In the music highlighted this week , romance seems to be on the mind of the artists with them exploring the tension that comes from being unsure in the face of unrequited love.
Nikita Kering’ unites with Vic West and a whole ensemble to put out an Afro house song that is rich in production techniques to show the tension of love but the narrative ends without a major decision unlike the COMPLICATED situation that alternative rappers tg.blk and Lu describe leading to an eventual break up.
B Classic 006 gives us a song where lovers are more sure of each other’s feelings and are holding an engagement feast. Grammy considered artist Fena Gitu reaches across the class divide of Nairobi to collaborate with Zzero Sufuri for a club banger that will rock both uptown and downtown establishments.
COMPLICATED– tg.blk featuring Lu
There’s an unmistakable ache that runs through COMPLICATED— the kind that lingers in the air long after the last note fades. tg.blk sets the tone from the first line, painting a picture of emotional exhaustion and miscommunication in a relationship that’s clearly run its course. “One day you love me then you don’t oh no,” she sighs, the words tumbling out with a mixture of disbelief and resignation. The track’s chorus, “Oh you’re too complicated girl I want to know / I don’t understand what you want me for,” anchors the song’s central tension: a lover who feels alienated by inconsistency, trying to navigate feelings that are both tender and toxic. tg.blk’s delivery is neither bitter nor apologetic; it’s that quiet middle ground where confusion gives way to acceptance. Her parting lines: “Got to tell you farewell hope you find some love” sound less like closure and more like a benediction for the one who couldn’t stay.
Lu’s verse enters as a counterpoint as it is smoother, more melodic, yet equally wounded. He recalls the tenderness of what once was: “You are so pretty baby, I love how you blush when you talk to me.” There’s nostalgia in his tone, the kind that makes remembrance feel like self-torture. When he raps, “I wash it down with a Hennessy but every time I drink I get sentimental,” it’s a small confession of how memory and melancholy intertwine. His verse circles around itself, mirroring the cyclic nature of heartbreak: the return to old feelings, the rhetorical questions that never find answers — “How are you toxic / how can you live with yourself?” Lu’s closing admission, “Always known you’re just trouble though / I guess that is how the story goes,” gives the song its emotional full stop — weary, self-aware, and profoundly human.
Produced by Nuri, the track’s soundscape perfectly mirrors its lyrical mood, stripped down yet pulsating with quiet intensity. The beat draws from bubblegum trap but trades the usual 808 aggression for something more introspective. A digital guitar loop forms the heartbeat of the song, light and airy, while a faint horn hums beneath like a ghost of emotion that refuses to leave. tg.blk hums along the beat in subtle harmonies that double as rhythmic anchors, her high-pitched tones adding warmth to the lo-fi melancholy. It’s a composition that feels personal, almost homemade ,,the kind of intimacy that characterizes the best of Kenya’s alternative hiphop (alt-hop) scene.
Both tg.blk and Lu embody a new creative defiance within Kenya’s alternative rap movement. Their collaboration in COMPLICATED isn’t just a meeting of two artists but also a merging of sensibilities. tg.blk’s DIY aesthetic and emotive delivery meet Lu’s polished sonic craftsmanship, yielding a sound that’s experimental yet familiar. Together, they reaffirm the growing voice of the alternative hip-hop community. The cultural impact of COMPLICATED lies precisely here: it normalizes vulnerability in Kenyan rap while carving space for alternative narratives of love, heartbreak, and identity. It’s not just a breakup song, it’s a quiet manifesto for a generation making sense of complexity in both love and art.
Pendana Nawe – Nikita Kering’
Pendana Nawe is a love song built like a ritual — a dance between language, rhythm, and emotion. From its opening moments, Nikita Kering’ creates a mood that is both intimate and ceremonial, her voice rising and falling like a tide of yearning. “Something about you makes me feel high, it’s not there within / you don’t pair with me,” she sings, a confession wrapped in uncertainty. The song’s structure leans on the Afro-house tradition of repetition and trance-like layering, where every lyric seems to echo back on itself, deepening its emotional resonance. The background vocals chant “Mimi nakupenda,” their soft insistence swelling with each bar like a Greek chorus, until Nikita herself responds, “Mi nataka kupendana nawe.” The dialogue between her and the chorus isn’t just musical, it is theatrical, recalling the Swahili poetic form of ngonjera, where meaning emerges from conversation, rhythm, and refrain.
The second verse heightens both the romance and the rupture. When Nikita switches from English to Swahili, the language shift itself becomes a metaphor for duality — of love’s purity and its pain, of devotion and betrayal. She croons, “We could be something bigger than the night,” before slipping into darker tones, her alto now heavy with emotion. The second verse unravel the idealism of the first half, with the persona confronting deceit: “Na unanicheza we wanicheza.” It’s the heartbreak of realization, tempered by grace, as she warns, “Subira sinanga, we wani shinyanga / Ila wanitesa tena wanitenda.” Her delivery oscillates between strength and fragility, pulling listeners into the push and pull of love that hurts but refuses to be silenced.
The song’s production, helmed by Vic West, Trill Xoe, and DJ Tarico, is a masterclass in Afro-house fusion. The backbone is a steady East African shaker pattern that grounds the instrumental, layered with chakacha-style drums that pulse with coastal flair. Synths and electric guitars weave into each other like silk and smoke, while the horns punctuate the rhythm with breezy authority. The result is an orchestra of textures including digital loops and organic percussion coexisting in perfect tension. The soundscape builds in waves: shakers quicken, synthetic drums tighten, and a low hum announces each vocal entrance like the breath before a storm. The dual register of Nikita’s voice — soprano brightness and alto depth — finds perfect contrast against the shifting pitch of the keyboard, crafting a sonic narrative as complex as the emotions it conveys.
Pendana Nawe marks a bold chapter for Nikita Kering’ and her collaborators. For Nikita, it’s a decisive expansion from R&B into Afro-house, a world where the body and spirit meet in rhythm. For Vic West, it’s an experiment beyond his afropop and gengetone comfort zone, fusing polish with unpredictability. Together with Trill Xoe, DJ Tarico, and Omphile Mosome, they form a continental ensemble ,a true orchestra of African sound. In a landscape where
Afro-house from East Africa is gaining global attention through acts like Suraj, Kato Change, Idd Aziz, and Sofiya Nzau, Pendana Nawe positions Nikita as both student and innovator. Its cultural impact lies in how it reclaims the house genre as a vessel for emotional storytelling; deeply African, linguistically fluid, and spiritually resonant. Here, love is not just sung; it is built, layered, and lived in sound.
Nare – Fena Gitu & Zzero Sufuri
Fena Gitu’s newest offering ignites much like its title. Nare,slang for a matchbox or fire is a track that burns slow before erupting into a confident, easy flame. Produced by Nagi Beats, the instrumental is an understated triumph in genre blending, fusing the bounce of gengetone with the smooth pulse of afrobeats. A high-pitched keyboard riff loops steadily, serving as both rhythm and restraint, while a soft synth hum smooths out its edges, setting a laid-back, nocturnal tone. Beneath it, layered percussion unfolds with deliberate intricacy ;a genteel afrobeats groove, punctuated by the occasional trap 808 burst that gives the song its dancefloor punch. It’s the kind of beat that doesn’t demand a party but builds one, carrying an intimacy that matches the fluid, collaborative spirit between Fena Gitu and Zzero Sufuri.
The song’s narrative plays out like a night in motion. Fena opens with a playful hook that doubles as a manifesto for good times: “Hakuna kulala hadi kesho / when hata hatuko jabaration / Savannah juu ya meza bila ration.” The lines blend coded references to drink, khat, and weed — indulgences that, for the night, are the language of unity. “Basi tulewe sote bila tension / nani ako na tools bila nare?” she continues, hinting that the real joy lies in peace ,a night where everyone is free, unbothered, and glowing. Zzero’s first verse expands the canvas, transporting us to a Kileleshwa party: “Tamasha ni kwa ma barbie leo tunachezea Kile.” More than a flex, it’s a symbolic moment where a hood rapper is bridging Nairobi’s class divides through music and camaraderie. He turns the setting into metaphor: crossing estates is like crossing social worlds, and Nare becomes the matchstick that sparks the connection.
The double entendre in Zzero’s “Mali safi safi hapa hatukulangi manyaru” lands with a knowing grin — both a nod to quality weed and fine women, weaving the sensual with the symbolic. His second verse rides the high of the night’s euphoria, “Nafeel poa ni vile vibe iko juu / after kuji pulizia ni mashuksha tu,” capturing the easy drift between intoxication and joy. It’s humorous and human; even when he quips “Na kuna form ka huna fare unaeza kuja miguu,” the warmth of community eclipses the lack of money. Every line is delivered with a confidence that feels earned — not just the bravado of a rapper, but the calm charisma of someone who knows how to hold a crowd’s attention. When Fena returns for her verse, she shifts the focus inward, narrating her own search for connection: “I’m in my element, me no vibe with a dumb dumb / pretty girl fi want to go home with me.” Her delivery is sultry yet grounded, and when she pleads, “Please be gentle, me I’m delicate / usi hesitate,” vulnerability sneaks through the swagger. By the bridge — “Nikislide in, pure badness… I’m liking your madness” — the night has come full circle, desire and energy finding balance.
Nare is more than a party anthem; it’s a portrait of Nairobi’s urban identity which is layered, collaborative, and proudly hybrid. Fena Gitu, long dubbed “The Fenamenal Woman,” continues to anchor Kenya’s alternative urban sound, using genre fluidity as a political act of inclusion. Zzero Sufuri’s presence grounds the song in gengetone’s grassroots energy, ensuring that the groove never loses its street heartbeat. Together, they collapse the imagined borders between uptown and mtaani, proving that rhythm, not class dictates belonging. As Fena celebrates Grammy consideration for her recent work, Nare stands as evidence of why she remains a cornerstone of Kenya’s evolving music culture: she doesn’t just make hits; she builds spaces where different worlds can dance together.
NAOA– B Classic 006
NAOA opens with the kind of soft urgency that defines a lover’s plea ;tender, rhythmic, and unashamedly devoted. B Classic 006 assumes the role of a man whose love is not just deep but electric, his voice trembling with both awe and conviction when he sings, “Umenigusanisha nyaya za umeme / umavyokata ndio usiseme.” This opening line, laden with imagery, frames love as something both dangerous and divine—an energy one cannot resist or rationalize. The singer’s rhetorical questioning that follows, “Nikupee moyo au nikupee figo?” captures that blend of passion and self-effacement that defines old-school serenades, yet his delivery is resolutely modern, almost conversational. The tone oscillates between playful exaggeration and earnest devotion, giving the listener the impression of a man speaking both to his beloved and to himself, rehearsing the vows he intends to make real.
What follows is a narrative of surrender that deepens the emotional scope of the song, transforming NAOA from a mere love confession into a portrait of devotion so consuming it borders on the spiritual. When B Classic admits, utilizing an onomatopoeic device, “Kwa penzi lako baby nimelewa tila lila / kikubwa baby nahitaji ndoa sina hila,” he frames love as intoxication and an altered state where clarity and madness coexist. His words, drenched in sincerity, suggest that what might appear foolish to the outside world is, in truth, the purest form of commitment. This idea is reinforced when he sings about being mocked by his peers in the pre hook that also belatedly declares an engagement feast,“Huku kwetu leo ni sherehe, mapenzi yamepamba moto.” Even the simplicity of the chorus:“We ndio na, we ndio na marry babe,” embodies a kind of mantra-like repetition, an invocation of certainty in a world where feelings often falter.
The song’s production, handled by Denzel under the Black Market Records umbrella, stays faithful to the lush, emotive soundscape of bongo flava while stretching its warmth through deft use of instrumental layering. A soft keyboard progression sets the melodic foundation, its notes gently rounded by digital synths that mimic the glide of human breath. Over this, Denzel weaves occasional horn flourishes—airy, almost teasing—adding to the song’s romantic playfulness. But the real mastery lies in the guitar work: an interplay between soft electric harmonies and light Latin-inspired loops that ripple through the verses, mirroring the spontaneity and humor in B Classic’s lyrics. The rhythmic balance is achieved through the contrast between the weight of slow R&B-style drums and the flickering hi-hats that erupt toward the end of each verse, ushering the listener seamlessly into the chorus.
B Classic 006, whose name nods to his home county of Taita Taveta (006), has become one of Kenya’s most consistent torchbearers for Bongo-Flava genre that thrives on a blend of melody, storytelling, and emotional vulnerability. From hits like Stella and Call Me Baby to his recent resurgence in May after a quiet spell in 2024, his career has mirrored the very romance he sings of: enduring, occasionally tested, but never extinguished. NAOA thus feels like a symbolic reaffirmation of his artistic commitment after a hiatus, a musical proposal not only to a lover but to his audience.
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