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Central and Eastern Kenya: Days 5-11: Ketebul Studios, Nairobi Story

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…okay and I made enough to buy my farm and build the house in which I still live. My biggest song was Baba otonglo which was about how hard it was to make ends meet. It was very popular but the government didn’t like it and I was interviewed to see if I was going to start a revolution. I told them I didn’t care about politics, I cared about music and makings about what was real – and what was real is I couldn’t keep a household budget. They left me…

Central and Eastern Kenya: Day 3 – Nkubu to Mariene to Murungurune to Nkubu Story

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…er she is now losing the boy, who on return is not to enter her kitchen or live at her home. Karagua nkabume, led by Charles Kinyua. This means ‘something fell in Nicabune’ – it is a song to prepare the boys being circumcised for a new thing that is about to befall him, e.g., the circumcisers knife, responsibility (new ones that they don’t have), not going back to the mother’s hut, etc… In this context, the knife is cutting away his old life and f…

Central and Eastern Kenya: Day 1 – Nairobi to Kiongwe to Muranga Story

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…Muranga on the Thika road, arriving at the Nokras Hotel in Muranga at about 1800. Here’s the route: We were all pretty shattered, so had a quick dinner (only quick if you ordered fish or meat, the chickens were apparently hard to catch and took considerably longer), drank the mandatory round of Tuskers and slipped off to bed. Working Practices: Roles and Responsibilities of the Team Each day, we will also bring you a set of ‘working practices’ we…

A Tanzanian Effort to Salvage the Music of the Past News

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…nd paid for all their instruments. Some of their songs are actually public service announcements set to a catchy tune, conveying information about how to take care of children or how best to help one another build a new, independent Tanzania. “It was all about love, all about unity, all about coming together and building a new nation”, said Benson Rukantabula, who also works on the project. But as with any state-sponsored propaganda, some messages…

Central Uganda: Day 5 – Jinja to Kampala Story

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…azi Ow’omwano Tanoba: Tamenha Ibuga Nalufuka: This was an incredible dance number that ended with all the Singing Wells crew, and many of the hotel staff, jumping up and dancing with the group. Here is their music: James Isabirye says, “It is a challenge for me to talk about Nile Beat because I have so many feelings about it. But what I’m most proud of its contribution to the preservation of Ugandan culture by organizing the only festival since 20…

Interview: fusion band Ndoto Afrika News

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Published in: News & Views

…l us about yourself and Ndoto Afrika – what’s your story? They say stories live forever and one famous Kenyan writer keeps saying that a story is good, until another is told. We are here to share with the world how wonderful it is to be born and raised in Africa. Sadly, the urban African youths are so consumed with the modern technology that they no longer are willing to sit by the evening fire and listen to stories. So we will have to transmit th…

Discussions with Peter Cooke: ethnomusicologist and Ugandan music expert News

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Published in: News & Views

…teaching them to the music students and to music teachers who came for in-service courses. Like Musisi, Busuulwa had not found conditions good for him at the palace and after the attack on the palace and the flight of the Kabaka (King) into exile in London, Musisi no longer had a patron so they were both enthusiastic about working at Kyambogo. Sadly Bulasio Busuulwa died during that awful period of turmoil under the dictatorship of Amin and Obote…

Central Uganda: Day 4 – Jinja Story

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…me Ndaba also plays the Endongo (the thumb piano) and sings. They played a number of songs and then we kept doing magic moments – but frankly, everything they did was a magic moment. Even at the end, when we played back their music over the speakers they all stood and danced and sang harmonies to themselves. Their songs were: Abalimperekera Baliba Muganda: When I die, those that will escort me to be buried, will be many. Enumba Y’eisubi Esana Buko…

Central Uganda: Day 3 – From Mbale to Iganga to Jinja Story

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…ctions that would bring money in to support the band members, all of which live on the premises. Shortly after, a friend of Julius’s donated some brass instruments and Julius started a brass band, called the Elgon Hero Brass Band. When you combine the two bands, the traditional and the new brass sound, Julius says, they blew audiences’ minds. As the bands have grown there are roughly 160 total members of his group, of which 100 are performers. The…

Central Uganda: Day 2 – Kampala to Budaka Story

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…possesses, they are possessed. They can’t just cut the song. They have to live the experience. Remember, for them these spirits are real. You can’t ask them to invite the spirits in and then expect a musical performance. You will get something very different.” Here’s their music: Journey Back After a full day of wonderful dancing the groups loaded into big trucks and headed off. So did we, making it the 30 kilometers to Mbale to stay at the Elgon…

What’s in the box? Story

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…November 28th, 2011 – Jimmy’s 51st Birthday and we’re at Rang-ala Village, Nyanza, recording the Ogoya Nengo. As a surprise, the village arranges a little birthday celebration. And in this lovely life box was a live chicken to ease Jimmy’s transition into middle age. The village and Jimmy fared better than the Chicken that became the centre of a lovely Birthday meal……

Ten More Singing Wells Stories News

…thousands of forest people who have lost their homes, their culture, their livelihoods… We recorded them in their villages and invited them back to our studios in Nairobi to work with some of Kenya’s best musicians. We maintain a great relationship with our Batwa friends and recently invited Jovah to meet us last year in Entebbe to record with additional Ugandan artists (see lullabies below). Here are three vocalists: Meet Francis, the leader of t…

Current Leading Figures News

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Published in: News & Views

…ery important for certain occasions, like marches. He is providing a great service. Brass music is very good and I love it.” Tabu argued, “He knows the traditions. It is not what you play, but how you play it. He is so steeped in Ugandan music that he will create a very interesting fusion over time.”   David Odwar David Odwar founded the TAKS Centre in 2005, along with his sister Joyce Laker, who Steve and Patrick met in 2012 on their recce for a…

Music Depositories and Archives around the World News

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…in print’ forever, for posterity. It honours this through its custom order service: “Whether it sells 8,000 copies each year or only one copy every five years, every Folkways title remains available for purchase.” Their mission, which the legacy of Asch, is ‘to document “people’s music,” spoken word, instruction, and sounds from around the world’ and is committed to ‘to cultural diversity, education, increased understanding, and lively engagement…

A History of Recording East African Music News

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…ture at various universities and was awarded the bronze medal for “Devoted Service to Africa” from the Royal African Society in 1958. His legacy lives on as he gives his name to a prize for advanced and critical essays in organology, at The Society of Ethnomusicology. Moreover, the Klaus Wachsmann Music Archive at the Makerere University, Uganda, has recently been set up. There is a course in archiving at the university and archive at UCLA has bee…

Tracey Instrument Collection News

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…s is a lute of the Gishu (also known as Gisu or Bagisu) people, who mainly live in the Mbale district of Eastern Uganda, on the slopes of Mount Elgon. The skin stretched across the cylinder is held with small pegs and two metal strings go over the wooden bridge, with nails as tuning pegs. We recorded the Elgon Ngoma Troupe, who are part of the Bagisu people. Here they are performing their pre-circumsicion ritual – something that the Bagisu people…