A low, wide shot of a professional radio studio desk, meticulously arranged with a brushed-aluminum mixing console, high-fidelity headphones resting on one fader bank, and a minimalist laptop displaying a waveform on its screen. The backdrop features a glass window revealing a softly blurred, soundproofed recording booth, walls lined with dark acoustic panels. Subtle, warm overhead lighting mixes with cool, directional LED strips along the console edges, creating a balanced, modern glow. The photographic scene uses the rule of thirds, drawing the eye along the diagonal line of controls, conveying an organized, authoritative environment where the voice of culture is carefully crafted and transmitted.

AGOGO FM

Live from Osun, we broadcast culture, truth, and unfiltered street stories that sound like home.

About

AGOGO FM began as a small Osogbo studio, now uniting Osun’s towns with real conversations, preserving language, championing local music, and giving everyday people a fearless microphone to shape tomorrow’s culture.

A low, wide shot of a professional radio studio desk, meticulously arranged with a brushed-aluminum mixing console, high-fidelity headphones resting on one fader bank, and a minimalist laptop displaying a waveform on its screen. The backdrop features a glass window revealing a softly blurred, soundproofed recording booth, walls lined with dark acoustic panels. Subtle, warm overhead lighting mixes with cool, directional LED strips along the console edges, creating a balanced, modern glow. The photographic scene uses the rule of thirds, drawing the eye along the diagonal line of controls, conveying an organized, authoritative environment where the voice of culture is carefully crafted and transmitted.

Our Voices

An urban nightscape seen from a rooftop, captured in photographic realism, with a matte-black portable radio and a small, rugged Bluetooth speaker placed on the concrete ledge in the foreground. Neon signs, streetlights, and car trails paint the streets below in vibrant reds, blues, and ambers, rendered as soft bokeh. A cool, ambient city glow reflects on the radio’s brushed metal knobs and the textured speaker grille. Shot from a low angle with shallow depth of field, the composition centers the devices while the city blurs into an energetic, electric tapestry, embodying the sound of the streets and the cultural pulse after dark.

Aarav Sharma

CEO

Morning mic maestro blending Osogbo street stories, Yoruba vibes, and sharp interviews daily.

A sleek black broadcast microphone with a finely woven metal grille and polished shock mount, suspended in front of a dark acoustic foam wall patterned with geometric pyramids. On the desk below, a compact digital audio mixer glows with tiny meters and colored LED levels, and a studio monitor speaker rests to the side. Cool, focused studio lighting creates crisp highlights on the microphone’s metallic surfaces and soft shadows on the foam texture. Photographic realism, eye-level composition with shallow depth of field keeps the microphone in sharp focus while the background softly blurs, conveying professional precision and an intimate, serious atmosphere for real, unfiltered conversations.

Mateo García

CTO

Producer turning raw neighborhood conversations into polished segments, keeping every show tight and fearless.

A close-up, photographic image of a vinyl record spinning on a high-end turntable with a smoked-glass dust cover lifted open. The matte-black record has a bold, graphic center label in red, yellow, and green, hinting at vibrant street culture. The tonearm and polished metal cartridge hover precisely over the grooves, catching warm, directional light from a single desk lamp. In the softly blurred background, stacked vinyl sleeves with colorful, worn edges rest against a concrete wall. Shot from a slightly elevated angle, the scene feels nostalgic yet professional, emphasizing rich analog texture, real conversations through music, and the timeless voice of culture.

Zuri Ndlovu

Engineer

Late‑night host amplifying emerging artists, unscripted debates, and call‑ins from across Osun.

A vivid, photographic close-up of a graffiti-covered concrete wall, every crack and layer of spray paint sharply detailed. Centered is a large, stylized radio wave symbol and abstract speaker shapes, painted in saturated oranges, electric blues, and deep blacks. At the base of the wall sits a sturdy, matte-black field recorder with bright VU meters glowing green and yellow, connected to a coiled XLR cable that snakes out of frame. Golden hour sunlight grazes the wall from the side, creating dramatic shadows that emphasize texture. Captured at eye level with moderate depth of field, the mood is bold, raw, and authentic, symbolizing recording real conversations straight from the streets.

Leila Haddad

Designer

Newsroom lead chasing facts on politics, culture, and streets, delivering bold, balanced bulletins.

A sleek black broadcast microphone with a finely woven metal grille and polished shock mount, suspended in front of a dark acoustic foam wall patterned with geometric pyramids. On the desk below, a compact digital audio mixer glows with tiny meters and colored LED levels, and a studio monitor speaker rests to the side. Cool, focused studio lighting creates crisp highlights on the microphone’s metallic surfaces and soft shadows on the foam texture. Photographic realism, eye-level composition with shallow depth of field keeps the microphone in sharp focus while the background softly blurs, conveying professional precision and an intimate, serious atmosphere for real, unfiltered conversations.
A low, wide shot of a professional radio studio desk, meticulously arranged with a brushed-aluminum mixing console, high-fidelity headphones resting on one fader bank, and a minimalist laptop displaying a waveform on its screen. The backdrop features a glass window revealing a softly blurred, soundproofed recording booth, walls lined with dark acoustic panels. Subtle, warm overhead lighting mixes with cool, directional LED strips along the console edges, creating a balanced, modern glow. The photographic scene uses the rule of thirds, drawing the eye along the diagonal line of controls, conveying an organized, authoritative environment where the voice of culture is carefully crafted and transmitted.
A low, wide shot of a professional radio studio desk, meticulously arranged with a brushed-aluminum mixing console, high-fidelity headphones resting on one fader bank, and a minimalist laptop displaying a waveform on its screen. The backdrop features a glass window revealing a softly blurred, soundproofed recording booth, walls lined with dark acoustic panels. Subtle, warm overhead lighting mixes with cool, directional LED strips along the console edges, creating a balanced, modern glow. The photographic scene uses the rule of thirds, drawing the eye along the diagonal line of controls, conveying an organized, authoritative environment where the voice of culture is carefully crafted and transmitted.