When Giovanni Kiyingi steps on stage, something ancient stirs. The air thickens with rhythm, as though ancestral spirits have taken seats in the crowd. His fingers, agile and reverent, move across the endingidi, a single-string fiddle whose voice can cry, whisper, or rejoice. Before long, he reaches for the adungu, or the akogo, or the […]The post Bringing Uganda’s lost sounds back to life first appeared on Sqoop - Get Uganda entertainment news, celebrity gossip, videos and photos.