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Kenyan fashion designers are providing effective face masks

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BY EMBUKANE LIBOSSO

With breathable cotton cloth masks now approved by World Health Organization due to the scarcity of surgical masks in this COVID-19 pandemic, Kenyan fashion designers are burning the midnight oil. They are providing masks to alleviate the shortage.

Designers like Teq Binti from Zuri Afrique have taken to the streets of Nairobi and Kisumu to hawk their cotton cloth masks, using the Facebook platform to get more orders. Yvonne Odiambo from Afrostreet Kollections on a Facebook post notes:

“To everyone who has supported us. Thank you!
Through buying these masks, by tomorrow we will have produced 156-170 more masks to donate to those who can’t afford to buy them.
Suggestions to how and where we can distribute is highly welcome.”

“Our masks are made of two layers of 100% breathable cotton materials and are washable for re-use.”

“In between the layers is a non-woven filter material to fortify protection against any liquid in case someone coughs/sneezes near you. This should be removed and disposed correctly after use.”

“N.B: We have improvised this particular solution by mimicking surgical/N95 masks *in the best way we can*”

“Secondly, it is better having a mask on. The mask prevents you from touching your face, (i.e. mouth and nose) known entry points of the virus.”

“Thirdly, when you wear a mask you not only protect yourself, but others.”

#MaskForAll

With the Kenyan government announcement this week that everyone will be required to wear facemasks when using public transportation, Avido, a designer from Kibera – teaming up with Project Kenya and Uweza Foundation – have created facemasks and given them freely to their community.

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Kenya News

The story behind the story Sema Stori brought to you by Docubox East Africa

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BY EMBUKANE LIBOSSO

The Sema Stori (Sheng slang for Stories that Speak) project is brought to you by Docubox East Africa with the support of Comic Relief Collaboration. Drawing fine young filmmakers from the East Africa region working within their local communities, the project seeks to spark conversations around mental health, early childhood development, gender justice, and the right to safe secure shelter and settlement.

Sema Stori is working with skilled and locally rooted filmmakers to share stories about the issues from their own perspective. It focuses on creating documentary shorts which will be made through small awards to talented filmmakers in the East Africa region, and with support to assist film makers in accessing mentoring, tapping into opportunities for their films to be seen, and focusing up front on the social impact they want to create. Docubox based in Nairobi, Kenya leads the project – an African led film fund, run by African filmmakers for African filmmakers.

Judy Kibinge, Oscar Academy nominee, founder of  Docubox and known for producing critically acclaimed films including: ‘Coming of Age’, ‘Dangerous Affair’ and ‘Something Necessary,’ is well aware about the funding challenge among African filmmakers. Judy says, “I was too familiar with how difficult it was for African filmmakers to keep making excellent work without more support – funding, technical input, networks, the list goes on.  We couldn’t have been readier to have a conversation with Comic Relief when we heard about the direction they wanted to take.”

The first film to premiere on Wednesday, August 12th, 2020 was “It’s Okay Not To Be Okay,” a film by Eugene Muigai. The short documentary film is a personal story following the life of Eugene Muigai, a boy who has struggled with depression. It follows his personal journey from childhood through adulthood, as he struggled with feelings of inferiority, feeling misunderstood, hated, and alone, without a clear purpose to justify existence in this world. Mental health has long been a subject that has drawn stigma and ridicule locally, and that is exactly why Sema Stori chose it as one of the four pillars in the Sema Stori Program.

“I am a creative who is passionate about storytelling, and I enjoy every aspect of it,” Eugene Muigai speaks of his passion for film.

Every Wednesday the project will be rolling out the films on the Sema Stori Facebook page for the public to watch and raise conversations during the week. Later on a panel will be invited the following Wednesday after the documentary premiere for a series of talks and conversations. This will run from August to October. The month of August focuses on mental health.

Creative storytelling is a growing industry in East Africa. Judy Kibinge adds on the Comic Relief website, “We’re so excited and looking forward to supporting the creation of this series of short films – important stories told by local voices. We’ve left it entirely to our filmmakers to let us know what stories they are burning to tell, and Docubox and Comic Relief can’t wait to keep you posted about them all.”

If you’re wondering what impact driven storytelling is all about, Thank You For The Rain is a great example of this

supported by a range of organizations including Docubox. Released in 2017, it follows the story of a Kenyan farmer Kisiilu who started to use his camera to capture the life of: his family, his village and the damages of climate change. During the film we see him transform from a father, to community leader, to an activist on the global stage inspiring climate action.

Sema Stori is unfolding and that story behind the story is what the project hopes will end up being as powerful as the stories themselves!

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Kenya News

“THREE!” An album celebrating love, life and happiness

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BY EMBUKANE LIBOSSO

Nigerian afro-dancehall superstar Patoranking announces his third album, Three, arriving August 28th via his own Amari Musiq imprint and US-based Indie powerhouse, EMPIRE.

Contemporary and multifaceted, the new album bills from “Odo Bra” with Ghanaian highlife star King Promise to “Whine It” with Kenya’s Sauti Sol.

Without a doubt there’s no shortage of musical diversity on Three. The project delivers a heavyweight slice of conscious reggae on “Lion in the Jungle” while the tender “Matter” sees Patoranking reconnect with Tiwa Savage, with whom he previously teamed on breakout track, “Girlie O.”

“Three is a strong number,” Patoranking says of the album title’s significance. “It stands for how I see language. In making the album, we tried to look at love, life and happiness. If you are listening to any of the tracks, even if it is a dance track, I want you to feel love.”

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Kenya News

Kenyan superstar Afro-pop quartet of Polycarp Otieno, Savara Mudigi, Willis Chimano and Bien-Aime Baraza drop first album with Universal Music Africa

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BY EMBUKANE LIBOSSO

Reviews.
Most writers who submit reviews are always cautious. Any art, book, play or performance you choose to review, you are always under scrutiny since you are dissecting someone else’s art and putting your voice as an authority.

I am a music fan. I enjoy music. I enjoy reviewing events and music festivals. I love music and sometimes writing about music, and not being a musician always ends up getting me in trouble over sentiments I write, that an artist feels was not right. But we always end up talking while at events, and agreeing to disagree. It’s fine because at the end of the day, opinions are personal.

The other day on my Facebook timeline I saw a post that Sauti Sol fans loving and praising the new album, are like Prophet Owuor followers. If you have no idea who the prophet is, let me save you that energy. Prophet Owuor, whose key messages are centred around repentance and holiness, enjoys a cult like following. The person, who shared on Facebook, went ahead to call Sauti Sol’s new album flat, and that those praising it were just cult followers to the band.

When I rocked up the Ngong Racecourse in 2016 to cover their “Live And Die In Afrika album launch” I wrote that they had definitely ‘come of age!’ That night, an 8-man band and a set of dancers, made everything explosive. From their choice of outfits, to the stage props—heck, they even ferried a piano and the actual benches they used to sit on while singing acapella back then at Alliance Francaise. I wish there was no Rona because honestly Midnight Train album deserves a live album party launch.

The intro draws the listener in and takes you back to the Nairobi Railways steaming engine vibrations before Midnight Train kicks off. Just like the train’s onset, it is mid-tempo and samples Toto’s 1982 track “Africa”. There is hope! We will reach our destination.

Insecure is the next track. We all have our baggage and insecurities we carry into the relationship. This song addresses that. The lyrics are metaphorical and sensational.

With the COVID-19 pandemic, Brighter Days release was perfect. It features the prolific Soweto Gospel Choir and in all its subtle politeness leaves that hope; brighter days will come!

With Disco Matanga and Rhumba Japani, there is an open invitation to dance and make merry. Rhumba Japani has been on a replay loop ever since I heard it and arguably it is one of my favourites on the album. How they tie in the party vibe to the politics in lyricism is amazing.

India Arie is an artist who has had immense influence on the quartet and to get her on the track My Everything, just shows how much midnight oil was burned. The jam is groovy, slow paced yet has all these blends of romanticism spiced on it.

The music video for Suzanna brings that funky throwback 70s retro perspective. The track explores today’s generation, and what it will do to afford a luxurious lifestyle. Leki Alaba Isama directed the video, and shot in the city of Lagos, Nigeria. It explores that African heritage in sound with the strings and the drums.

Overall, the album is uplifting and energetic. When the train halts, it gives the listener pause to ponder over love, jamboree, insecurities, politics and hope.

  1. Tracks:
    Intro
  2. Midnight Train
  3. Insecure
  4. Feel my love
  5. Brighter Days ft. Soweto Gospel
  6. Nenda Lote
  7. Suzanna
  8. Set me free (Interlude)
  9. My everything (ft. India Arie)
  10. Wake up (ft. Mortimer)
  11. Sober
  12. Rhumba Japani
  13. Disco Matanga

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