Mugithi — Link

Go for the curiosity. Stay for the whiskey. Come back because you finally understood the "Heeeey!" and it felt like coming home.

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. mugithi

"Guitar ndiriumaga" — The guitar does not bite. But it might make you confess your sins before sunrise. Go for the curiosity

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 . Someone shouts "Tongoria

This isn't just music. It is a cultural therapy session, a history lesson, and a party that doesn't end until the rooster crows. In the Kikuyu language, kugithi means "to take a walk" or "to go around." But musically, it means taking a slow, sentimental Benga beat, stripping it down to one acoustic guitar, and speeding it up until it becomes a rebellious shout-along.

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.

This is where it gets interesting. The singer switches to "reggae beat on acoustic guitar." The whiskey is flowing. The lead guitarist breaks a string and fixes it without stopping.