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M.anifest, Solana, Guchi, Khaid and More on New Music Friday

M.anifest, Solana, Guchi, Khaid and More on New Music Friday

M.anifest, Solana, Guchi, Khaid and More on New Music Friday

This week’s New Music Friday arrives powered by motion. Across Africa and the diaspora, artists are making records that refuse stillnessโ€”whether it’s the relentless hustle mentality of M.anifest & Kwesi Arthur โ€“ “No More Sleep”, the culturally rich optimism of Solana’s “Okunkun”, Khaid’s reflections on fame and relationships, or Koffee’s fiery return alongside Skillibeng. Together, these releases are united by a common thread: forward movement. They are songs about chasing dreams, navigating pressure, embracing love, and finding purpose amid uncertainty. Leading the charge is M.anifest & Kwesi Arthur โ€“ “No More Sleep”, a long-awaited reunion that transforms ambition into an anthem, setting the tone for a week of music driven by resilience, identity, and momentum.

M.anifest & Kwesi Arthur โ€“ “No More Sleep”

“No More Sleep” is a sharp, high-energy motivational anthem that marks the Ghanaian rap duoโ€™s first collaboration in roughly six to eight years since their 2018 track โ€œFeelsโ€. At just 2 minutes and 49 seconds, itโ€™s a concise, replay-friendly banger that delivers exactly what the title promises: an alert, relentless call to keep pushing without hitting pause.

Produced by Joeyturks with mastering by MikeMillzOn’Em, the track rides a driving, punchy beat that blends hip-hop foundations with the artistsโ€™ Ghanaian roots. M.anifest opens with a memorable, anthemic hook that sets the tone: motivational, direct, and catchy enough to stick after one listen. Kwesi Arthur then slides in with verses full of pressure-tested energy, street wisdom, and smooth delivery. The chemistry feels natural and elevated, M.anifestโ€™s sharp, introspective, and often socially conscious lyricism complements Kwesi Arthurโ€™s more vibrant, gritty flow. Itโ€™s not overly flashy or experimental; instead, it prioritizes tight bars, strong presence, and replay value. The short runtime keeps the momentum high without overstaying its welcome.

The core message is pure hustle and resilience: โ€œDonโ€™t need to fall asleep to chase my dreamsโ€. Key snippets highlight perseverance across environments (โ€œOn land or sea / Tank never running on Eโ€), finding inner strength or wisdom even in solitude (โ€œAlone but never lonely, found a wisdom treeโ€), and forward momentum with purpose.

There are nods to family (โ€œall for the familyโ€), grinding with purpose, and staying fueled/ alert amid challenges. Itโ€™s motivational without being corny, rooted in real-world grind culture that resonates with artists, entrepreneurs, and everyday hustlers. The wisdom-tree imagery adds a layer of introspection and growth, elevating it beyond a standard โ€œget moneyโ€ track.

The official music video directed by Henry Desouza, with DP work by Desouza and Drew Yeeez, was shot across Accra and New York. It mixes gritty urban elements โ€” New York subway vibes and night construction sites โ€” with stylish outfits and dynamic energy. The visuals perfectly capture the songโ€™s โ€œfull alertnessโ€ ethos: constant movement, stylish determination, and the beauty in the hustle. Itโ€™s cinematic enough to stand alone while reinforcing the audioโ€™s drive. 

As a reunion collab under the respected Mass Appeal imprint, it signals continued global ambitions for both artists while staying true to their Ghanaian rap heritage. M.anifest brings depth, while Kwesi Arthur injects youthful fire. โ€œNo More Sleepโ€ is a confident, well-executed win โ€” short, impactful, and built for momentum. It executes the motivational hustle anthem formula exceptionally well, with excellent chemistry between two of Ghanaโ€™s finest. The visuals elevate it further, making the whole package feel premium and cohesive.


Solana & Killertunes โ€“ “Okunkun”

Solanaโ€™s โ€œOkunkunโ€ is a bold, genre-blending Yoruba-language cut thatโ€™s quickly earning buzz as a standout โ€œYorupopโ€ experiment on this New Music Friday. Itโ€™s a tight, danceable track that feels both nostalgic and futuristic, produced by Killertunes, he delivers a beat that fuses electronic pop, soft rock edges, dance rhythms, and traditional Yoruba (Ibile) elements. Think bouncy percussion meets atmospheric synths and subtle rock-infused grooves, with echoes of 1970s Nigerian highlife legends like the Lijadu Sisters.

Ogunlana Oluwabusolami Habibat, professionally known as Solana, handles the vocals largely in Yoruba. Her delivery is confident, melodic, and rhythmic, gliding over the production with a mix of spiritual introspection and club-ready bounce. The track was recorded back in 2023, rediscovered by Killertunes recently (famously โ€œat the beachโ€), and finally sees the light of day as a long-lost gem. โ€œOkunkunโ€ translates roughly to “darkness”, and the song navigates themes of facing darkness, resilience, faith, and emerging into light. โ€œOjo ti fe sokunkun / Emi ni kan pere / Mi o duro / Kia kia mo mura mo mere…โ€  Simply references to not standing still, preparing quickly, and overcoming evil or challenges in the dark. Itโ€™s motivational and spiritually grounded without being preachy. Solana taps into personal vulnerability and cultural pride, turning potential fear into forward motion. The lyrics may feel a bit abstract or less polished in flow compared to the production for some, but the emotional core lands strongly for many.

Solanaโ€™s โ€œOkunkunโ€ leans into traditional Yoruba aesthetics mixed with modern, cinematic flair, evoking cultural motifs, dynamic energy, and โ€œsounds from the westโ€. โ€œOkunkunโ€ is a refreshing, culturally rooted banger that stands out in a crowded New Music Friday. Itโ€™s not trying to be the next viral Afrobeats hit, itโ€™s carving its own lane with electronic flair, Yoruba pride, and emotional depth.


Khaid โ€“ B4R&W (EP)

Khaid returns with a slick, concise 4-track prelude that delivers a genre-bending soundscapeโ€”a raw, pre-fame โ€œBefore Rich & Wackoโ€ snapshot of the 21-year-old Nigerian star navigating love, ego, pressure, and playboy contradictions. At less than 20 minutes total runtime, Khaid’s “B4R&W” is built for repeat listens and short enough to digest in one sitting. This is Khaid in lover-boy mode: vulnerable yet cocky, melodic yet street-edged, post-health-scare reflective but still hungry. Khaid blends Afrobeats, Afropop, trap influences, and subtle apala/Yoruba vocal inflections. The production keeps things dynamic across the EP: plaintive piano, staccato drums, and layered background vocals on the emotional centrepiece. Roiling bass, restless grime-tinged drums, and synth loops for high-energy moments. Bright xylophone accents and clattering percussion for upbeat hooks. His voice shines throughout โ€” breathy rap-singing, smooth melodies, and that signature youthful swagger. It feels like a natural evolution from his earlier EPs (Diversity, Emotions, 444) while teasing a more mature, genre-fluid sound for the debut album. On โ€œWACKO PLAYโ€, the emotional core, Khaid wrestles with power imbalances in a relationship โ€œShebi because you senior me make say I take all the blameโ€, missing an ex while embracing โ€œwackoโ€ (crazy/playboy) energy. Superstar life doesnโ€™t fit, but the vibe is irresistible. Lyrics mix English, Pidgin, and Yoruba flair for that authentic Lagos feel. โ€œI GAT YOUโ€ is romantic and aspirational. Lines like โ€œYour beauty got me screaming Jesusโ€ flip into serious commitment vibes, โ€œY26kโ€ is a pressure cooker track about fameโ€™s pull, girls online, and self-control. โ€œGO GO!โ€ is high-risk, high-reward energy. Sports/betting metaphors, team loyalty, and that urgent, anticipatory hook.

โ€œB4R&Wโ€ navigates lover-boy struggles, attachment vs. freedom, rising-star pressures, and emotional honesty. 

Khaid continues staking his claim from street mechanic to one of Nigeriaโ€™s most promising young voicesโ€”blending street cred with emotional depth.


Original Koffee ft. Skillibeng โ€“ “Rapid Fyah”

โ€œRapid Fyahโ€ marks Koffeeโ€™s return after more than a year, pairing the Grammy-winning reggae star with dancehall heavyweight Skillibeng for a high-octane, speaker-shaking banger. The track wastes no time delivering relentless energy. Produced by EJ Fya, “Rapid Fyah” fuses Koffeeโ€™s melodic, conscious reggae roots with Skillibengโ€™s sharp, experimental dancehall edge. Built on bouncy riddim, punchy drums, soaring horns, and that signature Jamaican heat that evokes rootsy foundation with modern trap-infused bounce.

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Koffee handles the hook and verses with her trademark warm, distinctive flowโ€”clear, confident, and full of attitude. Skillibeng slides in with rapid-fire bars and his signature โ€œBrrrpโ€ ad-libs, creating excellent back-and-forth chemistry. The production feels premium and radio-ready while staying true to Caribbean sound system culture. The song is all about unstoppable energy, addressing issues head-on, and rising above doubters: โ€œLike dem neva learn dem lesson / Any weh di issue deh me a address itโ€. Koffee brings conscious fire and personal resilience, while Skillibeng adds street-edged flair and playful aggression. Itโ€™s motivational, defiant, and celebratoryโ€”โ€œrapid fyahโ€ as both literal heat and metaphorical unstoppable force.

“Rapid Fyah” is a triumphant, high-energy return that delivers exactly what it promises: heat, bars, and Caribbean pride in one tight package. It executes the Koffee x Skillibeng collab with polish, chemistry, and replay value that could carry it through the summer and beyond.


Guchi โ€“ “Ganja”

After a long break, Guchi returns with a smooth, addictive Afropop love anthem titled โ€œGanjaโ€. The track captures Guchi in full lover-girl mode: vulnerable, playful, and irresistibly melodic, sneaking up on listeners with replay value. Guchi rides a mid-tempo Afropop beat with bouncy percussion, warm synths, and subtle highlife influences. Her vocals are the star; breathy, emotive, and layered with harmonies that give the song a dreamy, immersive feel. The production keeps things polished yet organic, letting her signature style that blend of pop sweetness and cultural warmth, shine without overcomplicating.

โ€œGanjaโ€ uses the metaphor of ganja (weed) to describe an intoxicating, addictive kind of loveโ€”the kind that calms you down, makes you hungry for more, and leaves you โ€œnot okayโ€ when itโ€™s gone. โ€œWhat have you done to me? … Done on my body, I no dey okay when you no dey with meโ€/โ€œYour love dey eye me like a tire… Make me hungry, make I chopโ€/โ€œNo fit give you 99, only 100… I no go for your heartโ€/โ€œThereโ€™s something about your love wey dey eye me pass it allโ€. 

Itโ€™s flirty, obsessive in a cute way, and full of Nigerian slang/Pidgin flair. Themes center on irresistible attraction, emotional dependency, and full commitment, turning the โ€œhighโ€ of romance into something celebratory and fun rather than heavy. The ganja metaphor adds a playful, rebellious edge without being literal.

โ€œGanjaโ€ is a feel-good, sticky summer single that highlights why Guchi stands out in the crowded Afropop scene: great voice, relatable energy, and songs that just hit different when youโ€™re in the mood for love.

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