Kizz Daniel, Angélique Kidjo & Johnny Drille – Police MP3 Audio Download
Uncle K adds a bonus cut to Lemon Chase with Police. After Eyo closed the main 6-track EP with a warning, Kizz drops Police as the extra lesson, the post-credit scene. This one pulls weight because Kizz brings in legend Angélique Kidjo from Benin and soul man Johnny Drille. After 6 tracks of personal growth, Police zooms out to society. Uncle K stops talking about himself and starts talking about the system. From King of Love Kizz sang about girls, from Barnabas he sang about pain, from Maverick he sang about standards, and now as Uncle K he sings about order.
Police is Afro-fusion with conscious, rhythmic energy. The production is percussive and bright, talking drums, clean guitar, bass that moves like a protest march. No dark vibe here, this is awareness music with groove. The beat feels like daylight, community, and “we need to talk” energy. Kizz opens with melody and concern, Johnny Drille adds soft soul and questions, Angélique Kidjo comes in with power, language, and authority from West Africa. Three voices, three generations, one message. Lyrics are direct but not angry. They talk about police brutality, abuse of power, fear, and the need for justice. Kizz doesn’t preach, he narrates. Johnny Drille asks the soft questions. Angélique Kidjo answers with fire and history. After Eyo said “don’t test my peace”, Police says “and police, don’t test the people’s peace”. They mix English, French, and native languages with melodies that feel like a town hall meeting set to music. From May 2025 to 2026, Police became the song for activism posts, “end brutality” reels, and “we deserve better” captions. “Police” became slang for calling out power when it forgets its duty.
The sequencing is thoughtful. The main EP Lemon Chase ended at track 6 Eyo with personal boundaries. Track 7 Police extends that idea to society. Uncle K shows you can’t have personal peace if the system is violent. Kizz proves maturity is thinking beyond yourself. On Maverick he sang Blood Is Thicker about family, and Police is Blood Is Thicker upgraded to community. He’s saying my peace depends on our peace. Kizz’s vocal delivery is calm but firm. He sings like a man who’s seen pain but still believes in change. Johnny Drille matches with gentleness, Angélique Kidjo matches with fire and ancestral weight. Voice blend is powerful and respectful, no shouting match, just truth in harmony. The hook “Police, Police” repeats because accountability needs repetition. The melody is rhythmic and sticky. It doesn’t chase clubs. It chases conscience.
Police works because Kizz uses his platform for more than romance. After 6 tracks of Uncle K lessons for the individual, he adds one for the collective. That’s Uncle K responsibility. A boss secures himself, an uncle secures the community. The beat is made for rallies, think pieces, and “we must do better” moments. Not party hype, purpose groove.
Police is conscious music with brave lyrics, percussive production, and urgent energy. Kizz chose truth over silence and gave listeners a song for their “speak up” season. That’s why it still matters in 2026.



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