Forget the DJ. Forget the auto-tune. If you walk into a packed, smoky bar in Nairobi’s outskirts or the foothills of Mount Kenya after midnight and hear a single nylon-string guitar fighting against a crowd screaming “Heeeey!” — you have found Mugithi .
A few ladies arrive. The guitarist starts a slow Kamaru classic. Couples do the slow shuffle —no choreography, just walking in a circle while holding a glass. mugithi
Someone shouts "Tongoria!" (Lead us!). The singer launches into a mukingo —a 20-minute medley of songs strung together. The crowd sings the kirogoto (the high-pitched, wailing backing vocal). Women form a line and do the Mwengere dance—small, fast steps while holding a handkerchief or a beer bottle. Forget the DJ
Forget the DJ. Forget the auto-tune. If you walk into a packed, smoky bar in Nairobi’s outskirts or the foothills of Mount Kenya after midnight and hear a single nylon-string guitar fighting against a crowd screaming “Heeeey!” — you have found Mugithi .
A few ladies arrive. The guitarist starts a slow Kamaru classic. Couples do the slow shuffle —no choreography, just walking in a circle while holding a glass.
Someone shouts "Tongoria!" (Lead us!). The singer launches into a mukingo —a 20-minute medley of songs strung together. The crowd sings the kirogoto (the high-pitched, wailing backing vocal). Women form a line and do the Mwengere dance—small, fast steps while holding a handkerchief or a beer bottle.
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