“Stop Stealing My Songs” – Kamuzu warns Northern upcoming Artist.
GULU CITY JUST GOT HOTTER! Northern Uganda’s lyrical outlaw and microphone assassin, Kamuzu Urban Niga, has sent shockwaves across the region with a fiery freestyle warning aimed at his fellow artists: “Stop biting people’s songs or face lyrical extinction!”
The Dancehall general, known for his raw Gulu swag and tongue-twisting flow, took to Facebook Live and dropped what fans are calling a “verbal landmine.” In a freestyle session dripping with smoke, Kamuzu spat:
No names mentioned, but the message? Loud, clear, and flaming hot like Rolex off a Juba stove.
Kamuzu is pointing fingers (indirectly… for now) at artists in Northern Uganda who, according to him, are swiping melodies, hooks, bars—even full verses—from their musical comrades and claiming it as original. During an interview on Hustler Deo YouTube channel Kamuzu urban Narrated how some Northern artist are stealing song
He claimed that his latest released “Kita Coni” he should have released it before “Jirani” but some Culprits stole his song during studio recording through recording it to their phone and they took it to another producer but he later noticed and warned them and the songstealers resigned.” That’s why I hold on that project and I decided to released”Jirani earlier ”
The moment Kamuzu’s freestyle dropped, Gulu’s timeline exploded like a bass drop in a club.
#KamuzuWarning, #StopSongTheft, and #Original256 began trending on TikTok and Facebook.
One fan wrote, “This is the kind of energy we need. Call out the fake and protect the real!”
Another commented,
“Kamuzu is not wrong. These new cats hear a good chorus today and record a ‘new’ version tomorrow. No creativity, just shortcuts.”
Whether you call him a hater or a hero, Kamuzu Urban Niga just lit up Northern Uganda’s music scene like a stage on fire. He’s standing up for originality, authenticity, and the real hustle behind every verse.
Kamuzu’s message is simple: “Copy-paste won’t take you far. Bring your own flame—or get burned by mine.”
Northern Uganda’s lyrical rebel and Afro-rap powerhouse, Kamuzu Urban Niga, has shaken the region’s music industry with a no-holds-barred warning: “Stealing fellow artists’ songs ends now—or face the wrath of truth!”
In a social media video that’s gone viral faster than a fresh beat in Gulu town, Kamuzu Urban Niga pulled no punches. The Gulu-born artist, known for fusing local rhythm with raw street poetry, called out unnamed musicians in Northern Uganda for what he bluntly called “musical robbery.”
“We are out here sweating in studios, writing from the heart—then some of you just sample our lines, rename the track, and act like it’s original? My guy, no! That’s not inspiration. That’s theft!”
Kamuzu, who has earned street credibility for hits like “Ni muyayi” and “Mon mabeco”, claims this trend is killing authenticity.
“Our culture, our sound, our pain—it’s not something you pirate. If you have nothing original to offer, go back to the drawing board. Don’t build fame on someone else’s sweat.”
Fellow musicians and producers in the North are split. Veteran producer Bosmic On Da Beat admitted the issue is real. “I’ve recorded artists who come in with a ‘new song’ only to find it’s a remix of someone else’s track from Kitgum or Lira. It’s frustrating, and it’s making us look unserious as a region.”
Rising artist Lady Morine, however, felt Kamuzu’s delivery was too harsh.“I respect his hustle, but dragging the whole industry in one statement isn’t fair. Not everyone is stealing.”
But Kamuzu didn’t slow down. In a follow-up interview on Hustler Deo YouTube channel, he doubled down:“If I call you out, don’t cry. Fix yourself. Or better yet, drop a diss track—but come correct.
- Stay tuned to Musicwaa for more..