
What are you grateful for? Family? Friends? Work? Or simply the gift of life itself?
These are the questions answered by “Njoh Weh,” the new single released on April 4 by Cameroonian rapper April Kay Innocent Bonwe aka Bonzyz featuring singer Rinyu.
The title comes from the Limbum language and translates to “By Your Grace.” True to its meaning, the song arrives as a reflective yet celebratory Easter offering inviting you to count your blessings and recognize the unseen grace behind them.
With “Njoh Weh,” the Muyama Music artist leans into the cultural soundscape that has gradually become his artistic signature, a fusion of hip hop basics with local sounds, and sealed with a Limbum delivery.
The track opens with a rhythmic warmth that gently draws listeners into a mood of thanksgiving. The underlying traditional instrumentals echo the same you would get from communal praise sessions, one many Cameroonians recognize from church gatherings, village celebrations, and family ceremonies.
It is within this sonic atmosphere that Rinyu’s voice emerges as the emotional center of the piece. The ‘Queen of Cameroon Urban Music’ as expected, defended her crown. Smooth yet powerful, her vocals glide effortlessly over the production, carrying the song’s message of gratitude with a devotional sincerity. Rinyu is not new to these stellar performances and delivering on “Njoh Weh” was just another day in the office for her. If Bonzyz provides the cultural grounding and thematic direction, Rinyu delivers the emotional resonance, making the collaboration feel both natural and deeply intentional.
Gratitude as a rhythm
At its core, “Njoh Weh” is a meditation on gratitude. The song gently reminds listeners that many of life’s most cherished blessings rarely arrive through sheer coincidence: a loving spouse, a meaningful career, supportive friends, and even the simple privilege of waking up each day with breath in our lungs.
These are gifts we often treat as routine, but as the song suggests, they are expressions of grace. Rather than framing gratitude as a solemn act, Bonzyz and Rinyu turn it into a celebration.
Beyond its Easter timing, “Njoh Weh” also speaks to the deep religious culture of Wimbum land. Christianity runs deeply through the social fabric of this community. Churches (whether Catholic, Presbyterian, Baptist, or Pentecostal) are not simply places of worship. They are centers of community life, spaces where faith, culture, and identity intersect and through the easter piece, both singers take you back home in just 4 minutes. Watch the song here and don’t forget to leave them a review.
