Meet the Band: Zack Dimmer (bass), Brandyn Lowry (vocals), Niko Salwan (drums), Timmy Sawchik (guitar), and Charlie Wilson (vocals, saxophone, and keys)

Cease and Desist: Wanyama began as a band called Cleveland Zoo, but according to Wilson, “it turns out the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo has that copyright dating back to the 1930s.” So the band adopted the name Wanyama, which means “animals” in Swahili. Wilson claims it’s “something people don’t forget.” Even if they can’t pronounce it.

Wrong Way: The Cleveland group’s mix of funk, hip-hop, and reggae sounds so much like Sublime that its music was once criticized as sounding like one of Sublime’s B-sides. Wanyama took it as a compliment.

Why You Should Hear Them: The band’s funky reggae-rock mix goes down smooth onstage. They’ve played on bills with the Original Wailers, Tribal Seeds, Carlos Jones and the P.L.U.S. Band, the Macpodz, and the Meditations. And even though they sound like that one California band, “We will always represent Cleveland music,” says Wilson.

Where You Can Hear Them: wanyamaband.com

Where You Can See Them: At the Grog Shop on October 26.

Alexander Hall

Scene's award-winning newsroom oftentimes collaborates on articles and projects. Stories under this byline are group efforts.

2 replies on “Local Band in Focus”

  1. Wanyama puts on one hell of a show~ their music makes you wanna groove around. Their songs are unique and catchy. I love their songs, lyrics and the sax… nice touch. Looking forward to more great tunes my Wanyama.

  2. This Mama and Yo Mama gonna see if we can’t coordinate a whole night off to come see you, finally.

Comments are closed.