By Our Reporter
On Good Friday, The Villa filled steadily as patrons streamed in for its now customary live band night, a growing staple within the city’s nightlife ecosystem. Across Kampala, live music has evolved from a niche offering into a defining feature of urban leisure, with bands like Abeeka Band, Janzi Band, and Vanessa and the Band building loyal audiences through tightly curated performances that blur the lines between nostalgia and contemporary sound.
At The Villa, The Maestro’s Band has been steadily contributing to this movement, crafting a reputation for dynamic sets and strategic collaborations. In recent weeks alone, they have shared the stage with artists like Lilian Mbabazi, whose vocal range and storytelling added depth to their repertoire.
Good Friday’s edition, part of the broader Tusker Malt and The Singleton Band Nights platform, leaned into this collaborative spirit. The night’s guest was Mbarara-based singer T-Paul, whose arrival signaled a shift from a routine performance into something more electric.
Tusker Malt and The Singleton Band Nights feed into Kampala’s live band phenomenon, curating memorable nights but at the same time give people a chance to express while experiencing the two brands.
“Our focus with Tusker Malt Band Nights is to celebrate the richness of Uganda’s live music culture by creating platforms where artists and bands can truly connect with their audiences. Nights like these show that live performance is not just entertainment, it’s an experience that brings people together, and we are proud to be part of that story,” said Sandra Againe, the brand manager, Tusker Malt.
The band eased into the night just before 10pm, working through a fluid setlist that oscillated between contemporary hits and old-school classics. The audience, buoyed by the elasticity of a long weekend, responded with equal enthusiasm, indulging in sing-alongs, call-and-response moments, and the occasional comic relief from media personality Isaac Katende.
There was an ease to the night: cocktails circulated, beer buckets made their rounds, and the crowd settled into a rhythm that felt both familiar and anticipatory. Then T-Paul stepped on stage.
Fresh off a high-energy showing at the Tusker Lite Neon Rave in Mbarara, he carried that same momentum into Bukoto. His set was equal parts performance and communion, running through crowd favorites like Nyamunyonyi, Ekirabo, and Sawa Sawa (his collaboration with Lydia Jazmine), each delivered with a confidence that kept the audience firmly in his grasp.
But it was his awareness of the moment that stood out. Acknowledging the Easter weekend, T-Paul pivoted into gospel, briefly transforming the venue into something akin to a late-night fellowship. Joined by two vocalists, he steered the crowd through a soulful interlude that blurred the boundaries between performance and worship, before seamlessly returning to the high-energy set that had defined the evening.
Moments like these underscore why live band nights continue to resonate. Beyond the music, they offer unpredictability, spaces where genres collide, artists experiment, and audiences become active participants rather than passive listeners.
In Kampala today, that experience is increasingly being shaped by platforms that understand the cultural currency of live performance. Without overwhelming the stage, brands like The Singleton and Tusker Malt have positioned themselves within these spaces, less as sponsors and more as enablers of a nightlife culture that values authenticity, collaboration, and musicality.
As the night at The Villa stretched into the early hours, one thing was clear: live band culture is no longer just an alternative, it is the main event.





