Elly Wamala (1935–2004) was a Ugandan
musician. On 22 August 2004, he succumbed to throat cancer at Mulago
hospital. Wamala was one of Uganda's first musicians to release a recorded
song and have it become a commercial hit in the 1950s when he released Nabutono. The song was so successful
that it caught the attention of a nation and Kabaka Edward Mutesa who regularly
summoned Wamala to his court to perform the song. After Nabutono, Wamala's next
release was Josephine and it also became a hit. By the time of his death, he
had over 60 songs to his name, including Nabutono produced in 1959, Viola (1974), Welcome Pope Paul (1969), Akaana Ka Kawalya (1974), and Ebinyumu Ebyaffe (1998), among others.
Elly Wamala was born "Elishama Lukwata Wamala" on 13
December 1935 to sub-county clerk Ignatius Mutambuze and Gladys Nabutiti in
Bulucheke, Mbale. He was the third of 19 children. He was raised in Bulenga on
Mityana road, by his paternal uncle, Daniel Katunda. His musical talent was
spotted when he was five years old, and his uncle started to call on him to
entertain his frequent visitors.
He studied at Bbira Primary School and later Mackay Primary
School After primary school, Wamala joined Mengo Secondary School, before going
to Makerere College where he studied linguistics, poetry, and prose.
After Makerere, he played the guitar at New Life Bar in Mengo
before going to Kenya to study advanced guitar playing at the Nairobi
Conservatoire. In Kenya, he led the Sportsman Chachacha Band before going to
England. Wamala returned from Britain with a Banjo Mandolin Guitar diploma. He
also studied TV production in Wales and on return to Uganda in 1961 worked with
the national broadcaster, until 1981 when he retired. Wamala was diagnosed with
colon cancer in 2000 but later succumbed to throat cancer. He is survived by a
wife and 13 children
Wamala dropped out of school in junior secondary three and started
to work at a Kampala music store. He quit and started to work with the then
Public Works Department (PWD), and later as a receptionist and resident artiste
with Opel Tom Tom, a recording studio in Kampala's industrial area. When Opel
Tom Tom closed, Wamala moved to Nairobi where he became a resident guitarist at
a commercial recording studio, HiFi. He was picked to lead the Sportsman Cha
Cha band, which was sponsored to tour East Africa, promoting Sportsman
cigarettes. And in the 1950s, he penned his first song, the playful love song,
Nabutono. The song became the first kadongo kamu song to be recorded on vinyl
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