Benga is a
genre of
Kenyan popular music. It evolved between the late 1940s and late 1960s, in Kenya's
capital city of
Nairobi. In the 1940s, the
African Broadcasting Service in Nairobi aired a steady stream of
soukous,
South African kwela,
Zairean finger-style guitar and various kinds of
Cuban dance music. There were also popular folk songs of Kenya's
Luo and
Kikuyu peoples.
Luo Benga
The Luo of Kenya have long played an eight-string
lyre called
nyatiti, and guitarists from the area sought to imitate the instrument's
syncopated melodies. In benga, the electric
bass guitar is played in a style reminiscent of the
nyatiti. As late as the turn of the twentieth century, this bass in nyatiti supported the rhythm essential in transmitting knowledge about the society through music. Opondo Owenga of Gem
Yala, the grandfather of
Odhiambo Siangla, was known in employing music as a means of teaching history of the Luo.
In 1967, the first major benga band,
Shirati Jazz, was formed by
Daniel Owino Misiani. The group launched a string of hits that were East Africa's biggest songs throughout the 1970s and 1980s. Shirati Jazz's biggest rival was
Victoria Jazz, formed in 1972 by
Ochieng Nelly Mengo and
Collela Mazee. Despite many personnel changes, Victoria Jazz remained popular throughout the 1970s, when the
Voice of Kenya radio station pushed an onslaught of East African pop. Victoria C Band of
Awino Lawi was one of the splinter group of Victoria Jazz.
1997 saw the death of three...
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