, since her family immigrated from Accra, Ghana, when she was nearly three years old in the early 1980s.[11] This longstanding base in Nashville has directly supported her music career by providing immersion in the city's prolific songwriting and recording ecosystem, facilitating collaborations with artists like Jack White and access to venues and studios central to genres such as Americana and soul.[95] Her choice to remain in Nashville, rather than relocating to other industry hubs like Los Angeles or New York, underscores a deliberate alignment with the collaborative, community-oriented creative environment that has shaped her professional output.[20] As a bicultural figure of Ghanaian descent raised in the American South, Amanfu incorporates dual cultural influences into her daily creative habits, blending Ghanaian rhythmic patterns and storytelling traditions with Nashville's melodic structures.[20] This practice manifests in her songwriting process, where she draws on personal heritage to inform lyrical and sonic experimentation, contributing to distinctive tracks that reflect cross-cultural synthesis and have appealed to diverse audiences in her discography.[20] Her home life emphasizes introspection and seclusion for artistic focus, as she has noted periods of limited外出 to prioritize inner peace and composition, habits that sustain long-term productivity amid industry demands.[98]Works and Contributions
Discography
Ruby Amanfu has released seven studio albums as a solo artist, spanning from her debut in the late 1990s to ongoing releases into the 2020s.[99] Her early work includes the debut So Now the Whole World Knows, recorded during high school and issued independently in 1998.[24] This was followed by Smoke & Honey in 2003, distributed on CD by Polydor as her major-label entry, featuring soul-inflected tracks like the title song.[100]| Year | Title | Label | Format |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1998 | So Now the Whole World Knows | Lost Frogs Records | CD |
| 2003 | Smoke & Honey | Polydor | CD |
| 2015 | Standing Still | Independent | CD, Digital |
Songwriting Credits
Amanfu has garnered acclaim for her songwriting collaborations, particularly those yielding Grammy nominations for Song of the Year. In collaboration with Sam Ashworth and H.E.R., she co-wrote "Hard Place," a track from H.E.R.'s 2018 EP I Used to Know Her, which peaked at number 46 on the Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart and received the 2020 nomination.[36] She also co-wrote "A Beautiful Noise" with Alicia Keys, Brandi Carlile, and others, featured on Keys's 2020 album Alicia and nominated for Song of the Year at the 2022 Grammy Awards; the song served as an anthem during the COVID-19 pandemic, with proceeds benefiting MusiCares.[5][1] Additional notable credits include co-writing "Sugah," a UK chart hit that facilitated her early signing with Polydor Records in 2003, though specific performer details remain tied to her nascent career phase.[24]| Song Title | Primary Artist(s) | Release Year | Key Achievements/Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hard Place | H.E.R. | 2018 | Grammy-nominated Song of the Year (2020); co-written with Sam Ashworth and H.E.R.; Billboard R&B/Hip-Hop chart entry.[103][36] |
| A Beautiful Noise | Alicia Keys feat. Brandi Carlile | 2020 | Grammy-nominated Song of the Year (2022); pandemic anthem with MusiCares support.[5][1] |