D.O. Misiani & Shirati Jazz

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Beatrice #4 00:00 Tools
Piny Ose Mer 00:00 Tools
Isabella Muga 00:00 Tools
Rose Akoth 00:00 Tools
Margret Odero 00:00 Tools
Otieno Anyango 00:00 Tools
Wuoth Iye Tek 00:00 Tools
Nakuru Bor 00:00 Tools
Dora Mamy 00:00 Tools
Dora mamy (Umoja edit) 00:00 Tools
Auma Nya Kanisa 05:58 Tools
Giko Piny 04:39 Tools
Kiseru 03:54 Tools
Wang'ni To Iringo 00:00 Tools
LK the Pretty 00:00 Tools
Alice Atieno 00:00 Tools
Dr. J. Abuya 00:00 Tools
Joshirati Misiani 04:53 Tools
Honourable Horace Owiti Ongili 00:00 Tools
sister mary lucy 00:00 Tools
Safari ya Garissa 00:00 Tools
Harusi Ya Mk 00:00 Tools
Safari Ya Tanzania (Visit to Tanzania) 00:00 Tools
Agnes Nyashirati (Agnes, Shirati's Friend) 00:00 Tools
Simaya Chunye Oketo 00:00 Tools
Sheroline 04:44 Tools
Nyar Gombe 00:00 Tools
Mary Pt 2 00:00 Tools
Ngeruok Joshirati Pt 1 00:00 Tools
  • 4,609
    plays
  • 1,944
    listners
  • 4609
    top track count

D. O. Misiani was one of the last surviving stars of the 1970s "golden era" of Kenyan music. Known at home as the "King of History", abroad he was dubbed "the grandfather of benga" for the speedy regional roots style which became almost synonymous with Kenyan music soon after the mid-1960s. Born in 1940, Daniel Owino Misiani grew up in a part of northern Tanzania where the main ethnic group were the Luo, most of whom live in neighbouring Kenya, around eastern Lake Victoria. His parents were singers and Misiani started his musical journey in school, hospital and church choirs, later playing percussion with a local acoustic group. His strict Christian father smashed the first guitar his son was given, but by the end of 1963, Misiani had overcome such opposition with gifts of livestock and clothing bought from his earnings as an itinerant musician in Tanzania and Kenya Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.