“Tausi Ndege Wangu” was a signature tune that introduced the Swahili soap opera Tausi on KBC TV in Kenya in the mid-1990s. The program was very popular with TV viewers across the country.
Coming at a time when most TV programs were imported from abroad, local content naturally became an instant hit with audiences. To give a complete local touch, the producers chose the song "Tausi" as the introductory tune. The introduction was laden with significance; while the country’s entertainment was dominated by foreign art, the country also had talent that could quench that thirst.
The song was recorded in the early 1950s, making it one of the earliest songs recorded in Kenya. Alongside other hits such as "Olivia," "Ajali Haikingiki," "Jambo Singara," and others, Fundi Konde remains an important pillar of Kenyan music, having played a significant role in the nascent days of the country’s music industry. He was there from the beginning and didn’t just witness its development, but actually played an important role in shaping it.
Fundi Konde, who was born Kenga Mbogo in Kilifi on August 24, 1924, began his musical journey playing the flute while still a student in a Catholic mission school. He later debuted his career as a full-time musician when he was enrolled in the colonial military, the King’s African Rifles, with the specific role of playing the flute and entertaining soldiers. A zumari is a bamboo-made wind instrument very close to a clarinet. The instrument is central to many Giriama folk tunes, and being one, this was Fundi Konde’s entrance before learning other instruments.
Historian Levin Opiyo, in 2023, posted a video of Fundi Konde while in Sri Lanka, accompanied by a caption that read:
“King’s African Rifles entertainment group entertained East African soldiers fighting in Ceylon, now Sri Lanka, in 1945 during World War II. They gave 350 performances in a year, covering 60,500 miles in Ceylon, India, and Burma. Among the soldiers performing in Southeast Asia was the hugely influential guitarist Fundi Konde, who joined the King’s African Rifles band in 1944. The double bass guitar was played by a corporal from Uganda. Another member of the band was George Senoga Zake, who was among the people responsible for producing a new national anthem for Kenya at independence.”
In the video, a young Fundi Konde is captured playing an acoustic guitar with unmatched expertise.
It was upon his return that he joined trumpeter Ngala Karani and drummer Joseph Chuza in Peter Colmore’s African Band, one of the pioneer professional bands in the country, in 1947. Fundi Konde is one of the most notable Kenyan pioneer electric guitarists. He ventured further and incorporated several genres into the traditional coastal music.
Fundi Konde also worked as a producer with the Kenya Broadcasting Service, as the national broadcaster was then known, before rebranding to VOK. While at KBS, he recorded several songs with Esther Fadhili, who was Fadhili William’s sister and also worked at the radio station.
Fundi Konde also worked with HMV (His Master’s Voice), a British record company with a subsidiary in Nairobi, as a sound engineer and musician, before switching to High Fidelity. It was there that he worked on "Malaika," a Fadhili William song whose authorship has often been disputed.
The musician, who has been praised as the "father of Kenyan music" by Them Mushrooms in the song "Daima," composed in his tribute, later settled as a music producer. The song extols his contributions to music and emphasizes his singing prowess: “kama ninga ulisikika, mashariki mwa Africa” (Like a pigeon, your voice entertained the entire East Africa). As a producer, through his hands, many great hits were made.
Several songs sung by Them Mushrooms and other Coast-based bands are either his compositions or old songs adopted from the rich coastal folk music, most of which were first recorded by Fundi Konde, while some were entirely his own compositions. He thus takes credit for having modified old traditional songs associated with the coastal traditions and making them recorded music for wider listenership beyond the Kenyan Coast.
Fundi Konde died on June 29, 2000, a death that brought to an end a career that had lasted six decades. He remains one of the icons of Kenyan music, hailing from the Coast region, which also produced greats such as Fadhili Williams, the Mushrooms Quintet (comprising five siblings from Kaloleni in Giriama: Teddy Kalanda, John Katana, Billy Saro, George Ziro, and Denis Kalume), the Pressmen Band of Albert Shehi and Willy Mwang’ombe, Adam Nadro Solomon based in Canada, Mzee Ngala of Bango fame, and many others.
Fundi Konde also mentored several musicians, an achievement that decorates his legacy further. Many upcoming stars passed through his mentorship, as he was himself a polished guitarist, composer, singer, and producer.
By Jerome Ogola
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