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Joseph Kamaru dies aged 80

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Joseph Kamaru dies: Legendary musician Joseph Kamaru has died. Kamaru has died at the age of 80. The revolutionary musician has been ailing for some months now and was admitted at the MP Shah Hospital in Nairobi.

The musician developed back pain in April. Kamaru’s family said his back problem has affected his walking. In April, the musician was compelled to go public and deny rumours that he was dead.

Kamaru started his singing career in 1956. For the better part of the 1980s, his vocals were a signature tune in most music stores. He recorded nearly 2,000 songs addressing morality and offering life teachings.

The songs stamped his status as a Kikuyu music legend who touched East Africans’ hearts with classic hits such as Gathoni and Charia Ungi. Although the younger generation may not be familiar with him, those who grew up in the ’80s recall he was a force to reckon with as far as Kikuyu classic music goes.
Growing up in Kangema, Murang’a, Kamaru said music was part of him long before he recorded his first song.

“I want to bless the President and the land of Kenya because it is the only home we were given. I also wish Kenyans lived in peace and love,” Kamaru said in one of his last interviews this year.

In the late ’70s, Kamaru had a good relationship with President Jomo Kenyatta, but the two fell out after he wrote a song condemning the murder of JM Kariuki in 1975.

Kamaru was also close with President Daniel arap Moi. In 1980, Kamaru toured Japan as part of Moi’s entourage. After the visit, he composed Safari ya Japan, praising the President.

Moi was however unhappy with Kamaru’s support for multiparty democracy in the late 1980s.

In 1993 Kamaru switched from secular music to gospel and disbanded his group, the Kamaru Supersounds.

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