Home Lifestyle Bebe Cool Returns with ‘No Risk EP’ One Year After Break The Chains Triumph

Bebe Cool Returns with ‘No Risk EP’ One Year After Break The Chains Triumph

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Bebe Cool Returns with ‘No Risk EP’ One Year After Break The Chains Triumph

Just when many thought he had said everything he needed to say with the critically acclaimed Break The Chains album, Bebe Cool is back.

The Gagamel Entertainment boss officially released No Risk EP on Friday, a seven-track collection arriving exactly one year and two weeks after Break The Chains reintroduced him to a new generation of listeners and reaffirmed his place among Africa’s most adaptable music stars.

Available on all major streaming platforms, the EP sees the veteran singer continue the sonic evolution that has defined the latter stage of his career, fusing Afrobeat, Dancehall, Reggaeton, and R&B with unmistakable Ugandan influences.

For an artist who has spent more than two decades at the summit of Uganda’s music industry, No Risk is less about proving a point and more about demonstrating why he has remained relevant while many of his contemporaries have struggled to keep pace with changing musical trends.

“No Risk EP is a journey through life, love, and focus with zero regrets,” Bebe Cool said in a statement accompanying the release.

The project opens with Kakebere, a hard-hitting Dancehall anthem built around the message of verification and caution in an era where misinformation, scams, and misplaced trust have become common realities.

From there, Bebe Cool shifts gears with Bundle, a celebration of financial independence and personal freedom that encourages listeners to chase success on their own terms while ignoring unsolicited advice from critics.

The energy intensifies on Shekete, a Reggaeton-infused dancefloor anthem that embraces confidence, movement, and self-expression, before transitioning into Kiss and Make Up, a song that explores the realities of modern relationships and the importance of forgiveness.

On Melodies, the singer leans into nostalgia, connecting childhood memories with mature romance over a groove-rich Ugandan soundscape.

The sixth track, Target, reflects a more focused and determined Bebe Cool, delivering a message about discipline, ambition, and staying locked in on personal goals despite distractions.

The EP concludes with Joromai, an Afrobeat-inspired love song that celebrates admiration and affection, offering a softer ending to an otherwise energetic project.

The release comes at a time when Break The Chains is still widely regarded as one of the most ambitious projects ever produced by a Ugandan artist.

Launched in May 2025 at Kampala’s Noni Vie Lounge before a star-studded audience of musicians, media personalities, and entertainment stakeholders, the 16-track album was praised for embracing Afrotech, African House, and Afrobeats while maintaining Bebe Cool’s signature vocal identity.

The album featured collaborations with rising Ugandan sensation Joshua Baraka and Nigerian superstar Yemi Alade, symbolising Bebe Cool’s desire to bridge generations and expand Uganda’s musical footprint beyond its borders.

At the time, he described the album as the beginning of a new chapter for both Ugandan and African music.

“This is the beginning of a new journey for both African music and Ugandan music at large,” he said during the launch.

The project also highlighted his growing focus on digital consumption and streaming platforms, an area where many veteran African artists have struggled to adapt.

While fellow members of Uganda’s celebrated “Big Three” have largely shifted focus in recent years with Jose Chameleone releasing music less frequently and Bobi Wine concentrating on politics Bebe Cool has remained firmly committed to recording, experimenting, and competing in the modern music economy.

That consistency has increasingly become part of his legacy.

From Ragga and Dancehall to Afro-pop, Afrotech, and now genre-fusing contemporary Afrobeat sounds, Bebe Cool has repeatedly reinvented himself without losing the core identity that first made him a household name.

The arrival of No Risk EP suggests that the reinvention is far from over. Rather than slowing down after the success of Break The Chains, the self-styled “King of the Uganda Music Industry” appears determined to keep building momentum, offering fans new music while positioning himself at the centre of conversations about the future of Ugandan sound.

For an artist whose career spans more than twenty years, No Risk feels less like a side project and more like another chapter in a story that continues to evolve.

Whether the EP will achieve the same critical and commercial success as its predecessor remains to be seen. But one thing is clear: Bebe Cool is not stepping aside for the next generation just yet. He is making them share the stage.