Blankets & Wine closes 2025 season with Kenyan Summer edition at Kasarani

GoodTimes Africa’s Blankets & Wine held its Kenyan Summer 2025 edition on December 21 at Laureate Gardens in Kasarani, closing the festival’s 2025 calendar. Organisers said the event, delivered in partnership with the British Council’s UK/Kenya Season 2025, capped a year that included the festival’s first UK edition in Bradford.

Business News Kenya
Business News Kenya

Blankets & Wine, a GoodTimes Africa production, closed its 2025 calendar with the Kenyan Summer 2025 edition held on Sunday, December 21, at Laureate Gardens, Moi International Sports Centre, Kasarani in Nairobi, according to the organisers.

The December event, staged under the theme “COME WE DANCE!” and delivered in partnership with the British Council’s UK/Kenya Season 2025, brought together “thousands of festival-goers” and featured two performance stages and an Onja Onja Market focused on Kenyan brands, the organisers said.

Blankets & Wine has grown into one of Nairobi’s established live entertainment properties, supporting a supply chain that includes event production, hospitality, brand partnerships, artist management, vendors and creative SMEs. Its continued regional and international activity also signals the increasing role of Kenyan-led cultural events in cross-border tourism and creative economy linkages across East Africa.

On the Main Stage, the lineup included Kenyan acts Shad Mziki, Bridget Blue, Elsy Wameyo, Okello Max, Ssaru, Matata and Iyanii. The organisers said the bill also featured Scorpion Kings (Kabza De Small & DJ Maphorisa), describing the performance as the duo’s first in Kenya, alongside Tanzania’s Marioo and South Africa’s Mi Casa.

The Onja Onja Stage ran from earlier in the day into the night and featured UK artist Donae’o as well as Kenyan DJs and performers including Darkfruit, Shishi, Foozak, Tina Ardor and Ms. Mika. The organisers said the stage closed with a back-to-back set from Aly Fresh, Mura and Big Nyagz.

Organisers linked the December edition to the festival’s broader international agenda in 2025. They said September 2025 marked the festival’s first UK edition, held in Bradford, which they framed as part of Blankets & Wine’s international expansion and as a continuation of collaboration with the British Council. The inclusion of Donae’o on the December lineup was described as a continuation of that partnership.

“2025 has been a defining year for us. From Bradford back to Nairobi, we’ve shown that Blankets & Wine is more than an event - it’s a living cultural platform that travels, evolves and connects people through music and joy,” said Muthoni Drummer Queen, Creative Director of Blankets & Wine, in the statement. She added: “Special thanks to the British Council’s UK/Kenya Season 2025 for supporting a fitting close to a truly transformative year for the festival, including our first-ever international edition in Bradford, UK.”

Diane Ywaya, Communications Manager at GoodTimes Africa, said the event’s programming and community support were central to its delivery. “What a powerful way to close the year. From the main stage to Onja Onja, the market and the dance floor, you reminded us why Blankets & Wine exists,” she said, thanking the community, artists and partners.

Justine Mbugua, Head of Festivals at Blankets & Wine, said operational execution remained a priority across the year’s editions. “Every edition this year reflected months of careful planning and a deep focus on service excellence. From production and hospitality to artist experience to audience flow, we are proud of the standard we delivered and the trust our community continues to place in us,” Mbugua said.

Beyond performances, organisers said the Onja Onja Market returned with a “Made in Kenya” theme, featuring Kenyan fashion, food, art, wellness and lifestyle brands. The market component is a revenue and visibility channel for local vendors, and it aligns with a broader trend in Kenya’s events industry where festivals increasingly bundle live entertainment with retail, food and experiential activations.

Looking ahead, the organisers said Blankets & Wine is entering its 17th year, positioning the 2025 close as a foundation for future editions and partnerships. Key milestones to watch will include the festival’s 2026 calendar announcements and whether it expands further into new markets following the 2025 Bradford event.