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Home Music

Bridget Blue’s RNB Marks a New Beginning for the Kenyan Singer

Story Center by Story Center
April 8, 2026
Reading Time: 6 mins read
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Bridget Blue’s RNB Marks a New Beginning for the Kenyan Singer

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On the day her new album RNB drops, Bridget Blue sounds like someone who has been waiting to exhale.

“You don’t really know what to expect,” she tells OkayAfrica. “So it can be really, really scary.”

The Kenyan singer-songwriter laughs a little when she says it, but she means it. Release day is exciting, yes, but it is also the point at which the work no longer belongs only to her. “It feels like you’re breathing out all the work. And then finally, it’s the day.”

Blue is treating the release of RNB as a reset. At 26, she has already spent eight years making music professionally, after first breaking through with the covers she posted as a teenager.

In that time, she has built both her catalog and her name in real time. She also learned the business by moving through it, switching labels and even teams as she figured out what fit and what did not. Songs like “Kesho” and “I Choose You” with Bien kept that momentum going, while projects like Colours, Grateful, and 24 helped map her growth. In the last year alone, she has released  “Mapenzi” with Toxic Lyrikali and “Ni Wewe,” a certified hit that pulled in 1.5 million views on YouTube in under one month. So by the time RNB arrived in April, Blue was building on years of work and a catalog that had already begun to speak for itself.

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Still, she says this album feels different from everything that came before it.

“This new album represents a new beginning,” she says. “I’ve finally stopped being so scared to say what’s on my mind. It’s the real, vulnerable me.”

She continues: “I feel with this album, it’s me bare and vulnerable and just pouring my whole soul. It’s what I truly wanted to say for so long.”

Doing It Afraid

When I ask what changed, she points to adulting. Getting older and growing into herself helped. But more than anything, she says, she learned to work through the fear that had been preventing her from showing up fully as herself.

“I think it’s just doing it afraid, because I feel like there wasn’t going to be a time where [the fear] would be completely gone,” she says. What also changed was how she wanted to be seen. For a long time, Blue says that she leaned into appearing harmless and non-threatening. She wanted people to read her as peaceful, shy, and not in competition with anyone. It was a defense mechanism 

“And then it reached a point where I was like, ‘okay, so I’m shy and meek, and I’m still getting what I’m trying to avoid!’ So that’s when I realized there’s absolutely no chance,” she says. “The humbling and the opinions were still happening. So I felt like I’m sacrificing myself for absolutely nothing.”

That realization changed the way she moved. She stopped trying to manage how people would read her and started showing up more fully in her work. Or, as she puts it, “If you don’t shape a narrative, it’s done for you.”

J Blessing, Blue’s manager and producer on the album, says the project reflects a new level in her growth. “Having worked closely with her for the past five years, I’ve witnessed her growth, and this project reflects a new level of depth, intention, and excellence,” he tells OkayAfrica. 


The cover art for Bridget Blue’s “RNB” album was designed by Blue herself.
courtesy of Bridget Blue

The result is music that feels bolder, sharper, and more fully her. RNB is a 12-track album, and many of its songs were shaped during the self-imposed writing camp Blue put herself through last year. She went back to her parents’ place, set up in her childhood bedroom, and told herself, “I’m coming out of here with music.” The record moves between love, doubt, vulnerability, and self-possession. One of its warmest moments is “Mimi Na Wewe,” her duet with fellow Kenyan singer Nikita Kering, which is quickly grabbing attention.

 “I’ve never really written from personal experience until now. I used to write more from imagination, and always tried to, I don’t know, escape me,” she says. “I think it’s a more daring side of me. I think it’s me not calculating the words anymore. I feel like I’ve been more bold with it.”

She points to “Nine to Five,” her latest single from the album, as one example. In it, Blue pushes back against smallness and against the pressure to make herself more palatable. The song captures the tension between playing polite and feeling that she is meant for more. In the chorus, she sings:

I’m too pretty for a nine-to-five 

Too loud for a quiet life 

Biting my tongue just to stay polite 

Tonight I’m saying just what I like 

I’m too pretty for a nine-to-five 

Too fire just to stay on ice 

Tired of pretending everything’s alright 

Yes I’ll be, I’ll be alright

“A song like that is really, it’s giving me chills when I listen to it,” she says. “And I’m having to ask people over and over, ‘Are you sure this is okay? Are you sure this is okay to say?’ And I feel like I’ve made peace with whatever happens afterwards.”

R&B From Her Eyes

To most ears, RNB sounds like an album staking a claim in Kenyan R&B. The title points you there immediately. But Blue says she does not necessarily see herself in such fixed terms. 

“I am still trying to figure that out, if I’m being honest,” she explains. “I’d wake up, and I wrote a pop song, look up, and I wrote an Afrobeat song, but R&B seemed to stick all the time.” 

That is part of why she named the album RNB. “It’s R&B from my eyes.”

Blue also sees RNB landing in a moment when Kenyan R&B is opening up more, with artists trying to dilute themselves even less. “I feel like more true R&B singers are coming up, and I feel like they are not shy about it anymore.” 

When I ask what she wants to remember about this season, her answer is simple.

“That I dared.”

‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’

‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.okayafrica.com ’

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