 Fufafu TV. It's a pleasure. Thank you for hosting me. Alright, so introduce yourself, what you do, where you're from, etc. My name is Holly Honest. I'm a musician. That's your camera. I'm a musician, I'm a entrepreneur and a volunteer. And also a community strategist. Okay. Those are very heavy titles. Community strategist, entrepreneur, still a musician as well. How do you, and a volunteer as well? Congratulations for those. How do you actually put all of those things together and still be able to do music before we get to where you're from? You know, it's about me managing me, myself and what I'm supposed to do as a man and as a person. So I get to do all this because I am able to do it. So at what time do you get that, because I believe as a musician or as an artist, you are a creator, you're a creative in other words. And every creative falls into that space where you're vulnerable enough to start writing. You're so creative, personally I've interacted with people who like, they just lock out, they shut out everything and they get into that zone of writing lyrics. Is it something that has ever happened to you or for you it just comes like a miracle and boom, you have lyrics and then you're in studio? You know, since that I've already said that I'm into a lot of things, I get motivation from so many different things. So from the stories, from the places, from the people, from the communities, from locations and areas where I always go, that is why I get those stories that I come to tell people. Before you came alive on air, you told me that you are originally from Uganda. Yes. I think you have an interesting story about your background. Please just tell us a little bit of that before we get to the rest. About my background. Right. I'm a no fan. Yeah, I'm a no fan. I was raised by, okay, let's not go there. Now be free to, be free beyond pen to share. Because this is your journey, this is your experience. Yeah, understand that. But I don't really talk about it actually. Why? What makes you to not talk about it? Is it crazy? Is it hurtful? Is it painful? It is painful and hurtful. It's not crazy. Okay. Yes. So I don't really do talk about it a lot. Okay. And I actually do talk about it via my songs. Okay, you have kids? No, I do not have kids yet. Okay. Yes, but I do have a family of people that I know close to me. Those are my colleagues, my friends. All right. Yeah, but I don't have a family that initial family. All right. Now, because you're an artist and every artist needs support and I'm just trying to imagine how do you actually choreograph yourself and package yourself to be this kind of an artist without a lot of support from your background. Who are your main supporters as well? Okay, my first support is me myself and my last support is me and myself. Okay. And then whoever comes in, I always thank God. You know, since that I was raised in an orphanage, I came to understand that in this world, first you have to push yourself before, then people will catch up from where you are. All right. That the moment where I am, at least I have a foundation. Okay. Where sometimes people see that, let's dig in, let's contribute, let's do that. So I would say that I am my first support and the last support. Yeah. Okay. At the moment where actually I don't, I am an independent artist. Aha. So I do support myself in all that I do and then other, I do have also friends sometimes who don't contribute when it comes. Actually in my community are the services. Okay. So my friends always participate. All right. I'm really interested to actually just get a little bit of that background story, like from an orphanage in Uganda to now Kenya. I just want to know what happened in between here before you came to this guy that you are here. Just a little brief from orphanage. That's an interesting story really. Please tell us. Orphanage to now musician, to now Uganda and now in Kenya. When I turned 18 years, I left Uganda and then I came here. I came here as an upcoming artist. When did you land in Kenya? It was in 2016. I started my career in 2018 professionally 2019. I was discovered by a Kenyan legend but before that I was an underground rapper and we used to, I used to actually battle in most of some of the community hub centers around Dagoreti South in Rangai. So I was discovered in Dagoreti. Okay. By a Kenyan musician who is a legend. Okay. It's called Filter from Makin' Busy Family. All right. Makin' Busy Family. Taking you back. As I've already said that I'm no fun and then I came here left today orphanage. So it's been really tough. I don't really talk about it. I wanted you to talk about it because a lot of us are usually ashamed to talk about our scars. Especially the boy child. Nobody is open, nobody is vulnerable enough to tell their story. I struggled to be an artist. There's an artist in our country who talked about when he was starting his career he had a lot of rich friends who never supported his music or played it on radio. But now he's made it though. He's a household name in Kenya. So just sharing your story and where you came from can inspire anyone like you out there watching. So away from that I'm really also interested to understand where did you reach to that point and just like I'm going to do Afrofusion because you mentioned it's Afrofusion and you've also mentioned that you used to do rap battles. That means you've done Saifars and you're also you know attributing it to the Makin' Busy Family which is like a solidified music group in Kenya. How did you reach to that place and understand that you know for me as wholly honest. And also your name is interesting. We'll get to that as well. How did you reach to that point and say this is me and this is my identity as an artist? It is after when actually I found out that I am full of I am full of gifted different ways on how I can tell stories. So when you look at the way the world is going the way people are living is inspired in so many different ways. So I fused my category of music due to the fact that when you get from Randa when you get from TZ when you get from Uganda and get from Kenya you get only one soap. Very very delicious soap. So that soap is what my music is all about. So for me to say I am full of gifted music. I didn't know you can speak so freely. Of course I do. I do. I am full of gifted music. I want to share more of Uganda more of Kenya more of Randa more of TZ and Nigeria too. So that is why I am touching so many different stories so that I can inspire everybody. I don't categorize people getting inspired in so many different ways. So you don't have a specific genre of music it's like freestyle freestyle kind of music. I don't like specifying what I do you understand because the world that we are living in nowadays you are saying now we are in a mainstream world you can jump on anything you can be inspired by anything and do it. We in the world where at least anything is possible you have been seeing how Amapiano came and took over we didn't know about it how Drill came and took over we didn't know about it. So if I wake up and I do a gospel song in a drill way that is also inspirational. That's interesting because rarely do you see someone who is everywhere or not everywhere with so many inspirations. It's about giving me a microphone and I show you what I can do. You just give me a microphone I need to hear the sound. Please, usyandoke kablo one of your favorite songs. It's okay. If you know how to create a sound it's okay. Now let's focus on your music your first song when was it out was the name of the song how was the writing process the inspiration as well. It was very interesting that I was I remember it was actually a very surprising day nili kwatu nitaapu na beshtewango so we beshtewango li kwa connected na beshtewake of which happens to be filter so umu say he came, he passed by so Alitu Patatuki freestyle yojiwani Aka katu like Kando Aka ni hangali aso mi sikwa na jua so we were freestyling playing beats playing instrumentals so after kuestya kaniwe kakanda kaniwe ambi ebu hi mbi ebu imba venyo li kwa na imba tse na so aka niwa maza kusima anything So later bat dai sikwa na jua ready asha pikiya producer beshtewaku kama ni kwa na misifu, na ni ampa na weza Tukimu, tukimu hai, ponaona, ni venye tu, by then I was really motivated, sana, because I was still down. So, yo jiyo ni, waka ni ambia ni niwa sendi kizia wa ende kaha wenda ni. So, tukifika ke kaha wenda ni kumbe tu na nda studio. So, kuningiza studio, they wanted to test me. I was freestyling on rap beats, waka ni waka afro beat. So, kuningiza afro beat ni kafrestaia. That was my first hit song. Now, hit song, I love the fact that you gave it that gooster of, this is my first hit song. Which year was it? It was in mid 2018. Between 2018 and 2018. Ya, tuli kwa 2019, I think September, because it was officially released in November 2018, bombastic. So, we recorded that. We actually recorded it sana ni, since that kutoka isomasa, tuli kwa 2, studio hyping, now now I say ni wengine, kili speyame to embia studio ni. Ya, this studio did it for spikes, actually that is where I had a calligraph also started from. Oh, wow, okay. Ya, it is called spikes music, it is located in Kawendani. I came to know that also calligraph started from that afro with them. So, after that very moment I was put in a boat. Yes, it wasn't actually that very fast take, producer said it's enough. So, in the morning DJs were coming and I was also touring the clubs in Kawendani. For the first time I didn't know anything. Ya man, it was like, it was a very great adventure. Alright, awesome. You mentioned calligraph Jones and coming from that community of very strong rappers, I'll call them conscious rappers or unconscious, whatever it is, coming from that community of such inspiration and grounding, it means you have a bright future in the industry and we wish you the best of luck. I appreciate it, I appreciate it, because after when I came to actually by the time I released that song and then I stayed at that studio so that I think the reason why they wanted me to stay at that studio is to be motivated because I have lived in a world that I was very lonely. Yes, I had songs. I could actually freestyle, write songs in my books and all that, I had them in my head but I think they kept me at that studio so that I can be able to see other musicians what they do. Because I got so many inspired by the way things are going and I got to tell a lot of stories because from that studio I think I was able to write an album. Interesting because you're also referencing to loneliness and the background of being an orphan because rarely do you get somebody who comes from a very not so good background with so much enthusiasm and positivity like you are. Now, how many tracks do you go to like large now that you would say they're already on mainstream platforms? Oh my God, I don't know how many songs. I released my album 2019, my first album of fishing 2019. But how many tracks? It was 33 tracks. I released my second album in 2021 but before I released my album I had released Arega EP. And then in January 2022 I released my first mixtape with Rajiz the DJ. Big up, I respect DJs. But when I released my first album I started at Moai Avenue distribution club to club with different DJs. Awesome. So you mentioned a mixtape, you mentioned Ragic because I'd really like to know which side you gravitate a lot like if we had to listen to your music right now which side you gravitate towards the most? Is it the Ragic side? Is it the R&B side? The trap side? The hip hop? I would say that Ragic and Afro pop I mean Afro dancer. Ragic Afro dancer because my latest album it is Afro dancer actually. Okay. Yes but my first album since that it was my first time to get that feeling, that vibe you know so I could just tell the story you know no matter how I feel, no matter how I just turned the studio on you know so I really it was Ragic, it was Dansal it was Gengi because I also featured so many different appraising artists yeah so it was full of so many different stories but this one specifically the current one it specifically was Afro What is the name of the album? At the first one it is called State of the Art Sota that is why actually I named it State of the Art because it was so many different categories and then the second one it is called The Beginning State of the Art The Beginning Do they have meaning? Those ones? Yes, yes of course At the beginning? The beginning it is after actually what I went through in 2022 Yes, yeah after the concert that I had actually happened to go and then they got the scandals and what happened after What was the what was the scandals? Please tell us man What exactly happened? You know it's knife I don't remember this Yeah I remember knife Yeah you know a lot already happened understand but me personally I was going through a lot of my personal challenges Regarding finances, production, distribution Regarding finances, production the release of my album and my second album and also depression you know so I went through a lot actually I was admitted in the hospital So sorry for that for depression I was the depression I was admitted Polesana bro because you know I love the fact that you're honest about that because a lot of people would hide so many things No no no I don't hide I don't hide Why should I hide? This perfect image like you know manatis and I have it all The only thing I feel had to tell because I was like I got tired of crying it is me my personal situation being an orphan and how I was raised but when it comes to my health when it comes to my fitness when it comes to my lifestyle I tell you know because I know that the same way maybe some people are out there when they appear in the same situation maybe some way I can get a friend who will be like we are in this together you know All right and you've actually reminded me something yesterday I mean a group of voiceover aunties through from Kenya, Uganda and USA Oh wow That's nice Yes and we talk about mostly you know some of the issues that you know especially young young media personality experience in the mainstream space and there's somebody who came and talked about you know how when the COVID-19 pandemic came they were later from a TV gig they had outside country and they had to actually go through a very bad depression and then when they were trying to actually recover and this was a boy child while they were trying to recover they were feeling a little bit shameful there was no support and things are very marky so I love the fact that you know I feel like your stories related to that kind again rarely do we get you know men opening up about you know issues that are festering them in their personal lives as well you mentioned you cry because you know when somebody hears the money is crying they be like bro why are you you are a man and you are crying forgetting that you are a human being and I can only imagine you know you are an orphan and you have all these positive energy it's just super amazing and a blessing to you as well Yeah man you know most people don't understand that it's okay for a man to cry because we are not metals we are human beings and there is no difference between me and and that person who is saying that oh you are a man and you are not supposed to cry because even what makes lions to be lions is because they show their fear you understand yes that is when a lion shows its fear you already see how it expresses right you understand it has to roll it lion doesn't roll just because it wants to scare you right you understand what I'm saying it rolls because there is something that is triggering inside should I attack or I just you know but I just lay low so it is okay for a man to cry and for those maybe who say you are a man you know suppose cry maybe they have not gone exactly what you have gone through all right you understand what I'm saying so it is okay for a man to cry and it is okay for a man to see right because the moment where we are living in a world that is really crazy all right we need each other absolutely yes it doesn't matter where come away nima na ume come away nima nima nisha na we all need each other we all need somebody to lay you know that's what the singer said right and I agree with you 100% let's come back to music in terms of distribution and airplay in Kenya would you say you've hard enough airplay and even in terms of bookings and gigs and and if yes where are the places that you know you've been played mostly and if not where are the some of the platforms that you wish they'd play you at work well initially it's been me playing my own music because Kenyans to see you to know you all right it's the Africans to see you to know you nowadays it is not easy so what is the strategy that you've got maybe to give you a breakthrough my strategy that actually I picked it is from the way back in 2005 2019 when you used to release a song you go get Bana CD on Natimbia Mta you hook it around that was my first strategy in 2019 did it work? it worked together with my DJ Totofis and the DJ Bisa we used to work in every club actually and then by then I met other people in the world of creatives so I met Raquel we used to come on kumpukaisu clubs we have club rumors sevens club each club spring iso club zenyo kwao zote iso 60 foam and I have a Florida iso club zote zakitambu where we used to that is where I used to go I beg a DJ play my music I stay there from saine up to sanane lasima sanfengu mangu all right and I stand so you heard it in a lunch disc yes I could actually ban nidikwa nawekanga njimboine okay top of my my photo top song then napeleka napea DJ actually na kaafo maybe I make sure that you know so that but you need kaafo I am telling you so then pia nidikwa na tuanga flash disc naenda na samplia basia oma tattoo asia oma tatuza umoja asia oma tatuza actually watatuza runga iso manzi big up matuza runga so yo make sure runga manzi me tizamziki angusana so I used to go na manzi please I am begging you oku naenda if you are at least atawakuskiza tu and second nisa so that is it means a lot so that is how actually that is how I have been managing giving to get money from because I don't I don't work my work is music I don't have like venya watu nasimanga so do you professional a nine to five professional is music so I started selling my music that way so niki kuja na kukonvi so kuskiza ewa shika fifty bow apo manzi na kwaunti sikwi me pita so through that that is how I managed yeah but now in the mainstream world in terms of radio tv radio tv it has not yet been I have not been able to kupata yo chansiju ya manzi lazimu lazimu toi kakitu apandani kenya man other even if you have a hit song even if you have a record song because apa kenya they don't see a record and also they don't see a hit song okay wana chagwa tukila song ni song all right but to kia nda ukuju they chagwa record a record and a hit song all right so most song hood most songs ni nizinamik records do na ona isoma songs na piwanga plaques all right you know like you see them nominated ni ni ni ni but hit songs ni zemi da da da da da da have broke broke records like zemi nda zina play ona isiki zayongoma kila kila ziki he shot it on rotation yeah so at the moment I'm trying to enter the music business world but before nili kwa music industry interesting because I even don't know the difference between the music world and the industry kuna difference say since that we were you know when we were attacked by a ma piano and drill music business in Kenya so here at least in Imeansaku but before up in Kenya and East Africa to li kwa kwa me music industry okay interesting yeah because music industry nili nili ona enda studio na fayangoma na kapa studio wudimusani all right omi fika but music business it is ome to a song you have a strategy you have a team the song is already on retortion already doing tour you're ready booking shows you have people who are running things for you and you too you are running things for yourself for yourself yeah interesting that is what is available at the moment in the industry now interesting but have you made use of the digital platforms in terms of diesel, ITU, Spotify and the rest since that I'm independent that is of course I'm trying but at the moment I look forward to I look forward for greatness I look forward for partnership I look forward for collaboration I look forward for for fans I look forward for collaborations from so many different aspects so the world and music business people at the moment where actually I am I look forward for a hand you know, twins are better than one for these years that I've been doing music I've reached at a moment where I'm like oh god I've done enough man na takapia ni at least muntakuja seme you know what I see this is why you need to go so that you can achieve this yeah exactly because because you know the digital platforms like right now everything is heading digital yeah and in the next three, four, five years even we might not even be doing this kind of TV it will all be digital even artists for you to be played you have to first of all break you know social media you know that the biggest stars have been discovered on digital so I hope you will also take that direction because it's not going to be easy though I don't think I don't I don't really agree with you because look we are not going to fly from them from us we go to to mass you understand the way vinyatua na ungea ni kama tuntatuka hapa immediate sunde mass na una okay look um things will not yet still be the same but still things will be the same yes technology will be around but we have not we don't need to forget that still lasima 20 tuangali yaitu 5-4 on the sTV na okay you understand what I'm saying it's not about that lasima it's not about that nisa how remote young okay lasima nishikio remote ni weke wa itu 5-4 on the sTV ni angali shuiakoya wa in the morning you understand what I'm saying so it's just that things are really we are in the world where like kila kitu vitu ni mingi masani masani o manchaji masani o manchaji but realistically okay ase ni usha putezasium okay usha putezasiumu sindio uh-huh iotai menyume putezasiumu na filaji like initially how do you feel right you're distressed no you are not distressed you're distressed you are where you are supposed to be really yes because the opposite but I love I love your perspective because you know even if people want to what I'm trying to show you it is that it's not about it's it's not going to be out about internet okay in reality people have to live people have to move with the way they're supposed to live because oki putezasimu kirudi nyumbani okay you feel a very different world okay you understand okitoka online oki in the offline it's a different world so it's just we need to differentiate differentiate between online world and offline world you understand and respect that because the offline world it is you and then the online world it is why you see now everything that you want to see okay ei but nimi bado ntarudi nishi kerimutiyangu ni wikia paletchanu yangu ya wa itofaifu amen kwa diya Steven iskizan ziki please don't stop iskizana please don't stop now in terms of music if people want to access your music I thought they should access it on YouTube and have a platform so if people want to access your music where can they exactly find right now before you sing it before you sing kumoka you're supposed to sing yeah it's all right I know that right now my music is on YouTube that is why you confirm my music and also I have I have uploaded my album on SoundCloud but since that at the moment where I am and I am looking forward to enter the music business world then at least I get be able to partner collaborate and also get funding or maybe labels and also individuals when you are now as a so I hopefully that my music will be all over the world worldwide maybe 2023 okay amen because I look forward to two also to have two us yeah I look forward to have two us right so it will be hopefully 2023 it will be all over amen but currently on YouTube and SoundCloud holy honest okay holy honest we were actually you are to tell us how did you actually come up with that name holy honest you know well does it have meaning does it mean something yeah it means something you know every finish line is a beginning of a new rest oh there you go when little wait when I was when I was young I happened to be this person who was actually favored yeah and through the survival me kwa favored sana yeah me kwa favored sana by guy so kuna u this mama that looked after me then she used to say whenever I used to I use actually to cheerlead I used to I used to be everyone then you say you are so holy then so whenever whatever that used to happen I used to be to tell people like naongia too kwaeli kitiki happen na kujatuna say ma kwaeli amen daivi naivi naivi naiving so that is how I got my name so honest you are very honest you are so holy so when I when I reflected on that story after when I grew up and I was like hey okay so I started now drawing like how do I phrase this because then I was like when I was when I was young I was like in that story okay yeah interesting now your real names your ideal real names are for that one next time please tell us bro for that one next time why not why are you so scared to say your real names people love to listen to my music by the way most people want to know holy honest they need to listen to my music they need to listen most especially my second album the beginning I spoke a lot about myself I spoke a lot about what was happening in politics I spoke a lot about what was happening in music last year happening in politics this year last year and this year because I released it I released it officially in June this year so I spoke a lot about politics music business lifestyle and all that I was really told really people need to listen to that album it's amazing okay so who are some of the people are looking for to to collaborate in the industry or maybe they're watching right now and you can tell them hey please come collaborate with me for those that have categorized over here and those that are now in your niche or categorized niche fanya now it could be a shout out on stage we've been happening on stage together in the grindeton world of course I look forward to work with major because that that man man I look forward I always look at him when it comes to storytelling mta right major it's very good on storytelling so I always look forward I look I look up to him sana and I respect sana okay yeah niche actually I have categorized for him even if maybe he came late to perform nani me jaribu kumit si jamit badu but I know I look forward to that in the future but I am saying Zuri sana then I look forward to work with with Aroboy na pia na na waifu akei Nadia Mkami Nadia Mkami I look forward to that because they're also a good duo I look forward to work with I look forward to work with this Rakeless yes we have the same vibe okay yes and also I look forward to work with them I look forward to work with them this guy this guy is a dancehall artist he's a dancehall artist this guy he's called Red Sun si bia wa siwa kwa pi baida wei bata wa miputu ya sana okay awa minyama ya sana ya nazi is waire you know that dancehall you know aha those are legends in that genre right ya you know I've been trying to push up for dancehall in Kenya even to kumita but awa tu mazewa na they let me down for real sayi atuna dancehall apa Kenya it's like ni mimimi sayi niko and I'm trying I'm trying I'm trying but I would love to see them still raising like raising that flag of Kenyan dancehall you know okay ya but I look forward you know ones juu na kumbuka dati it's African bashment vibe na una kila vibe ya Kenyan na zizi ya man that was the real vibe in the in the industry but sayi manzei si juu wana fanyanini but they need to really work on music all right ya so I look forward to to at least be part of their of their life ni juue vinyana as a you know blend right you know so that I can be great na piai look forward to work with will it fall will it fall okay na wasani wengi wasani wengi nimi make it and rise wasani wengi all right karigraf piai is a great artist ya I've been looking forward to meet him you know okay ya na piai work with El Kamondi okay ya ya artists wengi sana wengi sana wengi sana I would love to work with because okangalia even Nigeria that artists make it they collaborate right they all come together share one meal right and that's how it is and he said that's how it is in Uganda kita badu si jahuna pakenyan dizudi but I look forward to collaborate with any artists many others say maho li hunis let's go to studio nisao oh okay ya to tafanya kazi all right what do you think is the biggest obstacle in the Kenyan music industry that that you'd say at a when de me fa jahu jafikaio lavo what would you say is the biggest obstacle the biggest obstacle is government really okay onajua how is that um I'm sorry to say but government is a person who doesn't practice what I preach in reality what do you mean on 100 percent I'm sorry I'm not disrespectful but I'm being hwana because that's why this is why I am okay I mean if it was most of the representatives want to talk want to onger kufraisha camera our fraishimu ta konyuma camera wanna fraisha camera all right but in reality they are not doing anything okiyanga liya in Nigeria people come together they are in music business okiyanga liya TZD have seen what is going on okiyanga liya Uganda in Uganda what government did for artists actually they had to fight a lot government said when them jipanga in groups have that organization mukuji but Hapa Kenya in 2020 actually in 2019 I became an I in the community for play Kenyan music after when I came up with a a group of so many different upcoming artists now in the future now kwa kwa aba miango so there is this thing that was going on play Kenyan music after when after when ma piano na afro popi me giasana me wa gengetona and then gengetona artists to na complain no no no no no no so we were like how play Kenyan music how play Kenyan music so after performing after usual concert we were gengetona festival when we ended and after when we didn't get paid and all that there was a lot of commotion so nika toka nika sen ok nika organize wasi nika mbe ok let us at least write a letter we send it to maybe in 2020 mutmunya naza but say sa pia na mutmunya to na to li pia nili reach out but pia nae na dafta so you know to maintain his character to maintain his fame and all that so watunya nafa kufanya ekitu they are not doing anything ekitu na dosi ele as in what do you mean do you mean like the government should help representatives watunya na jweka uko that they are representatives but initially they are not for the artists and also for the music itself they are not they have not yet done anything to show that they have they have they have ok wananzak wanawak plan let's say music committees music organizations music copyright society of Kenya yes most especially you by the way killer story na toka sorry i'll have to cut you short we are out of time please sing for us your favorite song in your album yes ok just just to just kusema tool i just need like people to really understand that the world have changed now it's not about coming together to show the government that this is what we have please do something about us and people who are out there that are showing they are representative of artists and if they are not please you need to stop you need to come on the and the board we organize ourselves do you want to end Mr. Ruto at his idea so sing for us your favorite music the message is home now yes so my favorite i don't really have favorites all my music all my songs ok any please any kus we are out of time maybe ma i will sing my first song bombastik yeah please do it just a free song she's so bombastik aha bomba she's so fantastic aha bomba but she's so one man chick aha bomba all right dem hand down de one chick man i wanna see balansi ha balansi ha balansi balansi balansi ha balansi ha balansi ha balansi balansi more on youtube all right so speaking of youtube where can people find your music we are out of time kabisa social media platforms my social media platforms on instagram holly honest fan page holly honest and also my official account is holly honest holly underscore holly honest holly underscore holly honest so and then on youtube i'm holly honest on facebook i'm prince holly honest that's my page and then on soundcloud i am holly honest but mostly i always recommend instagram and on the youtube because that is where i'm active right thank you so much for coming through and sharing i appreciate it i appreciate it see what an bigger person i want to watch why people say him please please your fans yeah manze mafan thank you sana thanks for watching why two five four in the morning wasiwanguwa rungai manze wasiwanguwa cbd hollyo gandansapo cbd wa fanyikazi wa kenyao te manze na shukuru asanti sana tina brown manze asanti sana DJ by sir regiz DJ totoface wasiwa Dubai actually they are tuned in uk right month they are tuned in and in and USA asanti sana for watching and all the guys that i've been working with musically my producers producer Kenny Spikes music now formally bombing music asanti sana and everyone who is watching salute thank you for supporting Kenyan music mazam support we have what it takes we can really really make it big in this music business and music industry and make and make records and bring music awards Grammys and all that amen yeah man amen thank you so much for coming through asanti sana holly honest you know sharing about his journey in music trials and triumphs and i'm i'm pretty sure if you're watching you have been inspired in one way or another we take a break we're back with much more still on the hashtag 1000 day vibes