She claimed that she quickly learned that the course took up so much of her time that she was unable to read her books, making it one of the most difficult things to do.
MzVee stated that this experience taught her that nothing in life is easy and that everything is challenging if you want to succeed in an interview with Joy Prime’s Roselyn Felli on Prime Morning. Despite losing interest in the course, she tried her best to graduate because it was too late to make any changes.
“I picked Home Economics because I was lazy. I didn’t want to learn. I came to understand that it is one of the toughest things to actually do. Because the practical consumes so much of your time that you are unable to read your book.
“It was tough, and that’s where I learned my first lesson: nothing in life is easy. Everything is difficult. So far as you want to succeed at it, it is difficult,” she said.
When asked how she got into music, MzVee explained that a high school classmate encouraged her to join the girl’s band D3 in 2012, which was the beginning of her musical career.
She continued by saying that even though she had no intention of becoming a musician, Richie Mensah heard her sing after she and her coworker Samira Buari visited a recording studio.
“That’s the shocker because I didn’t plan on doing music. I literally just stampeded upon this blessing. I didn’t send myself to see any producers,” MzVee explained.
Afropop, dancehall, and R&B singer Vera Hamenoo-Kpeda, better known by her stage name MzVee, is from Ghana. Many successful hits from her debut solo album, such as “Borkor Borkor,” “Natural Girl,” and “Dancehall Queen,” are included.