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

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…elf. He is from Manafawa District and playing since 1970 and has played in Kenya, Malawi and Nigeria. He has 7 children none of who want to carry on the music tradition. Eridat Makwiri was fantastic; a very traditional player who lost himself in his music. Very much a long the lines of the Lou Nyatiti players or Ben Kinsinja. He played three songs: Wangoyo: This is a song about co-wives. One lady was lazy. And she would wait for the co-wife who ha…

Before They Pass Away News

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…add to throughout their lives. He followed the Samburu people in Northern Kenya as they travelled across the land searching for new plains for their cattle, and the Maasai in Tanzania. Singing Wells too has travelled extensively across Kenya, meeting remote tribes like the Pokot Tribe, the Marakwet Tribe and the Ameru Ethnic Community. In a Ted Talk, he shared some of the fascinating rituals that he came across on his travels. Nelson’s objective,…

Happy new year from Singing Wells News

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…g Wells YouTube channel. Our channel features videos from our trips across Kenya and Uganda, including visiting the tribes of the Kenyan Coast, Central and Eastern Uganda, our work to share the music of the Batwa community and the Luo community. We’ve told the story of repatriating Kenya’s music heritage after 50 years and celebrated magic moments – where we’ve found an extra-special artist on our journeys and recorded their work. 7. We spoke to a…

Central Uganda: Day 1 – From Entebbe to Kidinda Story

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…ful and appreciative. Sung when someone has been given something. It is an appreciation song. We then had a ‘Magic Moment’ where the troupe drummed and danced for a minute playing Nankasa Drumming Style. The lead dancers were: Fred Namuguzzi and Shadia Nalwadda. Other group members included: Cosmas Waswa, Huzairuh Ssembusi, Frank Kalema and Hakim Katongole. James Isabirye said the following: “This is an up and coming youth group which is at the me…

Singing Wells surpasses 500,000 YouTube hits! News

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…om our trips across Kenya and Uganda, including visiting the tribes of the Kenyan Coast, Central and Eastern Uganda, our work to share the music of the Batwa community and the Luo community. We’ve told the story of repatriating Kenya’s music heritage after 50 years and celebrated magic moments – where we’ve found an extra-special artist on our journeys and recorded their work. To celebrate our 500,000th YouTube hit, we’ve put together a selection…

Our top Singing Wells songs for April News

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…’re celebrating our all-woman groups with a selection of music from across Kenya. 1. Gacharaigu Gitiro Women Group, Kimunya We recorded the Gacharaigu Gitiro Women Group in Kangema, Kenya in 2014. The group, formed in 2006, is led by Fidelia Nyambura Mwangi. Their songs are dedicated to self-help. Its style is Ndumo, an old women’s dance purely for entertainment and preservation of culture. For all their songs, the ladies used the Kigamba (leg sha…

Who’s looking at you? Story

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…This little fan joined us along Lake Victoria to record some of the best Nyatiti players in Kenya in November 2011….

Rediscovering Afropop and its influences News

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…amed a musician that influences them as Daudi Kabaka. Kabaka was a popular Kenyan artist whose songs include African Twist.The traditional Benga sound is about 60 years old with its formative years occurring between the late 1950s and the 1960s. Its roots run deep in age-old Luo musical instruments. Singing Wells and the ‘bridge’ between traditional and modern Tracking the story of Sauti Sol’s musical influence excites us, as it’s a reminder of ho…

Discussions on music and culture with a young Kenyan News

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…aditional music mix – they were popular! So not all hope is lost for young Kenyans? Look, we aspire to a western life and we enjoy western music, but we have our own way of speaking in Kenya, our own slang – our own twist. There’s still some authenticity but it’s about mixes and making the most of these influences. We can’t go backwards but you could try and ensure that going forwards all is not lost for traditional music. How do you think Singing…

Meeting Ketebul: an interview with Tabu News

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…r own. I think there is a place for us in the world market and we haven’t tapped into it yet. For a long time Kenyan’s have just been music consumers. In exchange for our buying other’s music, we want them to see them buying ours. Who inspires you, and who are your influences? Anyone who is doing something original inspires me. I don’t like copycats. I like music from Jazz to Hip Hop as long as it sounds original. In terms of musicians who inspire…

Our top 5 Singing Wells songs for March News

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…more meaningful this song is. Ochieng was one of the founders of Benga, a Kenyan music genre adapted by the Kikuyu musicians of the ’60s. We were privileged to have the chance to record him and preserve his music in March 2014. Sadly, Ochieng died soon after. Had we not recorded and documented these songs, they might have been lost forever. 3. Mariene Traditional Dancers – Mpandi mautini This group was formed in 2003. They are from the Ameru Ethn…

The coolest dude at Homa Bay Story

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…A wonderful picture of one of the Kochia Dancers who we recorded on the banks of Lake Victoria at Homa Bay, Kenya, in November 2011….

From African Twist to Benga News

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…lls. Our goal was to record some of the most important ‘bridge’ artists in Kenya – a group of musicians who have built a connection between the music of their villages and modern music. They were the founders of Benga, the African Twist, Luhyia ‘Omutibo’ and the ‘Yoddeling’ sound adapted by the Kikuyu musicians of the ’60s. We dedicated six days of studio time at Ketebul Music in Nairobi to record this set of legendary musical artistes, all of who…

The repatriation of Kenya’s music heritage News

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Many hundreds of recordings by an early generation of Kenyan musicians are currently being returned to the communities in which these songs were made in the 1950s by English ethnomusicologist, Hugh Tracey. The repatriation of these recordings began in August, during a two-week pilot project in Kenya’s Rift Valley led by Prof Diane Thram, Director of the International Library of African Music (ILAM) in South Africa and the team from Ketebul Music,…

From the streets of Kisoro Uganda to a professional recording session… Story

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…Tiny Moses, backed by Winyo, plays guitar and sings in the Ketebul Studios in Nairobi. We discovered Tiny Moses during our visit to Kisoro Uganda to record the Batwa trips. Along with Francis and his wives and Jovah, we brought Tiny Moses and his team back to Nairobi to record them in a professional studio. Johnny and Bishop, on guitar and bass respectfully, joined Winyo to help Tiny Moses. Go here to listen to the result.  …

The lovely painted faces of the Marakwet tribes in the Rift Valley Story

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…This is one of the beautiful singers from the Sagat Traditional Dancers; we recorded them on March 7, 2012 during our trip through the Rift Valley, Kenya. Her white dots represent the soil and the harvest; their beads are traditionally given to them after female circumcision. These dancers had walked over 50 kms the night before to make sure they arrived in time for the recording….