Dowe Music Band arrives at Mombasa Terminus |
The weekend started with a wonderful journey on Friday 8, February
2019 from Nakuru to Mombasa. A team of four, (two gents and two ladies) had
been preparing for the Entrepreneurship Summit organized by the YouthEmpowerment Program Initiative (YEPI) for about a month. Tasked with a duty as
the guest artists, the team under the leadership of the director knew this was
an event to put their best foot forward. From the feedback after the event, you
can be sure, they never went wrong.
Mr. Amani (Center), CEO, YEPI |
The two nights were spent at Garden Park hotel while the
event took place at Sai Rock Beach Hotel. Upon arrival, the team made sure that
the clients at Garden Park had a snippet of what was in their package. Little
did they know that they would be needed the following day due to public demand.
However, this couldn’t work as the main occasion of the weekend ended almost
midnight and the songbirds had an early train to catch up with.
Late Night Performance at the Dinner, Sai Rock Hotel |
We must applaud Mr. Amani Katana, the CEO of YEPI together
with his team for the transformative work they are performing at the coast.
This is one among the many young people who are on cause to transform Africa.
Looking at the invited speakers, the idea pitching competition, panelists and
the whole meticulous organization of the event, one would think this was a
foreign company with fifty years of existence in Kenya. On the contrary, YEPI
have embraced the art of collaboration, team work and synergy. This is a big
lesson to all of us, especially the youths who have grown up with a competing
attitude. Leveraging on others’ strength makes one formidable. A force to
reckon with.
From Left: Douglas, Mitchelle, Juliana and Antony |
Dowe Music Band was on stage starting with a performance
from Asa’s beautiful tune ‘Jailer.’ As
the audience seemed to settle, the sizzling violin tune on ‘You Raise Me Up’ arrested every one as
if to command them to pay attention. This was followed by Eric Wainaina’s Daima Mkenya in which the violin leads
the verse while the singers take on the chorus.
In what seemed as a fresh reminder of the recently departed
hero Mr. Oliver Mtukudzi, his international tune Todii engulfed the audience as
they could resonate with the guitar plucking and the organized vocals.
Ms. Mitchelle and Douglas on Jailer |
You
could see from the audience that the worth of a man is actually in his work,
which lives on even after he leaves the earth. The team then sang Siteketei with the energy that the siong
commands of any performer. The MC, known as Mr. Good Stuff signaled the team to
do the last piece. No other tune does the curtain raising better than No To Poor Leadership and own
composition that gets everyone singing along or better still nodding in
agreement with it’s simple but provocative message.
The various speakers challenged young people to rise up and
be on course. One, Ms. Carol Odera, MWF2018, Tony Elumelu Fellow and a Yali RLC Alumnus reminded the young entrepreneurs that Financial Capital is important but
its not the main reason people fail to start businesses. One must invest in
knowledge search.
During the tea break, the hall was jammed with cool live
Jazz performed by Mr. Ogutu. The guitar was on point and it sort of reminded
people that this is February, a month of love. With his favorite phrase Babu
Kanambia ( Grandpa told me), sipping coffe has never been easy and fun than at
the time whenyou hear words of widom fused in tunes made of guitar strings. One
of the Idea Pitching Judges would later say, “Wow, I loved the Guitar plucking.”
Mrs. Julie Mwinyi is a business Coach at the YALI RLC, East Africa Region and
an MWF alumni.
Douglas, Solo Jazz Performance |
The pitching competition premiered five participants in
which the winner will receive $1000 (Ksh. 100, 000) to boost the initiative. The
top three entrepreneurs will get a one year mentorship program from Hazina
Trust Organization which is one of the partners with YEPI. Moving forward, we
can only say that such activities should be encouraged and if our leaders are
looking for youths to support ( as the claim has always been), then it’s time
they acted on their quest. We shall do it even if they don’t showp though.
Team at the Terminus |
In conclusion, we are grateful to the YEPI fraternity for inviting
Dowe Music & Arts the opportunity to entertain the guests. We look forward
to bigger engagements and call out to any other organizations to emulate the
same. Our music is live and authentic, relevant and least to say sound. Doesn’t
our tagline command us so? It reads, Dowe
Music & Arts: RIDING ON EXCELLENCE!
The writer is the founder of Dowe Music & Arts
What's life without good music..
ReplyDeleteThat was great.
Thank you
DeleteGood job Dowe,, I hope to join in one of the concerts soon!!
ReplyDeleteAwesome work they do
DeleteThanks, we sure look forward to seeing you jam along
DeleteYes, we'll walk with you
DeleteWow that's great Dougie
ReplyDeleteSafi, kizazi hiki kitafaidi
ReplyDeleteAwesome. That was a good move. Keep it up. There's so much ahead.
ReplyDeleteThanks for being part of the journey
ReplyDeleteWas a good experience.
ReplyDelete