We claim him as one of ours, a Zimbabwean.. Sam Mangwana's father was Zimbabwean and his surname Mangwana is Shona language word for tomorrow. The current government spokesman is Nick Mangwana. Same lineage as Sam Mangwana's
Growing up in nakuru Kenya in the early 80s,i always rushed to the radio when this song was playing and put my ear on the speaker to the amusement of my parents and my aunt Eunice Rip
In Kuwait 🇰🇼 listening and missing those old days when i was a young boy in 90’s memories are indeed made of this,viva to all Kenyans listening in these hard times,don’t lose hope brothers and sisters...
Sam Mangwana, une bénédiction venue de l'autre côté de la galaxie, ce musicien est un pur dandy, d'une élégance rare, qui sait poser sa voix avec une maestria et une intelligence rares dans le monde musical. On peut remercier le Zaïre, l'Angola et toute l'Afrique pour avoir produit un tel géant
Nostalgic. Growing up in Zimbabwe around the early 90s, my father used to play this song whilst preparing the wedding picture frames. He was a professional photographer. Rest easy my man. I miss those golden years.
Growing up in Enugu, Nigeria, I always heard this song on the local ABC Radio 1 then. What a Lovely memory. Reminds me when we dash back home from school on bare foot under the scorching sun. ABC Radio 1 then Devoted 1pm to 2pm Monday to Friday to Congo/Zairian music. It is a lovely memories now, looking back. What a world!.
Reminds me of the eighties in Nairobi,I remember the first time I heard the song how my mother bursted out in a dance while still seated, then joined in singing the chorus,I sat there watching with fascination,I wondered how she knew the words and how come I never heard the song?Those riffs are on another level, every time I hear this song,it takes me back to that very moment.Legendary
Time really flies. I too remember late 80s in our home town Kiwalani, Dar es Salaam. Back in the days my brother in law used to have a huge wooden boxed speaker with huge bars along side it. I was not able to sit down when music starts.
I started loving rhumba in 2014. I was staying with my friend who was quite older than me and he really liked listening to music from the likes of Mbilia Bel, zaiko Langa Langa, and Samba Mapangala. Every evening at a time like this we were listening to the songs. He owned Compact Discs with such songs and since then I liked rhumba music to date and no one can take me away from it. Prior to that my father also listened to Rhumba while I was young in the 2000s, since then, the love for rhumba in me is unstoppable.
its funny how when someone plays music, and you think you hate it, but somehow it lodges in the depth your memories, and boom 30 years later you hear the song, somehow fond memories start flooding back, when on a sunday afternoon, mother prepared scones and dad with his favorites soda drink, waiting for the afternoon soccer match, after a sunday church service, the speaker was taken outside, and he will play his rhumba music, abd staring so far away, and you wonder whether he understands the songs, whether has been to Tanzania, DRC, or if he knew these guys personally, he had all the albums.......i can still remember the sunday routine, up to the end of the soccer match, and we all run scrolling everywhere looking for socks, shoes, and making sure homework was done for sunday morning, phew, one sentence, breath!!!
Growing up in Kenya in the 90s provided a perfect opportunity of listening to this mellifluous voice and song on KBC channel 1, live long the legend. Looks like it was last year.
I can't agree more with what you said. After more than 35 years and I still enjoy the song like its the first time. The African rhumba melody speaks right to soul and heart. We Africans are really blessed and can never be less or more than ourselves.
Forget the Grammy Awards and western accolades. No big African star has ever been truly acknowledged globally. Africa should honour Franco, TP OK Jazz, Tabu Ley, Sam Mangwana et al. We also have an obligation to disseminate their works across the continent as part of an African Renaissance and demonstration of Africa’s pioneering cultural influences 👊🏾🇿🇼🇿🇼🇨🇩🇨🇩🇨🇩
I just remembered this song and decided to search for it and here I am listening to the music after over 4 decades. Thank you for preserving this melodious song and for this I have subscribed. Can you please let us have the lyrics. Iam from Nigeria.
I have no words to describe his great songs, in 1980 was only 4yrs and the music reminds me of my mother and my late dad how they used to prepare to leave for work in the morning
iv lifted so high, back to the early 80s i was very yang used to hear it from our small SHIRIKO radio. i miss our golden ZIMBABWE. life will neva be the same again
Thanks my brothers and sisters....I remember in early 80s this songs were the talk of town...when bread in Nairobi was less than a shilling per a loaf.... Life was sweet in Town....we were staying at brilliant Ngara at Kenya railways quarters.....
Growing up in early 2000 there was a family friend and neighbor too who used to listen to KBC Kisumu and Nairobi airwaves this was a station that usually played this songs though couldn't understand the language the beats were awesome ti date on my mid twenties I'm a lover of Rhumba appreciating our own culture with great respect and teachings dancing then were respectful.
From 3:51 I raise up my hands and surrender my wallet to all the beautiful women from Yaounde through Kinshasa, Lusaka, zanzibar, Nairobi, Abidjan, and Lilongwe telling them to take everything except my identity card. Weh golden 80s which will never come again which I remember how we used to attend Christmas in palms 🌴 tied night clubs from nothing but the magnitude of happiness was more than those that the run in Mercedes Benz today having air condition but they still sweat.lord have mercy to this generation
Moi personnellement, je n'ai pas vécu cette époque mais le jour où j'ai suivi cette chanson pour 1ère fois j'avais des lames aux yeux car, je me suis rappelé de mon Papa qui était décédé avant même que je fréquente l'école. J'aime beaucoup Sam Sangwana, si j'étais riche, je le rendrais visiter avec une faramineuses sommes pour lui rendre hommage. La dernière fois, je l'ai suivi via la voix de l'Amérique j'avais des pincement au cœur 😌
I don't understand the words of this song, trust me, I am crying right now, the music is reaching deep into my soul. I love it..Greetings to all from St Vincent in the Caribbean.
This Music gave me joy whenever its being played by then radio Cameroon thanks to great presenters .The like of Muema Meombo, Peterson Yuh, Akwanka Joe Ndifo, Luke Ananga May their soul RIP..
So many years since it was composed but still hit the hearts with so much love l remember these days when we were boys listening to these songs. We appreciate you great sons of Africa. Warm greetings from Zambia.
De très beaux souvenirs 🥰..je me rappelle mon enfance ☺️ à Nkomkana 💪 et souvent lorsque maman m'envoyait d'aller écraser du maïs chez un moulinier au marché mokolo tout juste à côté il y'avait un bar qui distillait cette belle musique ❤️ de Sam mangwana que c'était beau de voir nos papas danser en sirotant une belle bière....🇨🇲🇨🇲 Nostalgique
What a wonderful set piece. Carefully mastered to spend a cool twelve minutes. My dad used to own a Sanyo Radio and he would always make sure it has new batteries. We received rhumba via this transistor marvel at the time and I enjoyed this song coming to me as "Tembo Tembura" in 1979. I was growing up in the village of Gatura in Murang'a, Kenya. When parents were away I would 'steal airtime' and listen to rhumba.
This song brings tears, all my 8 friends whom we used to dance rhumba are all gone. am alone listening. Guys like Kayola, Mayoyi, Bonzo, Mahe, Jamaica, Hemba, Saotempo, Buachanga, etc RIP
@@stephenmuguti5434 waoh! Stephen am happy to hear that you were in mufulira l equally born in mufulira and use to listen to this at council bars when parents use to send us to buy chibuku kkkkkk really nice to refresh memories
Was lucky to hear this song first time as a 5 year old , today 35 years later i remembered it and looked for it , that's the kind of lasting impression it had back then, Timeless
I remember in 1983 (i was 6yrs) whenever they ask me to sing i could sing maria tebo tabola i'am now 44yrs i thank God for the gift of life🙏
Indeed you must be happy
Great and keep it up!!
G o o d m u s i c
More years to you. And do they still ask you to sing
Iam 14 yrs old 1983 at Mawenzi Sekondary form 1
I heard this beautiful song in 1983 in North Carolina my African brothers played the song nonstop.Brings back wonderful memories.
I feel you brother.❤❤❤❤❤
Thanks man. It means that you was open minded enough to open to listen to African music then. That’s incredible
We claim him as one of ours, a Zimbabwean.. Sam Mangwana's father was Zimbabwean and his surname Mangwana is Shona language word for tomorrow. The current government spokesman is Nick Mangwana. Same lineage as Sam Mangwana's
Même héritage historique et culturelle spirituelle et les nomes succèdent depuis KONGO, many KONGO et mwanamapata muana KONGO ( n'golo) angola
One of the best song played in my wedding party in 1983❤❤!
This song brings back good memories. It is one of my dad’s favorite songs. I still play it to date, reminiscing about the good old days.
I love this guy's music. He sings in Portuguese, French, English, Swahili and Lingala. His music is evergreen. Jeff Ochieng Nairobi Kenya.
Growing up in nakuru Kenya in the early 80s,i always rushed to the radio when this song was playing and put my ear on the speaker to the amusement of my parents and my aunt Eunice Rip
Un grand artiste au grand complet sur la culture musicale
In Kenya, siaya County...Smooth flowing rhumba..reminds me my late parents. Memories 😭😭😭😭
Mos baa te en chanro mar ruoth
😭😭😭😭
,
@@bernardotieno9440
C
Dxcjfcj d dd
Sam Mangwana visited Malawi in 1985. The had a big trail of his fans wherever he performed. His music is still surviving test of time.
In Kuwait 🇰🇼 listening and missing those old days when i was a young boy in 90’s memories are indeed made of this,viva to all Kenyans listening in these hard times,don’t lose hope brothers and sisters...
Thank you brother...we're together
I used to sing this song when i was 6yrs old , there was a wedding in my village they used this song for the wedding 💃💃👩❤️💋👩
Thanks bro,too encouraging,we pulling ahead no matter what,the Almighty loves us very much
Hi
Thank You
Its amazing the different African nationalities in this comment section. Thats the power of music, just wonderful. Viva Africa!🥰
The year is 2023, I am in Finland. I listen to Sam Mangwana almost every day, keeps me going.
Much respect!
music is life bro u will live long
Je suis congolais de la RD et j'apprécie beaucoup les commentaires des anglophones sur la musique de mon Pays vraiment
Sam Mangwana, une bénédiction venue de l'autre côté de la galaxie, ce musicien est un pur dandy, d'une élégance rare, qui sait poser sa voix avec une maestria et une intelligence rares dans le monde musical. On peut remercier le Zaïre, l'Angola et toute l'Afrique pour avoir produit un tel géant
Lovely memories
Zimbabwe muriko here uko!!
Nostalgic. Growing up in Zimbabwe around the early 90s, my father used to play this song whilst preparing the wedding picture frames. He was a professional photographer. Rest easy my man. I miss those golden years.
Till my last breath I'll choose African music, If only my fellow Africans would support their own. Africa is rich, what a taste! what a flavor,
Growing up in Enugu, Nigeria, I always heard this song on the local ABC Radio 1 then. What a Lovely memory. Reminds me when we dash back home from school on bare foot under the scorching sun. ABC Radio 1 then Devoted 1pm to 2pm Monday to Friday to Congo/Zairian music. It is a lovely memories now, looking back. What a world!.
chai!!😀😀
When it was only radio Uganda... And it could play... Life of the past, was beautiful and bountiful
mon enfance . berce par cette melodie, je revoie le tourne dique de mon papa hein, avce la platine.
This reminds me early 90's when my dad had the only radio in kipsaraman, baringo kenya. I love rhumba ❤️
And now you are the only one with a 32 inch flat screen television in the whole village😂. Just imagine what your son will say in 20 Years🤣🤣
Wimbo hu unanikumbbusha1982 mbozi Tz Godwin kayange naishi Lusaka zambia salam kwa wote wanaonifaham
Dynasty 😂
Those special wooden radios rocked😂
😂😂😂😂 Enzi zile😂😂😂👍🏿👍🏿
Reminds me of the eighties in Nairobi,I remember the first time I heard the song how my mother bursted out in a dance while still seated, then joined in singing the chorus,I sat there watching with fascination,I wondered how she knew the words and how come I never heard the song?Those riffs are on another level, every time I hear this song,it takes me back to that very moment.Legendary
Time really flies. I too remember late 80s in our home town Kiwalani, Dar es Salaam. Back in the days my brother in law used to have a huge wooden boxed speaker with huge bars along side it. I was not able to sit down when music starts.
Reminds me of my late dad in the early 80’s in Zimbabwe. Oh man!
It reminds me the 1980s when I was at 10, the song was of its kind.
This hit is a special dedication to my younger sister tebola my father gave her that name
Tebola tebola we love sister.
My old days at kasekesa mwachisompola
That good music
My old days at kasekese bar mwachisompola
After reading most of these comments you'll find yourself being gripped with nostalgia. Very nice
May my dad's soul rest in peace.This song reminds me alot.
From Nigeria, in the 70s I could watch my father playing and dancing this lovely song, may his soul rest in peace
Is still alive
Memories flowing , i swear 100 years to come this music will be still be sweet
I started loving rhumba in 2014. I was staying with my friend who was quite older than me and he really liked listening to music from the likes of Mbilia Bel, zaiko Langa Langa, and Samba Mapangala. Every evening at a time like this we were listening to the songs. He owned Compact Discs with such songs and since then I liked rhumba music to date and no one can take me away from it. Prior to that my father also listened to Rhumba while I was young in the 2000s, since then, the love for rhumba in me is unstoppable.
Lovely
its funny how when someone plays music, and you think you hate it, but somehow it lodges in the depth your memories, and boom 30 years later you hear the song, somehow fond memories start flooding back, when on a sunday afternoon, mother prepared scones and dad with his favorites soda drink, waiting for the afternoon soccer match, after a sunday church service, the speaker was taken outside, and he will play his rhumba music, abd staring so far away, and you wonder whether he understands the songs, whether has been to Tanzania, DRC, or if he knew these guys personally, he had all the albums.......i can still remember the sunday routine, up to the end of the soccer match, and we all run scrolling everywhere looking for socks, shoes, and making sure homework was done for sunday morning, phew, one sentence, breath!!!
Nostalgic
U makee cry. Ma papa is stroked now
I miss dem days ,very interesting
@@Lonewolf9856-u3iMay God heal your dad.
Growing up in Kenya in the 90s provided a perfect opportunity of listening to this mellifluous voice and song on KBC channel 1, live long the legend. Looks like it was last year.
2020 listening from Diani-Ukunda Kwale county, Kenya.Memories flowing like river Limpopo
Listening from ukunda. Real Ruhmba
Listening to this from Ukunda too
@@sarahnjoki1656 listening very happily in Imara
2020 With Mr Mangwana,this song Heals Coronavirus,joy overflows
Ameeeeeen mangwana king
I have been listening to this mans music for nearly 40 years. I cant just get enough of it! This is a true legend.
I can't agree more with what you said. After more than 35 years and I still enjoy the song like its the first time. The African rhumba melody speaks right to soul and heart. We Africans are really blessed and can never be less or more than ourselves.
@@jogotokanisio3426 a❤aaa
Listening to this amazing song in Mogadishu, Somalia. Reminds me 80s in Mogadishu.
From 1988, when we are picking coffee from my grandparents plantation (Roxanna, r.i.p), to date, this song rocks!!.
This is when iwas born sam king
Ooh sorry , let her rest in peace forever
i dedicate this song to my lovely wives Mellen and Faith Oteba. I love you all. Sam mangwana the son of an Angolan and a zimbambwean
This guy has never gone wrong with what he does.
Forget the Grammy Awards and western accolades. No big African star has ever been truly acknowledged globally. Africa should honour Franco, TP OK Jazz, Tabu Ley, Sam Mangwana et al. We also have an obligation to disseminate their works across the continent as part of an African Renaissance and demonstration of Africa’s pioneering cultural influences 👊🏾🇿🇼🇿🇼🇨🇩🇨🇩🇨🇩
I just remembered this song and decided to search for it and here I am listening to the music after over 4 decades. Thank you for preserving this melodious song and for this I have subscribed. Can you please let us have the lyrics. Iam from Nigeria.
Daaaamnnnn...from +255..reminds of loads of memories with dad. My eyes are wet. RIP my lovely dad.
In Kenya,we believe Mangwana is the son of the soil who only grew up and lives in a foreign country
I have no words to describe his great songs, in 1980 was only 4yrs and the music reminds me of my mother and my late dad how they used to prepare to leave for work in the morning
Growing up in the 80's, this song ... defined our generation
Oh cette chanson qui a bercé mon enfance !! TPO mon père etait un fan de sam Mangwana !!
Rhumba will forever live and override those generation X songs. Good bless all Rhumba musicians, past and present.
iv lifted so high, back to the early 80s i was very yang used to hear it from our small SHIRIKO radio. i miss our golden ZIMBABWE. life will neva be the same again
Thanks my brothers and sisters....I remember in early 80s this songs were the talk of town...when bread in Nairobi was less than a shilling per a loaf.... Life was sweet in Town....we were staying at brilliant Ngara at Kenya railways quarters.....
These hits bring different memories
Reminds me of my late brother Vincent J
He used to play the song late Friday and Saturday night while enjoying his beers
Growing up in early 2000 there was a family friend and neighbor too who used to listen to KBC Kisumu and Nairobi airwaves this was a station that usually played this songs though couldn't understand the language the beats were awesome ti date on my mid twenties I'm a lover of Rhumba appreciating our own culture with great respect and teachings dancing then were respectful.
I was born and grew up In Kenya 🇰🇪
EastAfrica. Fond memories of early 80s &90s.. ♥
At 23 years old now but you will forgive me if I told you rumba is my best music..real music first rest follows
Early 2000s KBC channel 1 played this song several times ...it reminds me childhood...I miss that moment🥲🥲
Aaah souvenirs de mon adolescence. Merci longue vie mon père ❤❤que dieu vous protège encore longtemps. Merci elisabeth de 77
Sam Mangwana my all time best. Listening from Western Kenya
Ngoooh papa Sam, nzambe à pambola yo, a pesa yo lisusu longue vie
Maria Tebo...reminds me of my step-mom who used to play this music repeatedly. May her sweet soul Rest In Peace ✌️
Adolphus Dixon he is a live my friend! He live now in hee country Angola!
He is a legend and he got a lot 2 give us
Maria Tebbo my darling. Soki na banggi
Eddy did yoy realy understand Adolphus? I think its memories of his step ma🤔
Listening to proper lyrics from Nairobi Kenya,I don't understand the words apart from I love you Maria,but surely what a good song and lyrics
From 3:51 I raise up my hands and surrender my wallet to all the beautiful women from Yaounde through Kinshasa, Lusaka, zanzibar, Nairobi, Abidjan, and Lilongwe telling them to take everything except my identity card. Weh golden 80s which will never come again which I remember how we used to attend Christmas in palms 🌴 tied night clubs from nothing but the magnitude of happiness was more than those that the run in Mercedes Benz today having air condition but they still sweat.lord have mercy to this generation
😂😂😂
This song brings back memories of my childhood and my grandpa, when visited them at village.
Oyazola.Very nostalgic indeed.Had Jesus Christ not died I would have prayed to have musicians such as the Mangwan and the Franco teams not to die.
Relaxing, soothing, enjoyful, just nodding my head and thumbing my feet,,I feel the best,,🇰🇪🇰🇪🇰🇪🇰🇪
This is the only kind of music that will live forever ☺️
Moi personnellement, je n'ai pas vécu cette époque mais le jour où j'ai suivi cette chanson pour 1ère fois j'avais des lames aux yeux car, je me suis rappelé de mon Papa qui était décédé avant même que je fréquente l'école.
J'aime beaucoup Sam Sangwana, si j'étais riche, je le rendrais visiter avec une faramineuses sommes pour lui rendre hommage.
La dernière fois, je l'ai suivi via la voix de l'Amérique j'avais des pincement au cœur 😌
I’m a 2000s kid but I listen to these to feel calm while others be listening something else. Oldies the best❤️🫶🏿
I am young but won't be left behind! Am 89 yrs in mind,, Rhumba is and will always remain my first wife!!!!
1980s Alobo Night Club, Gulu Uganda. God bless all the brothers who made it possible for me to enjoy this African legendary.
I don't understand the words of this song, trust me, I am crying right now, the music is reaching deep into my soul. I love it..Greetings to all from St Vincent in the Caribbean.
Joanne thomas, St. Vincent and the Grenadines...I long to visit the Islands. I'm from Kenya
Joanne thomas Thanks
Joanne thomas love you
same feelings here
Joanne it's the roots dear it has to. The connection 😍
Listening from Lilongwe, Malawi, memory refreshing songs like waters of Lake Malawi
Sam mangwana is a legend,,,💯💯💯2021 where are my likes from Kenya
Back then we were in primary schools in kenya and one year would look like two years before it ends.
I had the same experience bck then life was kinda gd.
MBUTA SAMUEL MANGUANA MUANA NZOKO......
VERY GOOD...
SOKI PONA MBONGO NA KOBENGA
MARIA...
This Music gave me joy whenever its being played by then radio Cameroon thanks to great presenters .The like of Muema
Meombo, Peterson Yuh, Akwanka Joe Ndifo, Luke Ananga May their soul RIP..
So many years since it was composed but still hit the hearts with so much love l remember these days when we were boys listening to these songs. We appreciate you great sons of Africa. Warm greetings from Zambia.
Am a Kenyan 30 years old but I listen to this master piece
Imweeee 🤛🏽🤛🏽
@@daisypaul I am also kenyan living in akila 1 estate
Reards eric
🙏🙏🙏🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
Sam Mangwana is a true son of Africa. Vive la Musique Africaine
Musik tam tam
The best music in the planet 💪🏾❤️🎶💯👊🏾
I heard this song today and I loved it ❤
Maria Tebbola was a very popular song on buses of Bujumbura in 80s. I was then prof of Geography in a secondary school 52km out of Burundi main city.
Duh nyimbo nzuri Sana hiii aiseeeee
The golden era of African music. The memory of my growing up lingers!
...even the name Mangwana.
De très beaux souvenirs 🥰..je me rappelle mon enfance ☺️ à Nkomkana 💪 et souvent lorsque maman m'envoyait d'aller écraser du maïs chez un moulinier au marché mokolo tout juste à côté il y'avait un bar qui distillait cette belle musique ❤️ de Sam mangwana que c'était beau de voir nos papas danser en sirotant une belle bière....🇨🇲🇨🇲 Nostalgique
Cresci ouvindo esse sucesso e continuo aqui amando essa beleza sonora em pleno 2024. ❤
One of the best if not the best rhumba jam ever
My daddy made me fall in love with this song,whenever am playing it I see my daddy dancing it.oh it's nice music
my ears widened each time when i use to hear this song from uncle s house in early 80s in namibia [ caprivi ]
I knew this music through my loving dad in UK 1986
I too will play these songs for my generations to come
I am stuck in this music century can’t seem to get enough of rumba music growing up we had a collection of Africas best singers and he was one of them
What a wonderful set piece. Carefully mastered to spend a cool twelve minutes. My dad used to own a Sanyo Radio and he would always make sure it has new batteries. We received rhumba via this transistor marvel at the time and I enjoyed this song coming to me as "Tembo Tembura" in 1979. I was growing up in the village of Gatura in Murang'a, Kenya. When parents were away I would 'steal airtime' and listen to rhumba.
kiarùtara...mataara
African music is the mother of all musics styles!!
This song is one of my favourites , and it never gets old!
It really brings good memories and l miss my mummy😭😭
Mimi nimoja wao 90$ nilikua 23 yrs now 56 yrs very okey with those songs kisive kangundo
My father's favorite best music of his time when I was young...
Music that swept across Africa!!! Wawaaah! Nairobi, Kenya listening 17/7/2019. Song is 45 years old and still a hit!!!
This song brings tears, all my 8 friends whom we used to dance rhumba are all gone. am alone listening. Guys like Kayola, Mayoyi, Bonzo, Mahe, Jamaica, Hemba, Saotempo, Buachanga, etc RIP
Be strong brother. Treasure the memories and good times you shared . Stay blessed
Sad😢 sorry
I love this song is taking me back to mid eighties where we have an forgettable memories in Sudan .
I love you Maria Tebo 2024 Nairobi Kenya❤
2022, I'm marking Kenyan Calendar...
Sema jambo kama uko huku
Jambo
i remember dad playing a record in 1983, mufulira zambia rest in peace daddy.
yes reminds me 1983 in secondary school first year ,
what a memory
@@stephenmuguti5434 waoh! Stephen am happy to hear that you were in mufulira l equally born in mufulira and use to listen to this at council bars when parents use to send us to buy chibuku kkkkkk really nice to refresh memories
Reminds of the good old days when I was boy with no worries, trying my best to back and forget the corona jail
One of the greatest Cameroonians..
Thanks to You tube I can go on a listening spree to such great rhumba vibes
Mario Tebbo, I love this song bro... RUMBA IS SO GOOD ❤️❤️❤️
Franko's Mario is another good memorable ❤ one. But this one by Mr. International Mengwana Sam is Maria Tebbo
Was lucky to hear this song first time as a 5 year old , today 35 years later i remembered it and looked for it , that's the kind of lasting impression it had back then, Timeless
long live mangwana this dong I remember year 1983 I was live in singida mwenge street near baba wa Wazee
What's live surely... This song has reminded alot of people alot of things, surely live
Thank you so much Lynder Matiko for reminding me one of my favorite songs by Sam Mangwana.
My late father and uncles were lover of Sam music. RIP Dad and uncles.