The Birth Growth And Death Of Arts.
- Dj Tellah Grand Duke Inc. Production
- Apr 24, 2023
- 2 min read

About 2 decades ago the topic of a young person becoming a Dj or musician in Kenya was churned and looked down as an immoral art.
The society had created an assumption that Djs are naturally immoral in their known work of interacting with different crowds.
On the same hand if it ever happened that a girl or a woman was seen in discos then she would be branded as the "you can't marry this one" type.
This was when the famous South African music was picking and youths will sneak from home to discos and turn up the whole night.
In the morning after raving you either come out of the disco dead tired, hang overed or with a boyfriend or girlfriend and a really angry parent.
Then millennium appeared and booms the abhorred expertise became a respectable career and the community has seen the rising of djs and musicians to the highest levels of inspiration with clubs becoming big business and employment opportunities for many. If a young man goes to the parents and pitch proposal of being an artist then he/she gets the support needed and by so the problem was fixed.
But the society should now start fixing the potential ruins that comes with "ravin"as the young generation terms clubbing this days.
When coming out of the club this days you're either injured from fighting or you have a leaked video of you in unsaid circumstances or you've been so hang overed to have an unproductive day the list is a multiple choice Pandora’s box you just pick your poison.
Is it that we've punished the people who fought to legitimize the existence of an art or is it that we have given the youth excess freedom?
Lerte Tellah Samburu County
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