This debut album leaves you wondering if the artist actually found his peace. Delroy Shewe, a Zimbabwean singer with great skills, just dropped his first record called Peace Of Mind. He blends his dancehall roots with Afrobeats, amapiano, and other local genres. Expectations were high following his hit Superstar with Saintfloew and other solid singles.
The album aims to explore finding calm through love and triumph. That concept is clear in the title track, where he sings about peace being unbuyable. His musical blend sometimes works incredibly well. Tracks like Tarie, Bhangu, and DLMG shine with confident energy, pulling from amapiano and dance music influences.
Other moments feel less inspired, as if Shewe is just going through the motions. A collaboration with Shona Prince called Murder presents toxic lyrics over a beautiful sound. It creates a confusing love-hate reaction. Despite patches of brilliance, the project feels incomplete overall.
Listeners get pulled between heartfelt moments like the loneliness on Dande and the generic passages. The replay button tempts you to reassess your judgment. You forgive the weaker spots for the strong ones, but the central question lingers. Shewe’s search for peace feels unresolved, leaving the music hanging in a promising yet uncertain space.
The album aims to explore finding calm through love and triumph. That concept is clear in the title track, where he sings about peace being unbuyable. His musical blend sometimes works incredibly well. Tracks like Tarie, Bhangu, and DLMG shine with confident energy, pulling from amapiano and dance music influences.
Other moments feel less inspired, as if Shewe is just going through the motions. A collaboration with Shona Prince called Murder presents toxic lyrics over a beautiful sound. It creates a confusing love-hate reaction. Despite patches of brilliance, the project feels incomplete overall.
Listeners get pulled between heartfelt moments like the loneliness on Dande and the generic passages. The replay button tempts you to reassess your judgment. You forgive the weaker spots for the strong ones, but the central question lingers. Shewe’s search for peace feels unresolved, leaving the music hanging in a promising yet uncertain space.