Bella Shmurda - Sanity (2025) Hi-Res

Artist: Bella Shmurda
Title: Sanity
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: Dangbana Republik
Genre: Afrobeats, African, Afro Beat
Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks) / FLAC (tracks) 24bit-44.1kHz
Total Time: 43:21
Total Size: 103 / 285 / 443 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist: Title: Sanity
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: Dangbana Republik
Genre: Afrobeats, African, Afro Beat
Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks) / FLAC (tracks) 24bit-44.1kHz
Total Time: 43:21
Total Size: 103 / 285 / 443 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Appraisal (1:49)
02. Verily (3:15) *** 16/44.1kHz
03. Turn Me On (2:10) *** 16/44.1kHz
04. Sanity (3:28)
05. Holy Jah (2:42)
06. Mandalene (2:25)
07. Bounce (feat. Seyi Vibez) (2:20)
08. Fuji Fusion (feat. CKay) (3:15)
09. Apala Fusion (2:53)
10. Bygone (feat. Seyi Vibez) (3:18)
11. Pretty Girl (feat. Joshua Baraka) (2:08)
12. Dangbana Riddim (feat. FOLA) (2:35) *** 16/44.1kHz
13. Run from God (feat. T.I BLAZE) (2:21)
14. My G (2:41) *** 16/44.1kHz
15. Pain (3:20)
16. Family (2:41) *** 16/44.1kHz
The street poet’s sophomore outing is an adventurous pursuit of clarity. You’d be sorely mistaken to think Bella Shmurda doesn’t understand the weight of his voice, but the magic of the Ghetto Preacher’s sermons is that they aren’t preachy. They land because they’re drawn from lived experience, not distance. The emotional core of Shmurda’s sophomore album Sanity is its brooding title track, where the singer can be found wrestling with purpose: “Everything we chase is vanity/My mind needs more clarity/For the wars I won, I’m proud of me.”
The sonics across Sanity are as restless and adventurous as ever. Shmurda stretches street pop into fresh shapes, layering amapiano’s logdrum on “Holy Jah” and “Bygone” with CKay, and then maintaining the communal vocals and robust percussion of fújì and apala on “Appraisal,” “Fuji Fusion” with K1 De Ultimate, and “Apala Fusion.” Dalliances with R&B are present as well in “Turn Me On,” with its clean, 2000s-indebted guitar lines, and on “Verily,” which samples Dennis Edwards’ seminal ’80s soul bop, “Don’t Look Any Further.” Shmurda closes out Sanity with “Family,” a reggae-leaning declaration of loyalty that plays as testament to his voice as both a street poet and seeker of meaning.
The sonics across Sanity are as restless and adventurous as ever. Shmurda stretches street pop into fresh shapes, layering amapiano’s logdrum on “Holy Jah” and “Bygone” with CKay, and then maintaining the communal vocals and robust percussion of fújì and apala on “Appraisal,” “Fuji Fusion” with K1 De Ultimate, and “Apala Fusion.” Dalliances with R&B are present as well in “Turn Me On,” with its clean, 2000s-indebted guitar lines, and on “Verily,” which samples Dennis Edwards’ seminal ’80s soul bop, “Don’t Look Any Further.” Shmurda closes out Sanity with “Family,” a reggae-leaning declaration of loyalty that plays as testament to his voice as both a street poet and seeker of meaning.