Tukula Life in the Sun – Eze Zimụzọ [2026]

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Description

Tukula (Life in the Sun) — Eze Zimụzọ (2026)

Under the banner Kwento xpr Hna sxm km, Tukula (Life in the Sun) marks the midday of the
Dikenga cycle—the phase of maturity, mastery, and sustained action. If Make KMT Black Again
sounded the call, Visions of KMT imagined the world, and Recapturing KMT enforced the return,
Tukula lives inside the result. This is the album of life in KMT: not aspiration, not prophecy, but
presence. It asks the harder question—what does it take to maintain Ma’at once power is reclaimed?
Like a vessel launched into open water, the work continues, just as the cycle continues. Inside KMT
there are still tides to read, internal pressures to correct, habits to discipline, and threats—both subtle
and overt—to neutralize. Eze Zimụzọ surveys the land in full sunlight, recognizing the beauty of Black
Power while refusing complacency.

Each track reflects an aspect of life at its peak. Back Home rejects wasted labor spent enriching foreign
lands and calls for the return of T.E.R.M.S.—Time, Energy, Resources, Money, and Spirit—to home.
Link Up dissolves imposed fragments—national labels, colonial borders, diasporic distance—and
reasserts common ancestry, common enemies, and common purpose. Don’t Stop Now confronts the
temptation to treat Black Power as a phase rather than a lifetime commitment. Love Our Own exposes
how manipulated tastes funnel wealth outward, re-framing cultural loyalty as economic strategy. Mind
Inna Traffic turns an everyday moment into political clarity: stalled in traffic, surrounded by borrowed
pride, Zimụzọ observes the absence of love for the Black land—and commits to becoming the example,
envisioning a future where that pride is reversed. Run Dem speaks plainly: krakkkas have no place in
KMT and must be driven out! Black Energy honors the beauty of Black womanhood as strength,
beauty, and shared direction worth komplementary building. D.O.O.R. (It’s Your Time) aligns art with
policy, amplifying the Decade of Our Repatriation initiative and welcoming return in Akan Twi, Eʋe,
and Ga. Badman sharpens political vision, urging listeners to stop staring at the web and
identify —and destroy—the spider. Betta Den affirms the arrival: we are home, we have our own,
and nothing surpasses life lived at full power in the sun. The album closes with Closer (Sunset), an
intentional and necessary shift toward preparation, as the Dikenga cycle flows from midday toward
Luvemba. The song frames transition not as decline, but as responsibility, disciplined motion,
reduced talk, and calibrated patience. The repeated call to “move closer” is both communal and
cyclical—closer to alignment, closer to readiness, closer to the next phase of duty as the sky turns
gold and the sun descends.

Anchored in the examples of Heru Narmer, Sa Ra Kamose, Nana Jan-Jak Desalin, Nana Yaa
Asantewaa, and the tradition of Black Power warrior scholarship and action, Tukula situates itself
within an ongoing global realignment. It nods to the continuity of efforts in present-day action breaking
neanderdog control (as observed with the Alliance of Sahel States (AES)), reclaiming resources,
restoring dignity, and enforcing self-reliance—not as symbolism, but as proof that this work is active
now. Sonically, the album weaves afrobeats, Igbo highlife, reggae, and dancehall, reflecting the breadth
of global Black expression and shared rhythm. A full lyrics booklet and recommended study materials
accompany the release, reinforcing that this is music meant to be used—recited, studied, embodied, and
applied.

Why it matters:
– It defines the discipline required after liberation—how Ma’at is maintained, not just restored.
– It frames Black Power as a living system that demands constant attention and correction.
– It confronts internal drift, foreign attachment, and complacency as ongoing threats.
– It affirms that life in KMT is active, dynamic, and defended.
– It declares that maturity is responsibility, and preparation for eldership begins before sunset.

Tracklist (Core Set)
Back Home • Link Up • Don’t Stop Now • Love Our Own • Mind Inna Traffic • Run Dem • Black
Energy • D.O.O.R. (It’s Your Time) • Badman • Betta Den • Closer (Sunset)
Total Runtime: 00:32:20
Included: Album Lyrics Booklet
Additional Study: Abibitumi.com / Abibitumitv.com / decadeofourrepatriation.com / r2gh.com /
sankofajourney.com /
Imprint: Kwento xpr
Directive: NOT TO BE SHARED ON CESSPOOL MEDIA PLATFORMS

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