Report: R&B dominates Kenyan airwaves

KBC Digital
3 Min Read

Once seen as a niche genre, R&B is now firmly rooted in the rhythm of everyday life in Kenya, and the numbers prove it.

In just four years, R&B in Kenya has gone from an underappreciated genre to a dominant one. Back in 2020, R&B-related streams hovered around 40 million according to Spotify. By 2024, that figure had grown to over 930 million.

The biggest surge came early, between 2020 and 2021, streams jumped 382%, and the momentum hasn’t slowed since. Year after year, R&B’s presence has swelled, reshaping Kenya’s music DNA in real-time.

Spotify says shift a “cultural moment”

Spotify’s latest R&B data underscores the genre’s rising influence across East Africa, culminating in what promises to be a defining cultural moment in Nairobi.

Leading the charge are global icons and homegrown heroes. Chris Brown tops the 2024 charts with 12M+ streams, followed closely by SZA (10M+) and The Weeknd (8M+).

Nigeria’s genre-blurring Tems also makes waves with 8M+ streams. But it’s not just an import affair, Kenyan singer Bensoul holds his own with nearly 7 million streams, signalling a home audience hungry for local voices with global-calibre sound.

Nairobi – The genre’s cultural capital

Among 18–24-year-olds alone, the genre logged over 30 million streams, the highest across all age groups.

For Gen Z in the capital, R&B isn’t background noise; it’s the soundtrack to real moments—romantic reels, moody commutes, curated playlists.

Even younger listeners (13–17) clocked 2M+ streams, while the 25–34 crowd also showed strong engagement. It’s proof that R&B’s emotional pull and textured production resonate across age brackets.

Kenya’s R&B rise mirrors a larger continental wave. In 2023, Spotify teamed up with COLORSxSTUDIOS to spotlight African R&B artists, pushing the genre into new spaces and showcasing fresh talent.

That collaboration helped cement Africa’s role in shaping R&B’s global future and gave Kenya’s scene a bigger stage.
While Gengetone drives the party and Afropop commands the dancefloor, R&B is carving out space for something deeper, emotion, introspection, and personal storytelling. It’s the sound of quiet nights, long thoughts, and loud feelings.

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