Classroom lesson 路 Music馃嚬馃嚳 Tanzania

Bongo Flava - Tanzania's modern music

The made-in-Tanzania sound now heard right across Africa

A drum and microphone representing Tanzanian music

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Bongo Flava is the name of Tanzania's modern pop music. It started in the 1990s, when young Tanzanian musicians began mixing hip-hop and R&B from America with traditional African rhythms, all sung in Swahili. Today it is one of the most popular kinds of music across East Africa.

Tell me more

The name 'Bongo' is a nickname for Dar es Salaam, Tanzania's biggest city. (It comes from the Swahili word ubongo, meaning 'brain' - a joke that you need brains to survive in such a busy place.) 'Flava' is the English word 'flavour'. Put them together and you have 'the flavour of Bongo' - the sound of Dar es Salaam.

Most Bongo Flava songs are sung in Swahili, which means listeners across all of East Africa can understand them. Songs are about love, family, friendship, growing up and the small struggles of daily life. The beat is bright and easy to dance to, often built on traditional drums underneath modern keyboards and bass.

Bongo Flava artists are some of the most famous people in East Africa. Singers like Diamond Platnumz have hundreds of millions of views on YouTube and tour all over the world. Their videos are full of bright colours and Tanzanian streets, beaches and family parties.

Bongo Flava lives next to an older Tanzanian style called taarab, which has been popular on Zanzibar for over 100 years. Taarab mixes Arab, Indian and African instruments. Many Tanzanian children grow up hearing both: taarab at older relatives' weddings, and Bongo Flava on the radio and on their phones.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why might it help a new music style to be sung in a language lots of countries share?
  2. 02What kinds of music do you hear at home? Do they mix sounds from different places?
  3. 03If you invented a new music style, what would you name it after?
Try this

Classroom activity

Find one Bongo Flava song online (your teacher can pick a kid-friendly one) and listen together. Then listen to a traditional taarab song. What instruments can you hear? What changes between the two?