Courtesy Osborne Macharia
Meet Kabangu, Kenya's hip hop grandpas. Having started their careers in the 80s, they teach would-be rising stars the important values in life such as upholding peace, equality, prosperity and social justice. Little had been known about them up until now...
Courtesy Osborne Macharia
Security guards by night, hip hop heads by day, the band live in Kariobangi - Nairobi's informal settlements. An enthusiastic group of hip hop aficionados, they meet regularly to educate and mentor young upcoming talent. Or so it seems...
Courtesy Osborne Macharia
The group had remained in relative obscurity until recently - perhaps because they never existed. Kabangu are the fictional creations of Kenyan digital photographer Osborne Macharia and stylist Kevin Abraham, in their latest editorial series. The bands nonexistence has not limited them gathering over half a million views online. Some believed the group were real.
Courtesy Osborne Macharia
"It's a way of telling our stories, in our own different kind of way", says Osborne Macharia. "I think for so long Africa has been known to be a continent of war, poverty, disease, famine and so on. Sometimes when we actually travel outside and show images of back home people are always shocked and say that's not what I know about Africa from what I see in the media" he explains, adding it's "just to show people that yes we have our own issues but there is more to it, there is beauty, there is life and positive energy, there is fun".
Courtesy Osborne Macharia
The artists imagine rich backstories for their characters. Kenya's league of extravagant grannies -- another fictional ensemble -- were once corporate and government leaders in the 1970's but are now retired. They live the high life traveling to exotic and remote areas within Africa to explore, party and enjoy themselves in exclusivity.
Courtesy Osborne Macharia
Mrs. Kamau Njuguna - former governor, central bank of Kenya (1980-1985) - Macharia and Abraham managed to catch up with three of these group of extraordinary grannies in Somalia soon after they landed. Little had been known about them until now...Many online believed the grandmothers were real, some posting that they wanted to meet them and that the women's efforts had given them "life goals".
Courtesy Osborne Macharia
Mau Mau were guerilla fighters during Kenya's struggle for independence. Macharia and Abraham created an editorial series focused on them - where they became an elite group of freedom fighting opticians. In Kikuyu - one of the main languages in Kenya - Macicio translates to spectacles.
Courtesy Osborne Macharia
Karanja 'the mole' jere: normally operates underground with his modified underground breathing suite. His hair is designed to appear like a rodent burrowing through the soil and he's spectacles are telescopic able to see close to one kilometer away.
Courtesy Osborne Macharia
Nyakundi: communications expert and voice imitator, he uses the knobs attached to the mouth piece on his spectacles to imitate five different animals using code language.
Courtesy Kevin Abraham
Camo, 2015. The series of images aims to celebrate the beauty of African fabrics and is a joint collaboration between Kevin Abraham and fellow digital photographer Thandiwe Muriu.
Courtesy Kevin Abraham
"It was just a simple concept to celebrate the African prints, something that any African can relate to", says Kevin Abraham. "I chose to work with prints because at that time the textile industry in Kenya was facing a lot of issues in terms of bureaucracy and challenges to textile production in the country", he says adding I though "the best way to make this situation better and to put a different perspective of positivity to was to create these works".
Courtesy Kevin Abraham
"I wanted to make it diverse or different from any images you've come across so hence the colors and spectacles" says Abraham.
Courtesy Osborne Macharia
Afro Juba, 2015. The concept was to celebrate both African hairstyles as well as childhood games. The hairstyles were created by Kenyan locals Richard Kinyua and Corrine Muthoni. "Each image was representing a certain childhood game that all Kenyans identify with" says Macharia.
Courtesy Osborne Macharia
Pictured: Afro Juba 2015. Duf_Mpararo - Skinny dipping in tadpole infested water. "Once Kenyans identified with it, we also started to realize that many Africans go through the same thing. I think that's what makes this project really stand out" explains Macharia.
Courtesy Osborne Macharia
Afro Juba, 2015. Muwindo - Hunting for quails and other small birds. Skinny dipping in dirty water and hunting for quails were all childhood games many people could identify with, say Kevin Abraham and Osborne Macharia. "We used to it in Kenya but you find people from different countries, from Nigeria, from Ghana and from South Africa say yes we used to do that as well", adds Macharia.

Story highlights

A Kenyan photographer has created an imaginary supergroup of octogenarians

Known as Kabangu, the fictional band has proven so popular many believe they actually exist

CNN  — 

They’re known as Kabangu, and they’re a group of hip hop grandpas who’ve been around since the 1980s – or so it appears.

This ultimate band of “true hip hop heads” allegedly double as security guards by night in Kariobangi - one of Nairobi’s informal settlements.

By day, the four men are said to educate and mentor up and coming talents within the hip hop scene.

The lyrical heavyweights remained in relative obscurity until recently, when they joined forces with Kenya’s “League of extraordinary grannies.”

These high flying ladies, who were once corporate and government leaders in the 1970s - travel to exotic and remote areas within Africa to explore, party and enjoy themselves in exclusivity.

A fictional creation

Unfortunately, you can’t really listen to any of their records. It would be great if these two sets of octogenarians actually existed, but they are fictional characters created by Kenyan digital photographer Osborne Macharia and stylist Kevin Abraham. The pair’s editorials - often shared on Instagram and creative network Behance - have proved so popular that many believe Kabangu are indeed spitting rhymes across Nairobi. The series has had over half a million views across the internet.

“The majority of our audience and the people who come across the images and read the stories believe that it’s actually true, or that it is something that’s about to happen” says Macharia. The duo met in 2014 at an artists showcase and have been working together since.

Our work is about spreading fun and sharing stories that are “positive and uplifting,” says the pair, who identify themselves with “afrofuturism.”

“We just wanted to set a new direction for storytellers and we’ve actually seen it starting to change locally where people are actually producing content that has a story, content that has meaning, content that is futuristic and based on our own ideas” says Macharia. “I feel this is the time for me as a stylist to tell my own story about my own environment” Abraham further adds.

Elsewhere, an elite group of freedom fighting opticians

Macicio - an elite group of freedom fighting opticians - was the pair’s first fictional story released last year. It revolved around the Mau Mau - a very real - group of guerilla fighters operating during Kenya’s struggle for independence.

Research carried out by Macharia and Abraham revealed a special unit of five opticians who hand crafted spectacles that would reveal or spot the enemy at night.

Again, because the Mau Mau existed, online, some believed the story was true. The purpose was to “change up” how Mau Mau fighters were portrayed explains Macharia, adding they were seen by colonials as savages and barbarians with “perverted tribalism”.

“This was just a project that glorified them [Mau Mau] and what they did for us”, he says. The outfits worn in the editorials are from recycled waste. Abbra explains: “during that time I used to collect garbage and my idea was to turn something that is ugly into something that is positive and that’s how we came up with those costumes and the spectacles”.

Snoop Dogg and Jamie Foxx, it transpires, are fans. The latter shared the pair’s images on his Facebook page - an incident Macharia describes as “letting you know you are doing the right thing”.