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  • ✇OkayAfrica
  • African Songs You Need to Hear This Week
    Every week, OkayAfrica highlights the top African music releases — including the latest Afrobeats and amapiano hits — through our best music column, African Songs You Need to Hear This Week.Read ahead for our round-up of the best new African music tracks and music videos that came across our desks this week.Victony & Fridayy – “Glory II”Releasing a sequel to his latest single just some weeks after the
     

African Songs You Need to Hear This Week

18 juillet 2025 à 20:05


Every week, OkayAfrica highlights the top African music releases — including the latest Afrobeats and amapiano hits — through our best music column, African Songs You Need to Hear This Week.

Read ahead for our round-up of the best new African music tracks and music videos that came across our desks this week.

Victony & Fridayy – “Glory II”


Releasing a sequel to his latest single just some weeks after the original, Victony is flexing the reach of his artistry. Here he’s joined by Fridayy, who’s built up an impressive resume of collaborations with Afrobeats acts. The grass-to-grace narrative of the original is maintained, as Victony’s rap-informed flow is matched for intensity by his guest’s choir-reminiscent vocals. A fine blending of sensibilities, it’s a song that delivers beautifully on its role as an ode to God’s enduring grace. – Emmanuel Esomnofu

Kabza De Small - “Siyabonga”


Kabza De Small moves in his own lane. His long-awaited fifth album lays his heart bare, clarifies his intent, and reaffirms his status as the top don in the electronic music game. Not that he ever left; in the past year alone, his music was performed by an orchestra, he dropped one of 2024’s standout tracks in “Hayi Baba” (with Chronical Deep and LaTique), and laced bangers alongside Darque, DJ Maphorisa, Xduppy, and Dlala Thukzin. He’s a man on a mission: to stretch the sonic spectrum, school our senses, and come out on top every time. “Siyabonga,” featuring Nontokozo Mkhize and Mthunzi, shows Kabza at his most tender, most curatorial. It leans into 3-Step, embraces you, cradles you. It’s a prayer – “asisabi lutho, isandla sakhe siphezu kwethu imihla yonke” (we fear nothing, His hand is upon us every day) – and everyone’s invited. - Tšeliso Monaheng.

Lojay – “Tenner”


After announcing the August release of his long-awaited debut album, Lojay has set the wheels rolling with a fiery song intended for the dance floors. Pairing his svelte vocals with hyper-vibrant pop beats is an artistic choice favored by the artist, and it continues to prove a winning formula, as he paints a riveting portrait of a lady he’s enamored by. Bold metaphors, swirling notes, and banging drums are ever-present throughout the song’s runtime, but the fusion doesn’t eclipse Lojay’s voice at the center of the fanfare. – EE

Adekunle Gold – “Coco Money”


Always one to reinvent himself, you’ll be hard-pressed to find Adekunle Gold in the same spot. On “Coco Money,” he returns to the indigenous throb that influenced his early music, pairing disco sensibilities with the unmissable drums of Juju music. It’s a quintessential fly talk song, an arena the artist particularly excels in. The vocals and the energy matching each other’s vivacity, it’s a renewed demonstration of the artist’s prowess as a songwriter. – EE

TOSS, Maglera Doe Boy, Young Stunna - “Hermano”


“Hermano” is the rap Olympics – a relay of distinctive, heavyweight voices in African music. Themed around Black township life, with fashion nods to la sapeur, Black dandyism, and ukuswenka, the video brings the song to life in elegiac style. The back-and-forth between TOSS and Maglera Doe Boy deserves its own support hotline; there are simply too many quotables to catch in one go. Then comes Young Stunna on the chorus, a welcome breather from the lyrical warfare unfolding. Together, the three move like a league of their own: elite yet grounded, daunting but disarming, feisty and tender in equal measure. It’s an overload of excellence, so pace yourself. - TM.

Mr Eazi – “Corny”


On his latest song, Mr Eazi shows why he’ll always be an interesting voice within Afrobeats. The chill number produced by P Priime showcases the artist’s expanding vision as a storyteller, as he reveals the intricacies of a romantic relationship. “No go do you cunny,” he sings atop the mid-tempo production, charting a seductive vibe that sways with the lyrics of the record. – EE

Blue Pappi - “G-Wagon” (feat. LaCabra)


Blue Pappi’s on a roll, and he’s only just getting started. The emcee, vocalist, and producer, who hails from Ladysmith in KwaZulu-Natal – home of the legendary Ladysmith Black Mambazo – follows up last week’s high-octane, Kane Keid-featuring “Dairy” with a mellow, left-of-centre tune that allows him and fellow Qwellers member LaCabra to exercise their rap muscles and cross uncharted flow territory. The cadences are impeccable, and the music, very stripped back, very lo-fi, allows them to swim with intention, playing lifeguard to your treasured eyes and ears. No word is wasted, and every moment of silence is as necessary as breathing itself. South African hip-hop is enjoying its moment in the sun, and these two are but part of a bubbling movement whose legend shall be spoken about in years to come. - TM.

Mlindo The Vocalist - “iMedi Yakho” (feat. Sir Trill)


Following the success of his breakout debut, Emakhaya, and the vulnerability of his self-titled sophomore album, Lindokuhle, Mlindo The Vocalist enters his third chapter with something deeper: perspective. It's a delicate balance of talent and emotional maturity that cuts above the clatter to go for the heart. Uhambo – The Journey is an album shaped by his own lived experience. It carries the weight of heartbreak, the beauty of healing, and the clarity that comes after navigating life’s highs and lows. On “iMedi Yakho,” a duet with Sir Trill, he repurposes the melody to Oliver Mtukudzi’s hit, “Neria,” and injects an Afro-pop swing to its step. The flavours ooze from the speakers straight to your soul. - TM.

Chrissy Spratt – “Call On Me” feat. Nonso Amadi & Serøtonin


Chrissy Spratt is no newcomer to the Afrobeats scene. Through her covers, the Canadian-based artist has curated a strong presence, even going on tour with Chike. Now, the Hi-Way 89 signee has released her latest song, a three-way collaboration with the talented singers Nonso Amadi and Serøtonin. As the line-up infers, it’s a vulnerable embrace that offers the love of a partner, with Spratt holding the thematic core through her piercing verse and vocals. It continues the purposeful run-up to a project expected in August, as she’s shown an impressive ability to handle several genres. – EE

  • ✇OkayAfrica
  • African Songs You Need to Hear This Week
    Every week, OkayAfrica highlights the top African music releases — including the latest Afrobeats and amapiano hits — through our best music column, African Songs You Need to Hear This Week.Read ahead for our round-up of the best new African music tracks and music videos that came across our desks this week.Runtown – ‘Soundgod Fest IV [EP]’Boasting one of the most credible portfolios in contemporary Afrobeats, the artist Runtown has accrued a reputation as a recluse. Behind the needle-moving rec
     

African Songs You Need to Hear This Week

27 juin 2025 à 19:30


Every week, OkayAfrica highlights the top African music releases — including the latest Afrobeats and amapiano hits — through our best music column, African Songs You Need to Hear This Week.

Read ahead for our round-up of the best new African music tracks and music videos that came across our desks this week.

Runtown – ‘Soundgod Fest IV [EP]’


Boasting one of the most credible portfolios in contemporary Afrobeats, the artist Runtown has accrued a reputation as a recluse. Behind the needle-moving records is a man who just wants to stay disengaged from all the buzz, but he’s finally responding to calls for more music. Soundgod Fest IV continues his successful project series, a collection of six songs that ease into a chill vibe, with tales of love and life filtering out from the savant’s sweet tease. – Emmanuel Esomnofu

Kabza De Small - “Kabza Chant 2.0” (feat. Nkosazana Daughter, Nobuhle, Sykes)


How do you follow up greatness? You make greater moves. And who better than the undisputed king of amapiano, Kabza De Small, to show us how it’s done? On the sprawling “Kabza Chant,” the producer assembled some of the scene’s most vital voices, like Young Stunna, Murumba Pitch, and Nkosazana Daughter, for a praise song worthy of his throne. This second iteration, where Nkosazana Daughter returns, joined by Nobubhle and Sykes, is half the length yet just as potent, if not more. This is amapiano that has been performed with orchestras, heard in full houses, and felt in the spirit. It’s a shift in perception and a redefinition of legacy. It’s enchanting, exacting, and impenetrable. Kabza De Small is truly one of one. - Tšeliso Monaheng

Tekno – “Powerbank”


Nigerian star Tekno reinforces the currency of his hitmaker status over knocking Afropop drums. “Powerbank” is quintessential Tekno, boasting an astute flair for riding the beat, sounding as purposeful as ever in the recounting of a love story. When he vows that there’s “nothing I can’t do,” he sounds quite convincing, with him making quite the show of what those things might be. – EE

Yugen Blakrok - “Being Here”


With every album, Yugen Blakrok unlocks new chambers of rhythm. Her pen sharpens, her mind expands, and her worldview – always informed, never preachy – sketches parallel realms where beauty resists erasure. She moves like a magnetic field: gentle and affirming. Intentional in every breath, Yugen remains one of the best rappers doing it right now. “Being Here” deepens her already rich visual canon while her bars climb heights few dare. Sample this: “There’s times where sinners become the preachers/ Claim that they’re believers ’til you challenge their beliefs,” she raps, every bar a carefully curated slice of a bigger picture. Proceed with caution. This is real rap: unbothered, unfiltered, undeniable. - TM

Gabzy – “So Much Sense” feat. Fireboy DML


For years now, Gabzy has steered a unique vision for his R&B-influenced sound. Here, he’s joined by a similar stylist in Fireboy DML, creating a bop that evokes all the feels. With a laid-back beat evoking the promise of cool evenings, both musicians paint vivid images of chilling with their love interest, inferring that this would make so much sense. – EE

Zoë Modiga - “Uyakhazimula”


When Zoë Modiga speaks, the room listens. On record or in person, her presence demands stillness. On “Uyakhazimula,” she returns to eMbali in Pietermaritzburg, the place that raised her. The song feels like soul food, vintage couches, coal-heated stoves, and warm bread fresh from the oven. Just as the world outside threatens to fall apart, it wraps you in memory, in comfort, in beauty. This is definitive art: lush harmonies, emotional abundance, and spiritual glow. Zoë Modiga is a prime artist, and she radiates light. - TM

Da Capo – ‘Indigo Child II: Love & Frequency [LP]’


South African producer Da Capo’s establishment in the Afro-house genre is no fluke. He’s proven himself a fine creator and curator, assembling some of the most forward-thinking artists on his stellar production, and the follow-up to his last project, Indigo Child II, is no different. Featuring artists like Bongeziwe Mabandla, Elaine, and others, it is an impressive body of work with great potential to become a classic. – EE

Eli Mary - “PIECES’


On the emblematic “Pieces,” Johannesburg artist Eli Mary doesn’t just sing; she conveys feeling, using the microphone as a tool for expression. Her voice is a balm. Serene yet stirring, it drifts like smoke and lands like scripture. The beat shapeshifts beneath her, combusting in waves that mirror her emotional range. With each iteration, she peels back a new layer of self, revealing an artist who speaks as much as she soothes. This is heart music – gentle yet galvanizing. -TM

ODUMODUBLVCK – “PITY THIS BOY” feat. Victony


Released earlier this year, Odumodublvck’s “PITY THIS BOY” has all the markings of an enduring record. Between the bright strings orchestrated by Niphkeys and the harmony both Odumodu and Victony bring, it’s a delightful song to listen to. Its new video follows the opulent overtones of the song, casting the artists in scenes rich with color and activity, further extending the song’s appeal. Check out “PITY THIS BOY” and the other songs on OkayAfrica’s Best Afrobeats Songs of 2025 So Far list. – EE

Beatmochini and Towdeemac - “Eventually” (feat. Priddy Ugly, Maglera Doe Boy, Kaygizm)


The last time Priddy Ugly and Maglera Doe Boy linked up, we got a generational banger in “Ntjaka.” Now they’re back – this time on a more subdued, soulful tip – and are joined by two-thirds of the legendary Morafe: Towdeemac and Kaygizm. It hits differently, like a gentle nudge that nevertheless leaves lasting imprints on your spirit. With Beatmochini on production, this is a cross-generational link-up we didn’t know we needed but absolutely do. It’s a quiet storm of legacy, precision, and poetics. Towdeemac, once again, proves he’s not the one to front on. His bars don’t just rhyme; they ripple. Sentences run on, fold into themselves, and re-emerge as something entirely new. Who else can rap: “Cava ntja, how I inspired … to flex in their mother tongue / bona nou bafana ba kajeko ba matha joang / on another level, Joe, ba nkgopotsa nako tsa ka,” and make it sound effortless? Listen to "Eventually" here. - TM

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