g.o.d Guluva

g.o.d Guluva

On g.o.d Guluva, Kwesta stays in his lane of repping the hood; his township slang is sharp as ever and is seamlessly weaved into his polished raps. The K1 God continues to incorporate current sounds into his music without sounding like a wave-rider—he ropes in like-minded rappers K.O and Kid X for his take on amapiano and its ancestor kwaito on “Kubo” and “Ma Se Kind.” Traces of amapiano can also be found on “Hamba Nawe,” featuring the rapper’s musical twin, the singer Thabsie. “Hamba Nawe” is one of many songs (“Nthabiseng”; “Nobody”; “Daai Deng”) that touch on Kwesta’s experience of love, as a man who’s been married for a few years. While most of g.o.d Guluva is lighthearted and a celebration of love, it’s impossible to divorce Kwesta from social commentary and self-introspection, which he delivers on “Fire in the Ghetto” and the album’s closer, “Who I Am.”

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